Developers in Oklahoma City pay $4.4 million for Bricktown site planned for $75 million housing and retail complex

Developers paid $4.4 million Wednesday for the north half of the former Stewart Metal Fabricators plant in east Bricktown as they move forward with a plan to build a $75 million mix of apartments, retail and a hotel.

 
By Steve Lackmeyer | Published: November 29, 2012    Comment on this article Leave a comment

Developers paid $4.4 million Wednesday for the north half of the former Stewart Metal Fabricators plant in east Bricktown as they move forward with a plan to build a $75 million mix of apartments, retail and a hotel.

photo - The former Stewart Metal Fabricator property is shown on Sheridan Avenue just west of Lincoln Boulevard in Bricktown. PHOTO BY PAUL B. SOUTHERLAND, THE OKLAHOMAN
The former Stewart Metal Fabricator property is shown on Sheridan Avenue just west of Lincoln Boulevard in Bricktown. PHOTO BY PAUL B. SOUTHERLAND, THE OKLAHOMAN

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This was a big milestone. But we have a lot more milestones in east Bricktown than on most other projects.”

Gary Brooks,
Bricktown Apartments LLC

The development is considered by observers at city hall to be one of the more complicated private/public development efforts since the renovation and reopening of the century-old Skirvin hotel in 2006.

Gary Brooks and Andy Burnett, principles in Bricktown Apartments LLC., first announced plans for the project earlier this year when they successfully obtained $4.5 million in federal stimulus funding.

The grant will help pay for the relocation of a large storm sewer line and remove contamination on the site. Other funding sources include $1.5 million in federal brownfield (contamination removal) loans approved Tuesday by the Oklahoma City Council.

As part of the stimulus funding agreement, Brooks and Burnett agreed to include 50 units that are affordable under federal Neighborhood Stabilization Program standards, as well as 200 market rate units to meet the demands of tenants moving downtown — especially students, athletes and employees of the nearby Oklahoma Health Center.

Yet another component of the deal required a land swap between the former owner, Bob Meinders, and the Oklahoma City Urban Renewal Authority, which controlled parcels of land on the north half of the former Stewart property.

“The real stars of this deal are the people at city hall and the Oklahoma City Urban Renewal Authority,” Burnett said. “The local departments of planning, the brownfields officials, the Department of Housing and Urban Development and the Urban Renewal Authority really paved the way here.”

Brooks, who is also developing the $36 million, 250-unit Edge apartments in MidTown, said he expects demolition of the Stewart Metal Fabricators buildings will begin in January. Site cleanup, relocation of the sewer lines and utilities are then expected to continue for 12 to 15 months. Brooks said if all goes as planned, construction could begin in early 2014.

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