Apartments seen for Mideke building in OKC's Bricktown

Two experienced Bricktown commercial real estate brokers are teaming up with a redeveloper of historic buildings to convert the top three floors of the 94-year-old Mideke Supply Building into housing.

 
By Steve Lackmeyer | Published: February 27, 2013    Comment on this article Leave a comment

Two experienced Bricktown commercial real estate brokers are teaming up with a redeveloper of historic buildings to convert the top three floors of the 94-year-old Mideke Supply Building into housing.

photo - BUILDING EXTERIOR: The Bricktown Mercantile/Mideke Building in downtown Oklahoma City. The first floor was home to the Bricktown Mercantile and Uncommon Grounds in the 1990s, CityWalk the past dozen years, and more recently, Coco Flow. The top floors have been empty for more than 25 years.
 <strong>John Clanton - The Oklahoman</strong>
BUILDING EXTERIOR: The Bricktown Mercantile/Mideke Building in downtown Oklahoma City. The first floor was home to the Bricktown Mercantile and Uncommon Grounds in the 1990s, CityWalk the past dozen years, and more recently, Coco Flow. The top floors have been empty for more than 25 years. John Clanton - The Oklahoman

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The building, 108 E Main, was one of the earliest warehouse redevelopment projects in Bricktown, the first floor home to the Bricktown Mercantile and Uncommon Grounds in the 1990s, CityWalk the past dozen years and, more recently, Coco Flow.

The second floor, meanwhile, has been home to a variety of professional firms.

Andy Burnett and Zach Martin, brokers with Sperry Van Ness whose Bricktown transactions included the Kingman, Oklahoma Hardware and Sherman Iron Works buildings, said they teamed up with Marva Ellard, who oversaw redevelopment of the Sieber Hotel in MidTown, after realizing the popular entertainment district was filled with old warehouses like Mideke with upper floors empty for decades.

“It's something we've all been aware of — that people have been able to make a nice living just leasing out the first floors of their buildings and off of parking lots,” Ellard said.

“And the upper floors have remained empty and don't do anything to contribute to making this a neighborhood with other uses other than being an entertainment district.”

Martin said he and Burnett approached several property owners with the unique proposition of selling just their empty upper floors. Burnett credited Gary Berlin, owner of the Mideke building, with being willing to be a pioneer in the new approach to Bricktown development.

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