Alley seen as key to latest MidTown Renaissance development in Oklahoma City

Work is under way in Oklahoma City to transform the old Guardian Garage and an adjoining alley in MidTown into housing and retail.

 
By Steve Lackmeyer | Published: September 19, 2012    Comment on this article Leave a comment

Brian Fitzsimmons credits a developer's architectural competition for giving him the chance to pursue a vision for a long-neglected MidTown building that may prove to be a prominent addition to his portfolio.

photo - The former Guardian Garage and neighboring Packard Building can be seen in this 1970s-era photo Oklahoman Archives Photo
The former Guardian Garage and neighboring Packard Building can be seen in this 1970s-era photo Oklahoman Archives Photo

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MidTown Renaissance, led by Bob Howard, Mickey Clagg and Chris Fleming, has redeveloped dozens of properties in the neighborhood. But for Fitzsimmons, the chance to oversee the conversion of the former Guardian Garage into apartments and retail is among the most unique of the batch, thanks to the inclusion of an adjoining alley.

Once complete, the alley will take on a festive look, serving as an outdoor patio for a future restaurant tenant in the Guardian building while also connecting it and the neighboring Packard and Hadden Hall buildings with nearby parking.

“I might have won the competition based on that alone,” Fitzsimmons mused. “We expanded beyond figuring out the building. We went and looked at how we could tie all the buildings together using the alley as a plaza. We knew that all of these buildings had to use the same parking, so we wanted to make the alley a place for pedestrians, a place where people want to be.”

The 90-year-old Guardian building, 1117 N Robinson Ave., allowed Fitzsimmons the opportunity to create 37 loft apartments and 4,445 square feet of retail space in the shell of one of MidTown's oldest buildings.

The building first was operated as a used car dealership that Fitzsimmons believes was somehow connected at one time with the Packard building to the south. A steel beam crossing the alley still connects the two buildings and will be incorporated into the new plaza. Door openings from both buildings into the alley also are being incorporated into the new public space.

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