Archive for the ‘business plans’ Category

Main Street plaza pitch postponed

Friday, April 30th, 2010

Bastrop, Tx–Bastrop’s Main Street Program leaders postponed presenting a suggestion to the city council April 27 aimed at creating a downtown public plaza to attract visitors and make them more comfortable while sightseeing or shopping in the historic business district.

Main Street Manager Nancy Wood asked Mayor Terry Orr to put off the presentation after some of the planned speakers left the session because it had gone on so long. Orr said he will reschedule a time, earlier in a future council meeting, to hear the Main Street group’s suggestions.

Tuesday’s council session began at 6 p.m. and lasted until past 9:30 p.m.

Public, private interests eye downtown Bastrop lot

Saturday, April 24th, 2010

Bastrop, Tx–The best use for a city-owned site on Main Street is stirring an intense debate which is just beginning to surface in Bastrop.

In September last year the city paid $230,000 for the burned out lot at 923 Main St., mostly for the rear part of the property which extends to Water Street between Water Street Mill Works and The Bastrop Advertiser. The council has had its eye on the property for roughly 10 years because it was deemed key to improving downtown parking and traffic flow in the so-called Alley D in the 900 block between Main and Water Street. City voters approved borrowing to pay for such improvements in 2003.

Buildings which had occupied the Main Street frontage of the property since the 19th century were destroyed by fires in 1980 and again in 2003. Since then the historic street scape has exhibited a notable gap–a cement slab surrounded on three sides by historic brick walls–immediately north of what is now Baxters on Main, a restaurant.

When the city approved buying the property last year, some council members suggested that the Main Street frontage could be resold to a private developer for some commercial use, especially since some of them had been snooping out opportunities there for several years but had been unable to make a deal with the owner.

The current debate is sparked by a rival vision for the property. On Tuesday when the city council meets at 6 p.m. at City Hall, Main Street Project manager Nancy Wood will outline a suggestion to make the vacant area into a public plaza to attract and comfort downtown visitors and other shoppers with benches, shade and public restrooms. The site could also play a role in public festivities, supporters suggest.

Last week Mayor Terry Orr declared that he will resist any move for a council decision on the issue until after a full and open public hearing which has not been scheduled. Interest in the site from private developers remains active, said Council Member Ken Kesselus in an interview last week.

Also last week the Bastrop Economic Development Corp. board declined to take up the issue, though the topic was on its agenda for discussion and possible action. The board agreed to delay any consideration of what future the site might have until the city council has signaled the direction it wants to take.

The politics of a decision may be complicated, but the issue at stake or easy to grasp. Will the city be better served by developing the vacant space on Main Street as a public amenity or by selling it for private development to boost the property tax roll and stimulate new commercial activity?

New office building tops county construction plans

Saturday, April 24th, 2010

Bastrop, Tx–Bastrop County officials this week formally published notice that they plan to borrow $10.8 million to finance a variety of projects including a new office building, road and bridge improvements and technology upgrades.

The plan is to issue certificates of obligation, a form of bond debt obligation which does not require prior voter approval. More than half the total, some $5.5 million, is earmarked for the county’s four road and bridge precincts. Specific projects are not identified in public documents immediately available for review.

The next largest project is a proposed $4 million office building on Jackson Street to house operations of the tax assessor’s office and the county’s development services department. The county already owns the site on the east of Jackson near the county jail and Bastrop Central Appraisal District offices. Construction could begin later this year, an official said.

The tax assessor presently operates out of the Courthouse Annex at 804 Pecan St. in Bastrop. Development Services is housed in the former Kershaw & Jenkins law offices at 802 Water St. across the street from the main Courthouse complex.

The remaining bond funds will go for technology improvements, mostly emergency service and jail communications, as well as a communications tower site in the Rosanky area.

Chestnut Street projects spark new development plans

Tuesday, April 6th, 2010

Bastrop, Tx–Ongoing public works construction projects on Chestnut Street are setting additional private development dreams in motion, including a modest barbecue restaurant and an ambitious arts center immediately west of the Union Pacific rail line and almost next door to a new city hall and convention center.

Steve Cartwright is opening a small barbecue restaurant in part of the Star Mart convenience store at Chestnut and Haysel Street. Remodeling work is underway and the opening is planned for early May.

Cartwright operated a popular barbecue restaurant in the 900 block of Main Street beginning in the late 1980s and later built and sold the current Cartwright BBQ on Texas 71. A non compete clause in the sales agreement for that enterprise is expiring, he said in an interview this week. He plans to open his new venture with a basic barbecue menu, a few tables and takeout service, he said.

Meanwhile, immediately across Chestnut to the north, Clyde Clardy said he has agreed to sell the site and its metal-clad 19th century building of 12,000 square feet to a local arts group which hopes to redevelop the the property as an art center with studios, teaching space and display galleries. Presently used as an auto repair facility, the main building dates to the 1890s or earlier and was formerly used to house a cotton gin, cotton seed storage and still later a grain storage facility beside the rail depot.

Clardy, who has owned the property since 1970, said the transaction has up to a year to close. He would not comment on the agreed sales price, put by one unconfirmed source at $400,000.

The non profit Bastrop Fine Arts Guild has been raising funds for a few years with the goal of establishing a downtown gallery and related arts facilities. The group will hold its major annual fund raising gala, An Artful Afternoon, on April 17 in Bastrop.

Owners of other Chestnut Street properties, including the Star Mart and the former coin operated laundry at Chestnut and Hill Street, also report being approached in recent weeks by property shoppers interested in the area and its redevelopment potential.

The Bastrop Economic Development Corp. is paying for utility, sidewalk and landscaping upgrades along Chestnut from Water Street to the railroad. That work could be finished as early as June.

City voters approved building a new city hall in 2003 and work began early this year. The building should be finished and occupied before year’s end. The convention center, which will be largely paid for with hotel room rent taxes, is expected to open early in 2011.