Economic Engine that Could

May 10th, 2012 | by holldev

Truckee’s railyard redevelopment faces its toughest hill yet, but supporters think they can

Comstock’s Magazine | Story by Bill Romanelli | Photo by Ryan Salm

May 9, 2012

“I’ve been in local government for 31 years, and I’ve never seen the kind of community support for development that I have for this railyard.”
— Tony Lashbrook, manager, town of Truckee

A town long known for its quaint historic authenticity, Truckee in the past five years has evolved from a sleepy hamlet to a city with the promise of vibrancy. But it’s a town mostly seen through car windows or during a quick stop as people make their way to the famous lake and ski resorts beyond its boundary.

In marketing lingo, Truckee is the gateway to Tahoe’s North Shore. But plainly stated, it’s a base camp for its surroundings, and that’s the label the town is committed to with the redevelopment of its downtown railyard.

When first approved in June 2009, the Truckee Railyard project was to be the largest downtown development since the town’s founding in 1868. Despite its magnitude, the project received a concerted 5-0 vote of approval from the Town Council and overwhelming public support, including that of every living Truckee mayor, the Truckee Donner Railroad Society and the Truckee River Watershed Council.

Rarely does a project enjoy such broad public support, yet three years after approval, this one remains at a virtual standstill. There are “25 million” small problems in the way, and that’s only for phase one, which focuses on infrastructure.

For a town of about 20,000 people, $25 million is a hefty price tag for phase one, but it helps create a project the town almost unanimously thinks it needs — and deserves. No definitive price tag has been established for the rest of the development because it hasn’t been designed yet.

“Truckee is directly competing against the resorts — it’s important that we be able to offer the same amenities those resorts offer,” says Alyssa Thomas, president of the Truckee Downtown Merchants Association. “We want Truckee to not just be part of a trip, but the destination itself.”

It’s not enough that National Geographic Adventure recently named Truckee one of the world’s Top 25 Ski Towns. If anything, that has forced the competition to step up its game. Major corporations are investing hundreds of millions of dollars in the region. Purchases by Vail Resorts of Northstar California Resort (previously Northstar-at-Tahoe) and Kirkwood Mountain Resort, and KSL Resorts’ acquisition of Squaw Valley and Alpine Meadows are leading many to believe the north side of Tahoe soon will be compared to the ski meccas of Utah and Colorado.

Couple that kind of investment with a growing population, comprised largely of young, smart, successful people — which translates into new business growth — and all the signals show that Truckee must take steps now to prepare for a more robust and prospering economy if it doesn’t want to get left behind.

“This is a large, blighted property right in the center of our community, but there’s no reason it should stay that way,” says Truckee Mayor Joan Jones.

The original master plan envisioned three distinct districts encompassing 75 acres of commercial space, 30,000 square feet of office space, 250 hotel rooms and 100 new residential units, effectively doubling downtown Truckee’s size. Within that plan is the goal to meet local demand for a movie theater, a grocery store and, above all, more downtown residents. By creating a residential core, Jones says, the project would supplement an economy that currently relies on visitors, seasonal second homeowners and locals who enjoy an occasional night out.

About 75 percent of the approved space is for residential projects, says Rick Holliday, president of Holliday Development, the project’s primary developer.

“This site can be a tremendous asset for housing and commercial activities that will create much more of a year-round economy for the town,” Jones says. “That, of course, offers substantial economic benefits for everyone.”

It was originally thought that much of the $25 million needed for phase one would come from a local redevelopment agency. But in a now familiar narrative, that funding source was eliminated under 2011 legislation.

“We’ve got a poster child of smart growth and planning, yet in our wisdom as a state we eliminated one of the best tools that could get this project started,” says Tony Lashbrook, Truckee’s town manager. “When that legislation was upheld by a state Supreme Court decision, we were suddenly facing a worst-case scenario.”

That scenario was exacerbated by the town’s unsuccessful bid to get funds from a state money pool created in 2006 by the sale of Proposition 1C bonds, which, among other things, were designed to support construction of affordable housing.

With a $25 million hole to fill, finding new sources of capital has become the principal focus of the town and the Truckee Railyard Partnership. Efforts resumed to acquire Prop 1C funds, and proponents have submitted a grant request to the federal Transportation Investment Generating Economic Recovery grant program which, as part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, awards grants for investment in surface transportation projects that “will have significant impact on the nation, a metropolitan area or a region.”

There also is discussion of scaling down phase one of the project — something supporters are calling “infrastructure light.”

“That’s about $5 million worth of infrastructure,” Lashbrook says. “The key is to determine what kind of development from there would make the most sense — what is the right use to attract energy and people downtown. Current ideas include a movie theater and housing adjacent to the downtown area.”

The reduced plan, which would involve some roadwork and a deal with a theater operator, is being shopped to potential partners. That effort is showing promise, and in recent weeks a new idea has emerged that could sweeten the deal.

“There’s a performing arts project that may make sense to be part of the movie theater project,” Holliday says. “We’re going to conduct a feasibility study to see if we can move the housing to a separate block and have the arts and movie theaters together on the same block, giving the town a dedicated arts corner.”

Implementing a scaled back program won’t diminish the project’s broader infrastructure needs, which Mayor Jones describes as “unusual.” Two of the biggest issues include the “Balloon Track” and Trout Creek.

The Balloon Track, a loop of railroad track owned by Union Pacific, was built in 1901 to facilitate the turning of snowplow trains. It’s in the way and must be moved to the eastern end of the site. The hardest part of that process — negotiating a deal with the Union Pacific — has already been accomplished. With that agreement in place, funding is the only obstacle left for the relocation.

Trout Creek is a slightly different story. As the key watershed feature on the site, it’s pinched between the Balloon Track and the highway, and it puts the project site squarely in the 100-year flood plain. Given that the area has already flooded twice in the past 30 years, it’s not a problem that can be easily overlooked. Moving the Balloon Track would help ease that constraint, but additional restoration and other efforts to minimize the risk of flood damage are required. Despite the setbacks in the four years since the project was first approved, progress has been made. Some construction, however small, is complete. One small building stands west of the railyard, serving as a model of the mixed-use development envisioned, as well as the look and feel of the architectural design. It even has a tenant, a local baker who moved in in May.

It’s a small start, but it’s also evidence the town has not given up its dream. The demise of the original financing plans is an impediment, but not something that would stop the project, say supporters, who continue to explore options.

“From the start, this project has been a great match for our town’s planning principals, and it continues to have a lot of momentum behind it,” Lashbrook says. “The most common question I get is, ‘When is it going to get started?’ ”

That is a question with no easy answer. In the best case, requiring some moon-and-stars alignment, infrastructure improvements could start in summer 2013 and be complete before the end of that year. The worst-case scenario is that the project never gets built. In the meantime, the project continues to receive broad public support.

“I’ve been in local government for 31 years, and I’ve never seen the kind of community support for development that I have for this railyard,” Lashbrook says. “It had great momentum until the economy and the redevelopment thing pulled the rug out. The positive energy is still there — we just need a little kick-start.”

 

Read and download article here

Revived Project Lifts Bayview; A San Francisco District Begins to Reduce Blight

March 21st, 2012 | by holldev

Read full article from the NYTimes here

SAN FRANCISCO — The names of the city’s storied neighborhoods roll off the tongue: Pacific Heights, North Beach, the Mission, Haight-Ashbury, the Castro.

Bayview, a historically African-American district long isolated between Candlestick Park and the former naval shipyard at Hunter’s Point along the city’s southeastern waterfront, is not among them.

The neighborhood’s decline was hastened by the decommissioning of the shipyard in the 1970s. A succession of San Francisco mayors — including Dianne Feinstein, Willie Brown and Gavin Newsom — sought to revitalize the area. But for decades, the Bayview remained blighted with abandoned warehouses and railroad tracks to nowhere.

Now, the completion of a troubled $75 million mixed-use development at 5800 Third Street is evidence that the long-sought revitalization is finally taking root.

Divided into two mixed-use buildings with public courtyards and shared common space, the 315,000-square-foot project’s 137 condominium units are priced to appeal to first-time “work force” buyers. Holliday Development has sold the entire ground floor, as well as 50 of the 71 units in the first building. Sales of the second building’s 66 units are scheduled to begin this month.

Prices range from $300,000 for a one-bedroom with a den to the high $400,000s for three-bedroom units.

“This development proves that economic diversity and market-rate housing can work in the Bayview,” said Olson Lee, the city’s director of housing. Mr. Lee also hailed the arrival of three food-related retailers — Fresh & Easy, a grocery store owned by the British company Tesco, and branches of the popular area restaurants Limon Rotisserie and Brown Sugar Kitchen — as an equally important milestone for the neighborhood.

“There hasn’t been a new grocery store in the Bayview in 20 years,” Mr. Lee said. “It was a classic food desert,” where struggling residents had to leave the neighborhood to find nutritious food and staples. “These additions will change things,” he said of the grocery and restaurants.

Change for the better has been predicted here for some time. In 2007, it was expected to arrive in the form of a new light-rail line along Third Street, with a stop right across the street from 5800 Third at Carroll Station. The extension linked the formerly isolated neighborhood with jobs in the city’s financial district to the north and technology and biotech companies in South San Francisco and Silicon Valley.

That rail expansion, coinciding with a soaring housing market, ignited construction of condominiums in neighborhoods that wrap around the city’s eastern shore. The building boom, anchored geographically by the AT&T Ballpark and the Mission Bay research center medical-school campus, transformed a light industrial zone into a series of up-and-coming residential neighborhoods.

The boom, however, stopped just short of the Bayview, with its lack of political clout and financial resources.

The project at 5800 Third Street was started in 2006 by James D. Noteware of Noteware Development, based in Houston. But the housing market collapsed in 2008, torpedoing Mr. Noteware’s effort. “He was hoping to sell two-bedroom units for $500,000,” said Rick Holliday, the developer who is finishing the project. “But in 2008, prices fell by at least 30 percent.”

Mr. Noteware did not return calls for comment.

Cost overruns and notice of a work stoppage by Thompson Pacific, Noteware’s main contractor, rang alarm bells for the project’s two financiers, Citi Community Capital, a division of Citicorp, and the equity partner, the Urban Investment Group of Goldman Sachs. Citi, holder of the construction loan, faced $11 million in liens from unpaid subcontractors, a general contractor who had walked off the job and a ground floor with nothing but steel rebar protruding from a concrete slab.

Hal Kuykendall, a co-director of Citi Community Capital, had a working relationship with Mr. Holliday, who specializes in affordable housing. Mr. Kuykendall and his partner, Steve Hall, had previously financed a similar “infill conversion project” of Mr. Holliday’s in a similarly troubled neighborhood — West Oakland’s Pacific Cannery Lofts project. Mr. Hall asked the developer to evaluate the Bayview project in 2008, with an eye to starting it up again.

“We didn’t want to leave behind an eyesore,” said Mr. Kuykendall, whose division is responsible for 90 percent of Citigroup’s affordable housing loans, a market segment that F.D.I.C.-insured banks are mandated to serve by the 1977 Community Reinvestment Act. “We knew the Bayview was at a tipping point and that this project could be transformational.”

Mr. Holliday liked what he saw. “After meeting the residents and getting a deeper sense of the place,” he said, “I saw the potential. The Third Street corridor had become the spine of an emerging neighborhood.”

He said the area would have an influx of more than a thousand residents once housing projects nurtured in the downturn by the city’s Redevelopment Agency were finished.

Mr. Holliday hired a new contractor and landscape architect, modified design elements, untangled the liens and reassured neighborhood advocates and retail investors like Tesco. He also added $700,000 to Goldman Sachs’s $20 million equity investment.

Mr. Holliday cultivated relationships with Tanya Holland, the owner of Brown Sugar Kitchen in West Oakland, and Martin and Antonio Castillo, brothers who own Limon Rotisserie, a popular Peruvian restaurant established in the city’s Mission District. In an important step, Mr. Holliday convinced the restaurateurs to buy rather than lease their space and helped them navigate financing.

One longtime Bayview resident, Angelo King, the executive director of the nonprofit Neighborhood Jobs Initiative, recalls when the area near 5800 Third was little more than a long stretch of abandoned warehouses, a shuttered Coca-Cola factory and a methadone clinic. To Mr. King, these changes do not mean gentrification.

“We need to look at how many working-class African American families who do have income leave because they can’t find a middle ground,” he said. “The housing stock here was in disrepair and dilapidated. Further away, it was overpriced.”

Mr. King, who moved into a three-bedroom unit at 5800 Third last September with his wife and two children, said: “We need private development in a post-Redevelopment Agency world of government cutbacks. Here, they’ve built something we can take pride in.”

 

The Real Story with Colleen Edwards

December 17th, 2009 | by KB

askcolleenColleen interviews Rick Holliday of Holliday Development
December 7-11, 2009 (5 part series)

Click on the articles below for summary and podcasts

December 11, 2009 – A new focus in housing is to repurpose underutilized buildings.

December 10, 2009 – What makes lofts so popular?

December 9, 2009 – Building community means creating places for people to gather.

December 8, 2009 – Central Station in West Oakland uses flexible zoning to animate ground floor spaces.

December 7, 2009 – After many years of planning, West Oakland is getting hundreds of new lofts, rentals and row homes

Truckee Railyard Approved

June 23rd, 2009 | by holldev

“An odd thing happened Wednesday night at the Truckee town hall;  the audience that made it through four hours of meeting applauded at the unanimous approval of a development project (the Truckee Railyard Project)”  This is a quote from the Sierra Sun June 19th, 2009 following the City Council meeting held the previous Wednesday evening. Attended and supported by over 100 residents and officials including all previous Truckee mayors, the support to approve the railyard masterplan and EIR was overwhelming, emotional, passionate and straight forward. In addition there was support from a variety of groups including the Mountain Area Preservation Foundation, Truckee Donner Historical Society, Sierra Business Council, Truckee River Watershed Council and the list goes on.

The only challenge to the project was by a group who calls themselves the Friends of Truckee who’s spokesperson is Siobhan Smart, a local business owner. The opposition group was challenged by many including former Mayor Ted Owens who stated, “To the so called and self proclaimed Friends of Truckee..it is my belief you are few in your view and I’ll ask for your support as well”.  Mike Dunsford, a long time Truckee resident said, “Friends of Truckee has a nice ring to if but is sort of a misnomer.”  Lisa Wallace, executive director of the Truckee Watershed Council expressed concern that the threatened lawsuit by Friends of Truckee, which Rick Holliday referred to as them trying to play a game of “gotcha,” could actually hurt the Trout Creek restoration effort by upsetting time sensitive funding that is now in place.

All in all it was a great night for the Town of Truckee and for Holliday Development.  As Mark Tanner correctly stated…..this is not Mr. Hollidays project but it belongs to the people of Truckee.  He is so right!
Background: The Truckee Railyard Master Plan is the culmination of over a decade of planning efforts by the Town, which 5 years ago turned into the Truckee Railyard Partnership between the Town of Truckee and Holliday Development.  This plan was a community wide effort involving innumerable public workshops, community meetings, open office hours, and formal and informal dialogue with stakeholders.  The plan, including 25 developable acres on former Union Pacific property, proposes to extend downtown with a boutique hotel and movie theater, offer more downtown housing at mixed-incomes, commercial, retail, and work-live space.

You can read more about the Truckee Railyard approval at the links below:

Sierra Sun, Railyard Approval Draws Public Support

Sierra Sun Editorial, All Aboard

Tahoe Ticker Blog, Overwhelming Enthusiasm Behind Truckee Railyard Project Passage

HD & CANNON work on Rebuilding Together Oakland house

April 27th, 2009 | by KB

For the past couple of years Holliday Development and Cannon Constructors have paired up to sponsor and work on a house in need for Rebuilding Together Oakland. RTO is nonprofit and primarily works with elderly and disabled people in Oakland who can’t afford to fix their homes. This year we worked on a “Heavy House” meaning it needed lots of skilled work to bring it up to snuff.  With months of preparation, planning and dedication, the house was completed in two days, April 18th and 25th.  Here is what we did:

A handicapped ramp was erected in the the back of the house so the thirteen year old paraplegic boy who lives there could come and go without assistance.  When the ramp was completed and the young man first descended down the ramp there were tears in everyone’s eyes.

The team completed the lath and then plastered and painted the house inside and out.  Some light electrical and carpentry work was also performed, in addition to sloping and tiling a bathroom floor making it wheelchair accessible.

No one knew at the time that the homeowner had worked with an unscrupulous contractor who was picked up by KGO – 7 On Your Side.  They went after the contractor, but the homeowner, Gracie Madden, still did not get her issued addressed.  KGO followed up with her to see how see was doing, and she told them that “RTO is fixing my house”.  KGO plans to cover this event as a “happy ending”.  Regardless if the TV crew shows up or not…it IS a happy ending.  Check out the picture of Gracie and her daughter.  I must say that it was a pleasure working with them.  The sweet potato pie these ladies baked for us was “to die for”!

Pacific Cannery Lofts: SF Biz Times Finalist

April 9th, 2009 | by holldev

Pacific Cannery Loft was chosen as a finalist in the Residential Category Awards by the San Francisco Business Times.  The building was chosen for its location and impact on the community of West Oakland in addition to the incorporation of its industrial features with modern elements.  Also noted were the three large beautifully landscaped courtyards, dog washing station and bicycle lounge.  Developer Rick Holliday  stated that the target market is people who are tired of paying rent and who want to be closer to San Francisco than San Francisco(referring to the 6 minute BART ride from near by West Oakland Bart and the easy access to  freeways in all directions). Come by and take a look at these well designed and well received new lofts.  More information and directions can be viewed on their pclofts.com website.

Truckee Railyard Secures Funds for Enviromental Cleanup

January 14th, 2009 | by holldev

A grant in the sum of $1,585,724.00 has been awarded for the environmental cleanup of the Truckee Railyard.  Holliday Development secured the funds from CCLR (Center for Creative Land Reuse), a non profit organization focused on creating sustainable communities by identifying and implementing responsible patterns of land uses and development.  At this time the funding has been put on hold due to the State of California’s financial crisis but is expected to be released in the near future.  We will keep you posted.  Once released the environmental cleanup of the railyard will begin.

West Oakland Looks to SoMa’s revival model

December 4th, 2008 | by holldev

The Novemeber 21-27 SF Business Times featured an article paralleling the current changes in West Oakland to the revival of the South of Market area of San Francisco in the late 80’s. This neighborhood transformed from an under utilized industrial zone to a booming office and residential district. Rick Holliday had a large hand in the SoMa revival as he developed three of the first San Francisco loft buildings in this area, 601 4th Street , followed by 355 Bryant Street and the Clocktower Lofts on Second Street. Rick and many other developers including Pulte Homes and Bridge Housing believe that West Oakland is on the cusp. Read more

Holliday Development Back in San Francisco…and happy about it.

November 12th, 2008 | by holldev

Goldman Sachs Urban Investment Group has tapped veteran Rick Holliday of Holliday Development to rescue a 340 unit housing project at the former Coca-Cola bottling plant at 5800 3rd St in San Francisco.  The $150 million project’s first phase will include 140 units of housing and the city’s first Fresh and Easy grocery store. Completion is scheduled for a year to 14 months from now.  The building’s podium was 80 percent complete when it was shut down in April due to Noteware Development’s financial troubles.

Back in SF and happy about it.Holliday Development began with lofts in San Francisco and after nine years of focus on the east bay is now glad to be back in the city.  Jesse Blout, managing director of Goldman Sachs Urban Investment Group calls Rick Holliday creative, community minded and experienced.  All in all he has what it takes to successfully develop in a difficult market.  Click here to read the San Francisco Business Times article on this new development.


Rick Holliday Interview in the San Francisco Business Times

October 29th, 2008 | by holldev

An executive profile of Developer Rick Holliday of Holliday Development was published in the October 17 – 23, 2008 edition of the San Francisco Business Times. The tag line on the front page was…”How Bay Area developer Rick Holliday stays aloft”. Many people don’t realize that Rick’s career roots were in affordable housing and that he was the founder of Eden Housing in Hayward and co-founder of BRIDGE housing in San Francisco where he currently serves as Chairman of the Board. After leaving BRIDGE he became one of the first developers to turn in-fill sites into live/work lofts and residential projects in the South of Market area. Having build 16 residential developments throughout the Bay Area Rick is now focused on projects in Truckee, Sacramento, West Oakland and San Francisco. Read Rick’s interview in the SF Business Times by clicking here.