Lower Bricktown developer's plans fail to win Urban Renewal Authority approval

Lower Bricktown developer Randy Hogan was told Wednesday his proposed designs for a one-story restaurant addition along the Bricktown Canal are too oriented to parking and do little to interact with the waterway.

 
By Steve Lackmeyer | Published: September 20, 2012    Comment on this article Leave a comment

Lower Bricktown developer Randy Hogan was told Wednesday his proposed designs for a one-story restaurant addition along the Bricktown Canal are too oriented to parking and do little to interact with the waterway.

photo - The proposed entry for patrons of the future Kevin Durant restaurant to access the Bricktown Canal would be through an alley two feet wider than this one that separates Beatnix Coffee Shop and the Floral and Hardy Florist along the 100 block of N Robinson Avenue. Photo by Steve Lackmeyer,  The Oklahoman
The proposed entry for patrons of the future Kevin Durant restaurant to access the Bricktown Canal would be through an alley two feet wider than this one that separates Beatnix Coffee Shop and the Floral and Hardy Florist along the 100 block of N Robinson Avenue. Photo by Steve Lackmeyer, The Oklahoman

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Hogan was first designated developer for the city-owned land in 1997 and paid $3 million for the entire area, the proceeds of which were then used to build walkways and bridges to accommodate his project.

The Urban Renewal Authority, which has design and development control of the area, refused to approve Hogan's plans for a 10,000-square-foot building that he wants to build along the canal between Toby Keith's I Love this Bar and Grill and Earl's Rib Palace. One of two new restaurants set to be tenants in the building is an eatery associated with Thunder star player Kevin Durant and owned by the Hal Smith Restaurant Group.

“I think it's real attractive,” Hogan said when asked about the frontage facing surface parking to the south instead of the waterway. “Toby Keith's has been very successful with its storefront facing south.”

Commissioners were told the parapet wall of the new building will be at least 17 feet high — tall enough to block any view of the rooftop and air conditioners from nearby canal patio seating in front of Earl's.

Commissioners, however, remained unhappy with Hogan's minimal patio space along the waterway.

They also didn't agree with his plan to limit canal access for the new building to a 9-foot alley between it and Toby Keith's. Neither wall would have any windows.

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