Crabtree Valley Avenue Extension Fading
The proposal for a bypass road on the west side a Crabtree Valley Mall has been debated for 40 years. The middle third of the project, Crabtree Valley Avenue, is complete, but its planned extensions appear to be doomed.
The current recommendation is to finally remove the road from the city’s comprehensive plan. After all this time, the City has not found justification for its existence. Today the City Council recommended pushing the topic back to committee to consider its need with the ensuing developments behind Crabtree. According to Michell Silver’s presentation today, though, it is likely that this road will not be included in the new comprehensive plan for the city.
McCormick & Schmick’s Opening July 10
Sue Stock is reporting that the Crabtree location for McCormick & Schmick’s opens in two weeks on July 10. Keep an eye out for Jake!
Sharper Image Stores Being Liquidated
Engadget is reported last night that Hilco Merchant Resources and Gordon Brothers Retail Partners are liquidating all 86 remaining nationwide Sharper Image stores. This is the same outfit that gutted CompUSA, so expect sales starting at 20-40% off.
This story comes in sharp contrast to the all-is-well-with-Crabtree’s-store news in the TBJ article a week-and-a-half ago.
Crabtree Moving Forward
In the year 2002 there were five malls that opened in the United States. Two of those were in the Triangle. The massive introduction of retail opportunities, especially those offered by Streets at Southpoint , presented Crabtree Valley Mall with their biggest challenge yet. Six years later, the mall is making giant strides toward the high end and the ability to attract regional shoppers.
TBJ reported last week many interesting developments at the mall. New stores coming are Try Sports , Diamonds Direct , Clarks (which will stock children’s shoes as well), Ticknors , Lush , and Teavana . Crabtree & Evelyn will relocate while Coach , American Eagle , Buckle , Foot Locker , Wet Seal , Oakley , Zales , and GameStop are redesigning their stores. In fact, American Eagle’s new design will be the second location using a new prototype.
I am intrigued by the remodeling of Coach. One of my favorite things to pass the time in fine malls has been to step in the Coach store and just smell it. The leather in all of those stores is incredible and the scent takes me back to my beloved baseball glove on hot summer days as a child. Coach opened their Crabtree store in a space adjacent to the Kanki, and sadly, the store has always smelled like Japanese food. I love the Kanki, but I don’t want to smell it in a leather store. When Coach decided to remodel, they moved to a temporary location next to the Disney Store. Unfortunately, their plan is to return to their old spot, right next to the Kanki. Hopefully the new store will have a better ventilation system.
The most interesting aspect of the TBJ article, however, is the revelation by sources that the mall has been in talks with Neiman Marcus . The mall currently has no space for the store. Could this mean that Sears , one of the mall’s few remaining original tenants, is on its way out? Quite possibly. Since the merger of Sears and K Mart , the long-term plans for the company have been muddy . It appears that the company wants to emphasize its free standing Sears Grand and Sears Appliance & Hardware stores, and move away from mall settings. The store does not necessarily jibe with Crabtree’s high-end approach, too.
Another interesting recent development is the redesign of the Crabtree Place development. The birds-eye rendering was pulled from Weingarten Realty’s website, and a very vague street-level rendering is now posted. At one point there was a proposal for Crabtree to expand to the south, bridging its second level over Crabtree Creek to a fifth anchor store. Nordstrom was the subject then, but could Neiman Marcus be in the cards for a connected Crabtree Place? Nothing would surprise me. When Neiman Marcus was added to Atlanta’s Lenox Square mall, the mall grew over to it. I have to add, though, that Neiman Marcus would have been a perfect free-standing anchor for my proposed Crabtree overhaul . (cough cough).
Crabtree will welcome three high end chain restaurants this fall on the parking deck extension between Belk and Barnes & Noble . McCormick & Schmick’s , Brio Tuscan Grille , and Fleming’s Prime Steakhouse and Wine Bar will be joining all-star tenants Cheesecake Factory, P.F. Chang’s and Kanki on the Glenwood frontage. Rumors still abound about the vertical expansion of Barnes & Noble. A two story store actually appears in the artist’s video rendering of the project.
While Crabtree has made some inefficient decisions in recent years, their ability to remain as one of the most highly sought-after malls in the South deserves much praise. They have faced the challenges of newcomers well, and the future looks bright in the valley.
Soleil Slated for 2010
The article this morning by the News & Observer’s Jack Hagel mentions an early 2010 completion date for the Soleil Center. Work is currently being done on the supporting foundation for the 480-foot residential and hotel tower .
Crabtree Place Goes Back to Drawing Board
Last week I noticed that the artist’s rendering for the planned Crabtree Place project disappeared from the Weingarten website . A representative stated:
We no longer plan on building the shopping center as depicted on our website so we have removed rendering so we don’t mislead folks. We are reworking our site plan and elevations and will place a new picture when the time is appropriate.
Here are some of the previous renderings for the project.
Which Will Be Taller?
The Soleil Center and the RBC Plaza are currently under construction and will soon be Raleigh’s tallest two towers. Which will be taller? If you read the News & Observer’s articles (such as today’s " Triangle Skylines Evolve ") you’ll believe a recurring misnomer that Soleil will be taller. The 41-story Soleil Center will be 480 feet tall and will contain hotel and condo floors. The RBC Plaza has a different structure. It will include retail, parking garage, office space, and residential. Its 32 floors will reach 538 feet tall , capped with a 23 foot spire. The difference is in the height of the floors, and hotels and residential traditionally have shorter floors.
The N&O story reads: "What other metropolis would put its tallest building – the 43-story Soleil Center…- in one of its deepest valleys." The word tallest implies sheer height, and the RBC Plaza wins by at least 58 feet. In fact the bulk of the building is going to be 12% taller than the Soleil Center , so it is incorrect to assert that we are "putting" our tallest building at Crabtree.
Sedona Opens Southwestern Options
6/30/08 Note: This restaurant is now closed.
The evolution of Raleigh is fun to watch. When I was young, my parents, who once relocated to Houston for a year, were big fans of Mexican food. Back then Tippy’s Tacos were it; the only thing in town. They dragged me there kicking and screaming and I’d steadily order the corn dog. I didn’t like that weird stuff.
I have evolved and so has Raleigh. I crave Mexican or Southwestern food several times a week and almost never eat corn dogs. My favorite celebrity chef is Rick Bayless, and his PBS show is fantastic. For years the options around here were limited to El Rodeo variants. Jibarra opened the door to finer Mexican dining, and now Sedona gives us another great option.
Tucked away in a jinxed location behind the gas station at Pleasant Valley Promenade ( map it ), Sedona is the new concept by the owners of the site’s former oyster bar restaurant. The oyster bar and bar area occupy the majority of the restaurant’s space and the dining room has been minimally decorated to a southwestern theme.
Chef Michael Juers’ food is the star of this restaurant, though. The dinner menu is varied, yet moderate in length. Eleven entrees offer four seafood dishes and no vegetarian dishes. Four-colored chips are all fried well and come with a delicious red salsa and an interesting tomatillo salsa. I am not a huge fan of tomatillo variant salsas as the primary option, so I was thoroughly satisfied by this delicious option.
During one visit I enjoyed the pork tamales on the lunch menu. The tamales are excellent and come with “Colorado sauce”, which was a dark mole-ish sauce that did not overpower the pork. I am excited to see places offer meats other than chicken and steak in these dishes and this one had me satisfied. We also enjoyed the fat chicken enchiladas which presented a quite “grande” portion for lunch. They, too, are covered in the Colorado sauce.
Dinner was excellent. I had the Skillet Seared Beef Medallions which are coriander-rubbed, goat cheese topped, and sit upon three different chili sauces; green, red, yellow. What I loved about this dish was the variety that the three sauces offer. Each sauce was somewhat light (especially the sweet yellow one), and did not overpower the beef. As I made my way through the meal, I never found myself bored. The dish also comes with a sweet potato version of pommes frites. These were not a success, however, as they were tough and akin to eating cardboard.
Other dishes at the table were the chicken quesadillas (mild and perfect for children) and the chicken chimichangas. The chimichangas were beautifully prepared, sliced and on-ends, but had a strange surprise to the palate. The sauce heavily leaned toward an Italian red sauce. The dish was delicious, it was just almost a fusion type of thing. I can imagine this is not by design.
Another dish at the table was tricolor tortilla battered fried shrimp. This was a flop, though, because the tortillas don’t add enough interesting flavor to the shrimp. It did come with a sweet sauce that I didn’t love (I’m having trouble finding this on the online menu).
Service at one visit was fair while another visit was poor (15 minute wait for drinks and scant refills on drinks and chips). The restaurant was only about 10% full at each visit. Hopefully that will improve because the food deserves it. The menu’s prices are somewhat between the level of El Rodeo and Jibarra, mostly in the $15 range. There is a brunch menu now, though Sedona’s website is unclear as to when this menu is available.
Aside from the excellent food, the restaurant gave me a creepy vibe. This will surely fade as the restaurant fills and the wait staff smoothes out some glitches.
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