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Fashionable
Address
Rival apparel mart
signs first clients in bid to lure design industry downtown
Dallas Market Center doubts the site's merits despite tenant interest
Dallas Morning News, The
(TX)
August 14, 2003
Author: STEVE BROWN; Real Estate Editor
Edition: SECOND
Section: BUSINESS
Page: 1D
About two dozen fashion wholesalers have leased space in downtown Dallas
to create an apparel showroom center.
The
group, called the Fashion Industry Guild, will take about a third of the
recently renovated Southwestern Plaza office building at 1807 Ross Ave.
The
leases represent one of the largest industry expansions in years for the
central business district. Some of the showrooms will be new to Dallas,
but most are relocating from the Dallas Market Center on Stemmons
Freeway.
Developer
Brook Partners - which owns the building that formerly housed
Southwestern Life Insurance Co. - plans to have the first phase of the
100,000-square-foot apparel mart open by January.
"This
is a whole industry that's coming to downtown - not just another
tenant," said Brook Partners CEO John Sughrue.A group of showroom
owners began scouting the downtown area for a new location months ago.
Their earlier plan to move into the historic Mercantile National Bank
fell through.
Now
the same group plus a few others have signed on in Southwestern Plaza
and plan to create a small, independent apparel mart.
"We
will be the boutique hotel version of the fashion market center,"
Mr. Sughrue said.
Federico
Mariel, who's operated his fashion showroom at the Dallas Market Center
for 18 years, said the independent showrooms want to broaden the options
for retail buyers who visit Dallas.
"We're
going to offer a different shopping experience and attract the same
buyer" as the Dallas Market Center, Mr. Mariel said.
The
23 showrooms will show dozens of fashion lines, including Trina Turk,
Tracy Reese, Rebecca Bruce, Tommassini, Puma, Ya-Ya, Me & Ro, Wasabi,
Hat Attack, Vitamina Jeans, Central Park West, Nicole Miller and Tommy
Bahama.
Mr.
Sughrue said his firm is negotiating with an additional 10 to 20
showrooms that have expressed an interest in the building.
Peter
Rauch, who represents the Tommy Bahama apparel line, said that a second
fashion mart should bring more buyers to Dallas, just as a similar
concept has done in Los Angeles.
"The
biggest challenge for the independent showrooms in this business is the
buyers have so many opportunities," Mr. Rauch said. "There's
New York, and L.A. and Chicago, Atlanta and Las Vegas.
"Our
goal today is try to win more of them back to Dallas by offering
something different," he said.
The
showroom operators said their decision to set up a small fashion mart
shouldn't be characterized as a revolt from the much larger Dallas
Market Center.
"This
core group started looking months ago," said showroom owner Suzanne
Collier. "We needed a better venue because our buyers were going
elsewhere to shop. We needed to give them something new."
The
location of the Southwestern Plaza building - between the Fairmont Hotel
and the Dallas Museum of Art - is a radical change from the Stemmons
Freeway locale of the current wholesale district.
"It
was the location and the quality of the space - more than anything -
that convinced this group to make the move," said Lyle Burgin of
Brook Partners.
Brook
Partners began redeveloping the 1807 Ross building three years ago with
an eye toward turning it into a high-tech center.
When
the dot-com and telecom market burned out, the owners converted the
five-level building into multi-use office space. About two-thirds of the
building will still be used for general office tenants.
The
new fashion mart will occupy the lower two levels and part of the
basement. A three-story stairway will connect the showrooms.
The
showrooms will occupy about 80,000 square feet with 20,000 square feet
set aside for seasonal, temporary display space.
The
park in front of the building at Ross and Akard Street is also getting a
makeover. The public plaza will be named for Dallas businessman Henry S.
Beck Jr., whose family's Beck Group general contracting firm occupies
the top floor of Southwestern Plaza.
Special
events
"We
will be able to create special events in the park associated with our
trade shows," Mr. Burgin said. "We see it as an extension of
the common area space."
Business
owners in the area said they welcome the prospect of retail buyers
coming to downtown. "This will give us an additional ability to
market Dallas," said Frank Naboulsi, general manager of the
Fairmont Hotel. "It will help revitalize the downtown core."
Brandt
Wood, whose company operates several restaurants and entertainment
venues downtown, said the fashion center will add to pedestrian traffic.
"This
is probably second in importance only to the new Nasher sculpture garden
in terms of the cultural contribution it could make to downtown,"
Mr. Wood said.
Competitor's
doubts
Operators
of the much larger and competing Dallas Market Center disputed the
notion that fashion buyers would want to spend extra time downtown.
"Buyers want one-stop shopping - an efficient place with lots of
parking," said Cole Daugherty, public relations director for the
Dallas Market Center.
Mr.
Daugherty said the new downtown fashion market could wind up as a
"hodgepodge" and that "it doesn't hang together very
well."
The
Dallas Market Center is in the midst of a $20 million,
1-million-square-foot project to remodel part of the World Trade Center.
It announced earlier this year that it will close the landmark
International Apparel Mart and consolidate the fashion showrooms into
its largest wholesale market building. FashionCenterDallas is scheduled
for completion in first-quarter 2004.
"We
are marching ahead with our project. We have 600 tenants and thousands
of lines," Mr. Daugherty said. "We have a 40-year history in
the apparel business here."
He
said independent wholesalers who are moving downtown have been
"walking up and down our halls" trying to solicit tenants.
"The
barriers of entry to opening up a comprehensive marketplace are
incredibly high," Mr. Daugherty said. "You just
can't open up the doors and hope people show up."
E-mail
stevebrown@dallasnews.com
Caption:
MAP(S): (Staff graphic) DALLAS - Downtown - Southwestern Plaza 1807 Ross
Ave.; Parking garage. CHART(S): A FEW OF THE LINES GOING DOWNTOWN:
PHOTO(S): (Brook Partners) The Fashion Industry Guild will move into
Southwestern Plaza at Ross Avenue and Akard Street. The first phase of
the 100,000-square-foot project should be open by January.
Copyright
2003 The Dallas Morning News
Record Number: 4511327
REPRINTED WITH PERMISSION OF THE DALLAS MORNING NEWS
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