The first official image of the Boise Sports Park proposal submitted to a city agency. Image from Boise Planning & Development Services website.
After more than a year of public debate, the proposal to build a downtown Boise stadium became official April 24 with the first government filing for the project at Shoreline Drive and Americana Boulevard.
Greenstone Properties of Atlanta, filing as Greenstone Boise LLC, applied with the city of Boise Planning & Development Services to rezone 11.05 acres from C-2D General Commercial and R-OD Residential Office to C-5D Central Business District to allow for the construction of a 5,000-seat stadium and assorted residential, office, commercial and garage development.
The developer seeks to have the Boise Planning & Zoning Commission consider the rezoning at its June 4 or June 11 meetings.
For more than a year, Greenstone has described the proposed details for the project. The city filing is the company’s first official statement describing the plan.
The Boise Sports Park stadium would have 5,000 fixed seats for baseball and, with additional temporary bleachers, 7,500 seats for soccer.
The project proposes 120,000 square feet of office and a 700-space garage behind the right field wall in the baseball configuration and 60 multifamily units along the left field wall. These apartments or condos would be behind a goal in the soccer configuration.
Another 240 apartments and 40,000 square feet of retail are penciled in between American Boulevard and the Boise River. There would be 20,000 square feet of retail behind the third base line bleachers.
The project still has several steps to go through before final city approval, with public comment opportunities at each step along the way.
More than 300 people showed up at a neighborhood meeting staged by attorney Geoff Wardle (center) regarding a stadium project at Americana Boulevard and Shoreline Drive. Photo by Teya Vitu.
The developer of a proposed 11-acre downtown Boise stadium-office-commercial-residential complex will make the first official submission to the city of Boise for the project by April 24.
That date is the deadline to submit applications for the June 4 and June 11 Boise Planning & Zoning Commission meetings.
Greenstone Properties will ask to rezone the property owned at Americana Boulevard and Shoreline Drive that the Atlanta-based developer expects to acquire from St. Luke’s Health System in October.
Although this downtown stadium proposal has been publicly discussed by the developer and several government entities for more than a year, this is the first official submission for the project to a government entity to gain government approvals for the project.
Greenstone wants to rezone five lots at Americana and Shoreline to C-5 Central Business District “for activities conducive to a compact and concentrated urban downtown commercial center,” according to the city’s zoning districts document.
Geoff Wardle, a Boise attorney representing Greenstone, said the properties are now zoned C-2 General Commercial and R-O Residential Office. He noted the nearby Fairview and Main corridor that the city calls the West End has been rezoned C-5.
C-5 zoning allows for a wide range of development including the elements specific to Greenstone’s proposal: office, parking structure, multiple-family dwellings (apartments), outdoor recreation facilities and planned development.
If the city approves rezoning the property, Greenstone can proceed to design review, the next step on the way to a building permit. Each step involves public hearings.
“This is the first of several applications,” Wardle said.
Wardle on April 17 conducted a neighborhood meeting in the parking lot at Americana/Shoreline that drew more than 300 people. All of the attendees who asked Wardle questions were opposed to the proposed location of the stadium. Nobody spoke from the baseball or soccer communities, which overwhelming supported the stadium and location last year at open houses about the project.
The neighborhood meeting is a city requirement before a developer can apply to rezone a property.
Stadium opponents challenge the stadium location and cite concerns about noise pollution, light pollution and the intention to use a potential $27 million in Capital City Development Corp. bonds to build the $40 million stadium.
“The No. 1 issue is that the location is not appropriate,” said Bob Mayer, a West Bench resident who carried a placard reading “Bieter Boisexit. No Stadium. I condem (sic) the developer and ‘Bieter-offer’.” “You look at the infrastructure around here. (The roads are) already congested. It’s not a good place to do this. It should go where they are doing it now (Memorial Stadium in Garden City). It should be in Meridian.”
At the suggestion of Boise Mayor David Bieter, triggered by an unnamed individual, Greenstone managing member Chris Schoen did explore a land swap that would have College of Western Idaho open a Boise campus at Americana/Shoreline, and would have Schoen build his stadium-commercial-retail-residential complex at CWI’s Main Street and Whitewater Park Boulevard property.
But that plan seems unlikely to move ahead.
“Neither party is in a position to facilitate the exchange,” Wardle said. “The (St. Luke’s) property is under contract. We’re now moving forward with this.”
Wardle said the Greenstone team has discussed the land swap with CWI officials, but CWI President Bert Glandon has said no formal proposal has been brought to the CWI Board of Trustees, and no decision has been considered regarding the land swap.
Glandon characterized any land swap talks as “hallway conversations,” “very casual” “with absolutely no detail.”
Greenstone expects to apply for design review later in summer, with anticipated construction in 2019. The 5,000-fixed-seat stadium would be ready for the 2020 soccer and minor league baseball seasons, Wardle said.
Boise is on the short list to land a United Soccer League minor league soccer team if a stadium is ready, league officials have said for the past two years.
The properties include the St. Luke’s Business Center, formerly a Kmart, the Shoreline Center and all the land bounded by Americana, Shoreline, Spa Street and 14th Street.
Greenstone proposed to build the 5,000-plus-seat stadium overlooked by a four-story, 60-unit apartment-and-retail structure and a 150,000-square-foot office building. Between Americana and the Boise River, Greenstone managing partner Chris Schoen wants to build 40,000 square feet of retail and 240 apartments.
Greenstone, Agon Sports and Entertainment, which owns the Boise Hawks baseball team, and St. Luke’s Health System since March 2017 have had an agreement for St. Luke’s to sell five lots adding up to 11. The sale is expected to close in October.
Developers take first official step to build downtown Boise stadium. Image from Boise Planning and Development Services.
Developer Chris Schoen considered moving his proposed downtown stadium to the College of Western Idaho site near the river, but he has now shifted back to his original Americana Boulevard/Shoreline Drive site.
Atlanta-based Greenstone Properties, where Schoen is managing partner, will have a neighborhood meeting on the proposal April 17 at 6:30 p.m. in the parking lot of the St. Luke’s Business Center, 688 S. Americana Blvd.
The neighborhood meeting is a city requirement before a developer can apply to rezone a property. The move is Greenstone’s first official step to gain government approvals for the project.
At the suggestion of Boise Mayor David Bieter, triggered by an unnamed individual, Schoen explored a land swap that would have CWI open a Boise campus at Americana/Shoreline, and would have Schoen build his stadium-commercial-retail-residential complex at CWI’s Main Street and Whitewater Park Boulevard property.
Schoen did not immediately respond to request for comment from the Idaho Business Review.
“The property is under contract,” Boise attorney Geoff Wardle, who is representing Greenstone, said of the Americana/Shoreline property, which is owned by St. Luke’s Health System. “We’re now moving forward with this.”
The neighborhood meeting comes more than a year after Greenstone committed to the Americana/Shoreline site.
Wardle said Greenstone expects to apply “soon” for a Boise Planning & Zoning Commission hearing to rezone five lots at Americana and Shoreline to C-5 Central Business District “for activities conducive to a compact and concentrated urban downtown commercial center,” according to the city’s zoning districts document.
Wardle said the properties are now zoned C-2 General Commercial and R-O Residential Office. He noted the nearby Fairview and Main corridor that the city calls the West End has been rezoned C-5.
C-5 zoning allows for a wide range of development including the elements specific to Greenstone’s proposal: office, parking structure, multiple-family dwellings (apartments), outdoor recreation facilities and planned development.
If the city approves rezoning the property, Greenstone can proceed to design review, the next step on the way to a building permit. Each step involves public hearings.
“This is the first of several applications,” Wardle said.
Greenstone expects to apply for design review later in summer with anticipated construction in 2019 to have a 5,000-fixed-seat stadium ready for the 2020 soccer and minor league baseball seasons, Wardle said.
Boise is on the short list to land a United Soccer League minor league soccer team if a stadium is ready, league officials have said for the past two years.
The properties include the St. Luke’s Business Center, formerly a Kmart, the Shoreline Center and all the land bounded by Americana, Shoreline, Spa Street and 14th Street.
Greenstone proposed to build the 5,000-plus-seat stadium overlooked by a four-story, 60-unit apartment-and-retail structure and a 150,000-square-foot office building. Between Americana and the Boise River, Greenstone managing partner Chris Schoen wants to build 40,000 square feet of retail and 240 apartments.
Greenstone, Agon Sports and Entertainment, which owns the Boise Hawks baseball team, and St. Luke’s Health System since March 2017 have had an agreement for St. Luke’s to sell five lots adding up to 11. The sale is expected to close in October.
Two downtown Boise sites are under consideration for a soccer/baseball stadium. Image courtesy of Greenstone Properties.
The owners of the Boise Hawks baseball team would like to have a downtown Boise stadium ideal for soccer and baseball ready for the United Soccer League season starting in spring 2020.
The open questions: Where would a downtown stadium be built and when would construction start?
The only agreed-to date in play right now is October, at which time the sale is set to close on the 11-acre St. Luke Health System property at Americana Boulevard and Shoreline Drive to Greenstone Properties.
Greenstone managing director Chris Schoen has proposed for that site a 5,000-fixed-seat soccer/baseball stadium and accompanying commercial-retail-residential complex. Schoen remains confident a stadium will be complete in time for the 2020 soccer and baseball seasons.
But since November, at the encouragement of Boise Mayor David Bieter, Schoen has considered moving his project to the proposed College of Western Idaho Boise campus site at Main Street and Whitewater Park Boulevard. That’s when someone suggested to Bieter that Schoen and CWI swap properties. The mayor presented the idea to Schoen and CWI President Bert Glandon.
Schoen warmed up to the idea of moving his $70 million stadium-residential-office-retail project to the CWI site, but in early March was still evaluating the CWI site.
“For the CWI site to move forward requires the involvement of a major foundation,” Schoen said in an email. “The mayor is on board but waiting on the determination from the foundation.” He didn’t elaborate on what role a foundation would play at the CWI site.
Glandon also warmed up to the Idaho of possibly moving the CWI Boise campus to the former Kmart building that now houses the St. Luke’s Business Center at Americana and Shoreline.
Glandon said with the 2016 failure of a bond election, he does not foresee construction starting on a Boise campus for five years. The St. Luke’s property would give CWI an existing campus.
But Schoen has made no formal presentation to the CWI Board of Trustees, Glandon noted. CWI has not evaluated the St. Luke site for how it would work out as a community college campus.
“Nothing is going to be quick,” Glandon said. “Is this going to be sustainable for us in the long term?…Until we have some detail, that’s a lot of work to figure out ‘what if.’ Until we have more substantive detail to decide (on the matter), we’re neutral on everything.”
Last fall, Schoen that indicated a $1 million-plus deposit to secure a USL team was expected in November, and when the CWI idea surfaced, Schoen indicated a property swap with CWI would need to be “buttoned up” in 30 days.
Schoen is in close touch with USL and he is co-owner of the Boise Hawks baseball team, which would also play at the downtown stadium.
USL wants a team in Boise. USL currently has 33 teams with six more announced and intentions for 2020 to be the last year for league expansion, though teams in Chicago and Oakland may come onboard after that. The league is one rung below Major League Soccer, the top U.S. professional soccer league.
This 10-acre site is now identified as the home of a future College of Western Idaho campus on the west side of downtown Boise. Developer Chris Schoen would like to use the site for a sports stadium, exchanging it for a site closer to downtown that CWI could use as its campus. Photo by Anne Wallace Allen.
“Boise continues to be a market of great interest to the USL, checking off several boxes that we look for in an expansion city,” USL officials said in a prepared statement. “We are finalizing the deal with the ownership group, which includes details on a venue development.”
Even though CWI has not been formally approached about a property swap, Schoen, who is under contract to buy the St. Luke’s property, would like to close the St. Luke sale in October and “simultaneously swap a portion of it in exchange for the entirety of the CWI site.” He said the CWI site does not require rezoning and does not require the creation of a new urban renewal zone, so it would be possible to start construction in 2018.
Nampa-based CWI leases several locations in Boise. Talk of a property swap comes just as a couple lease extensions are pending with most the other Boise leases up in two or three years, Glandon said.
“The board of trustees remains committed to finding the most efficient and sustainable Boise property we can,” Glandon said. “We welcome any interested property owner to make a presentation.”
The St. Luke’s property at Americana offers 138,573 square feet in four buildings. This includes the former 95,000-square-foot Kmart building that now houses the St. Luke’s Business Center and includes all the land bounded by Americana, Shoreline, Spa Street and 14th Street along with the 31,373-square-foot Shoreline Center property across Shoreline Drive and the former Beehive Salon (1,200 square feet) and Total Woman Fitness (11,000 square feet).
Schoen initially proposed for the St. Luke’s site a 5,000-fixed-seat stadium overlooked by a four-story, 60-unit apartment-and-retail structure and a 150,000-square-foot office building. Between Americana and the Boise River, he outlined 40,000 square feet of retail and 240 apartments.
“It would be a similar program to the other site: office, retail, residential and other potential uses that would provide TIF revenue to pay back the city bonds,” Schoen said. “Same strategies, same basic components. That site has good advantages. (It has) better visibility from the major arteries into town and better access. Disadvantage is it is not as close to the center city and not as walkable.”
Schoen seeks a $27 million bond from the Capital City Development Corp., the city’s urban renewal agency, that would be funded with tax-increment financing paid back with increased property tax revenue from the project.
Boise State seeks a baseball stadium site on campus
Boise State University is considering several sites to build an on-campus baseball stadium. Photo by Teya Vitu.
Boise State University turned down a chance to field its new baseball team in 2020 in the downtown stadium in favor of building its own baseball stadium on campus.
The university is evaluating several on-campus locations to build a baseball stadium, but no timeline is in place to select a site or start construction, sports information director Joe Nickell said.
“We would hope to have something in place for the first season in 2020,” Nickell said. “We’re not going to rush into anything to make sure we have something by 2020.”
If the Boise State baseball stadium is not ready for the 2020 season, the university will find an alternate baseball stadium on a temporary basis, he said.
A stadium size, design, cost and funding all depend on selecting a stadium site. Boise State hopes to establish a location and start construction “as soon as possible,” but Nickell stressed there is no defined timeline.
Boise State on Oct. 26 walked away from a proposed public-private soccer/baseball stadium at Shoreline Drive and Americana Boulevard with Boise State President Bob Kustra insisting the nascent baseball team should play on the university campus.
The university expects to have a timeline for site selection and building a stadium ready to present to the Idaho State Board of Education in June, Boise State spokesman Greg Hahn said.
Developer Chris Schoen is considering building his downtown Boise stadium at this site at Main Street and Whitewater Park Boulevard. File photo.
Downtown Boise soccer/baseball stadium developer Chris Schoen has warmed up to the idea of moving his $70 million stadium-residential-office-retail project to the proposed College of Western Idaho campus site at Main Street and Whitewater Park Boulevard.
An anonymous suggestion last fall to Boise Mayor David Bieter floated the idea of CWI swapping its 10.33-acre Whitewater Park property alongside the Boise River for the 11-acre St. Luke’s Business Center property at Americana and Shoreline Drive.
St. Luke’s is observing from the sidelines.
“We are still under contract to sell Shoreline to Greenstone,” St. Luke’s spokeswoman Anita Kissée said. “From our perspective, nothing is different.”
The sale is scheduled to close in October, she added. Greenstone Properties is an Atlanta real estate development company where Schoen is a managing director.
Schoen and CWI President Bert Glandon were both willing to explore the swap, while the stadium opposition group Concerned Boise Taxpayers still opposes using public funding for a stadium without a public vote.
Meanwhile, Schoen is focusing on the feasibility of the CWI site.
“Yes, we are still pursuing the CWI site,” Schoen told the Idaho Business Review. “We hope to make a determination in the next two to three weeks.”
Schoen initially proposed for the St. Luke’s site a 5,000-plus-seat stadium overlooked by a four-story, 60-unit apartment-and-retail structure and a 150,000-square-foot office building. Between Americana and the Boise River, he outlined 40,000 square feet of retail and 240 apartments.
“It would be a similar program to the other site: office, retail, residential and other potential uses that would provide TIF revenue to pay back the city bonds,” Schoen said. “Same strategies, same basic components. That site has good advantages. The St. Luke’s site has good advantages.”
Schoen seeks a $27 million bond from the Capital City Development Corp., the city’s urban renewal agency that would be funded with tax-increment financing paid back with increased property tax revenue from the project.
Boise Sports Park could have apartments overlooking left field, offices overlooking right field and a music venue beyond center field. Image courtesy of city of Boise.
Terms of a master development agreement for a downtown Boise stadium and mixed-use commercial, housing and office complex at Shoreline Drive and Americana Boulevard should be in place by the end of the year, according to city officials and the developer.
This Boise Sports Park agreement would spell out conditions and guarantees regarding the private development and lease payments for the proposed stadium.
Atlanta developer Greenstone Properties proposes to build the 5,000-plus-seat stadium overlooked by a four-story, 60-unit apartment-and-retail structure and a 150,000-square-foot office building. Between Americana and the Boise River, Greenstone managing partner Chris Schoen wants to build 40,000 square feet of retail and 240 apartments.
Chris Schoen
The terms under negotiation include the donation of the stadium land valued at $5 million by Greenstone; proof of financing for the accompanying private development; and terms of how Greenstone would cover a gap if the taxes generated by the private development do not reach the required $1 million in annual tax revenue.
The objective is for Greenstone’s $1 million lease payment and the $1 million expected in taxes from the private development to pay the annual debt payments on the proposed $27 million public body to build the stadium, said Nic Miller, the Boise economic development director.
The master development agreement would nail down a public-private partnership that would have Greenstone lease the stadium for 20 years. After that time, the city of Boise would take over stadium ownership.
Schoen is starting traffic, noise and lighting studies for the 11 acres at Shoreline Drive and Americana Boulevard that he is under contract to buy from St. Luke’s Health System.
Schoen expects to submit documents in January or February to start the zoning and entitlement process toward a building permit that will include several public comment periods. He wants to start construction on the stadium and office/apartment/commercial buildings in October or November to have a stadium ready for the 2020 United Soccer League season.
That timeline is realistic, Miller said.
He added that Schoen has met with neighborhood and business groups many times.
“He’s taking it on,” Miller said. “He knows what kind of opposition he’s facing. He’s talking to a lot of people in town.”
Miller anticipates a $27 million bond issued by the Capital City Development Corp. to finance stadium construction, estimated at $36 million. The parties are negotiating now to determine how much money Schoen will have to put forward before a bond is issued.
Schoen is proposing $60 million to $90 million in privately financed development around the stadium.
The city intends to commit $3 million to stadium construction. No official dollar figure is in play from the Greater Boise Auditorium District but it is anticipated the district will consider $5 million, and Schoen will pay $1 million.
“Probably at the end of December or first of January we will have a master development and stadium licensing agreement in concept,” Schoen said.
That would allow Schoen to make a deposit in excess of $1 million to secure a USL soccer team. USL is a 30-team minor league just one rung below Major League Soccer, the top U.S. professional soccer league.
Opposition and rebuttal
In an earlier interview, Sean Garretson, owner of Pegasus Development in Austin, Texas, questioned the feasibility of a 5,000-seat stadium and surrounding mixed-use office, residential and commercial complex at Shoreline and Americana. Garretson was hired by Concerned Boise Taxpayers, the most organized opposition to a publicaly financed stadium. The group is co-chaired by Gary Michael, former CEO of Albertsons, and Bill Ilett, former managing partner of the Idaho Stampede.
Sean Garretson
“As an urban planner, I love the concept. It’s just highly speculative and risky,” Garretson said in October. “What can the market support (in regard to the proposed housing, retail and office components)? It’s a question I have.”
Schoen intends to have some office and commercial tenant leases in place before construction starts.
“We already met with corporations to be in a position to do pre-leasing,” Schoen said.
The city of Boise conducted a public stadium survey online and at three open houses that drew 906 responses. City spokesman Mike Journee said 76 percent were positive feedback, 22 percent negative feedback and 2 percent neutral with 727 surveys turned in online, 152 at the open houses and 27 by email.
According to its website, Concerned Boise Taxpayers opposes the stadium project because Boise is overtaxed; the stadium bond is risky; there are stadium project problems elsewhere; “the demand isn’t there;” and there is an existing baseball stadium at the Ada County Fairgrounds. The group says it has 1,000 supporters between its email list, member list and Facebook followers.
The Concerned Boise Taxpayers and Garretson don’t see any certainty that the Boise Hawks baseball team, where Schoen is co-owner, and a potential United Soccer League high-tier minor league professional soccer team will be successful or that a soccer team is a certainty.
“Is it a given the Boise Hawks will have an attendance increase? I don’t know,” said Garretson, a former vice chairman of the Austin Urban Renewal Authority. “USL, they don’t have that. It’s very speculative.”
The USL and Schoen insist Boise is on track to get a USL team if a stadium is ready for 2020.
“We have a definitive agreement with the USL,” Schoen said. “We’re going to have to be able to prove to them we have a venue to play in.”
“Boise remains a desired market for the next and final phase of USL Expansion,” USL spokesman Leonard Santiago said in October.“At this time, USL approval primarily hinges on a successful outcome for the stadium development project under consideration.”
Critics contend a new stadium should be built where the existing Memorial Stadium is or somewhere closer to the center of the valley. Critics believe the Boise Sports Park site is awkwardly located.
Schoen counters with the stadium’s location near the Boise River Greenbelt and half mile from Grove Plaza.
“The stadium is going to be attractive because it’s super easy to get to,” Schoen said.
Boise Sports Park could have apartments overlooking left field, offices overlooking right field and a music venue beyond center field. Image courtesy of the city of Boise.
Public and private entities have their sights set on having a downtown stadium ready for Boise Hawks baseball and professional soccer by 2020.
The Boise City Council on Sept. 26 instructed city staff to assemble a financial and legal framework to establish a public-private partnership with Atlanta-based Greenstone Properties. Greenstone managing director Chris Schoen proposes building an 11-plus-acre complex of offices, residential and retail anchored by 5,000-plus-seat Boise Sports Park.
The Capital City Development Corp. expects to create a new Shoreline urban renewal district late in 2018 that would include the Shoreline Drive and Americana Boulevard area where the Boise Sports Park stadium is proposed. The urban renewal district would be the source of bond financing for the estimated $40 million stadium, and CCDC would own the stadium until the bond is paid off, CCDC Executive Director John Brunelle said.
Schoen hopes to have a public-private partnership in place with the city by November, at which time a deposit of ore than $1 million is due to land a United Soccer League team for Boise. USL President Jake Edwards has indicated a keen interest in having a Boise team.
Chris Schoen
Schoen hopes to start stadium construction in a little over a year, with the stadium opening in 2020. Boston-based International Stadia Design is designing the Boise Sports Park to be configured for both baseball and soccer.
Schoen also is co-owner of the Boise Hawks, but he and Hawks co-owner Jeff Eiseman are even more bullish about soccer. Atlanta-based Agon Sports & Entertainment is the ownership entity for the Hawks and Augusta Greenjackets minor league baseball team in Georgia.
“We really think that’s the best (soccer) league we can bring to the market,” Schoen said. ”Soccer is growing up nationally. Boise has seen some of that.”
Schoen cited the three high-profile Treasure Valley soccer matches in the past two years: The Basque Friendly that filled Albertsons Stadium with Idaho’s first international soccer match in 2015; The Portland Timbers T2 minor league soccer match that filled to overflowing the Rocky Mountain High School stadium in Meridian in 2016; and the indoor soccer match featuring the U.S. national arena soccer team that sold out CenturyLink Arena in August even with the game announced just days before kickoff.
“I think soccer is going to be more successful than baseball,” Schoen said. “Soccer fans can be rabid. We can image a procession marching from downtown to the stadium.”
Schoen’s initial concept proposes a stadium with variable seating from 5,000 to 6,500 seats.
“It’s really built for soccer and it’s also built for baseball,” Schoen said.
He initially plans a four-story structure at the left field wall with retail facing the stadium and the street and 60 apartments above. In the soccer configuration, this building would be behind a goal.
In right field, Schoen plans a 150,000-square-foot office building.
The stadium would be built on the site of a former Kmart that is now home to the St. Luke’s Business Center at Shoreline Drive and Americana Boulevard. Schoen is under contract to purchase 11 acres from St. Luke’s Health System including properties on both sides of Shoreline, Americana and Spa Street.
Between Americana and the Boise River, Schoen expects to build 40,000 square feet of retail and 240 apartments.
Schoen made presentations of the initial conceptual plan to the Boise City Council, Greater Boise Auditorium District and Boise Metro Chamber of Commerce during the last week of September.
“These plans will change,” Schoen stresses, reminding audiences these are early conceptual idea. “We are still in the planning stages.”
The city of Boise brought on Jay Lenhardt, principal at Dallas-based Conventions, Sports & Leisure International (CSL), to do an independent study on the Boise Sports Park. CSL did a stadium study for Boise in 2011 but no project was on the table at that time. CSL previously did studies for the Boise Centre East expansion and the Stueckle Sky Center at Albertsons Stadium.
“We strongly suggest this is a project worth pursuing,” Lenhardt told community leaders. “The facility will help ensure long-term viability of the Boise Hawks. It will also help secure a professional sports franchise.”
Greenstone has experience mixing stadiums with retail, office, residential
Agon Sports and Entertainment bought the Boise Hawks baseball team in 2014 with the firm acknowledgment that a new stadium would have to be built.
Boise Sports Park developer Chris Schoen envisions a large plaza outside the stadium. Image courtesy of the city of Boise.
Agon partners Chris Schoen and Jeff Eiseman – through Schoen’s Greenstone Properties – are now building a similar mixed-use stadium, office, retail complex in North Augusta, Georgia, for the other minor league baseball team they own, the Augusta Greenjackets.
Schoen in a prior partnership built a baseball stadium in a mixed-use setting in Fort Wayne, Indiana. Prior to joining Greenstone Properties, Schoen was CEO at Barry Real Estate Companies in Atlanta from 1996 to 2010 and Hardball Capital from 2005 to 2011. The latter company owned the baseball teams in Fort Wayne, Salem, Virginia; and Savanna, Georgia.
While at Barry, Schoen developed the 29-story Pinnacle at Symphony Place in downtown Nashville in 2010; the 28-story W Hotel in Alan Plaza in Atlanta with 237 hotel rooms and 76 residence that opened in 2008; and the 11-story One Federal Place office building in Birmingham, Alabama in 2002. In Fort Wayne in 2009, Schoen developed the 6,500-seat Parkview Field that is part of the Harrison Square mixed-use development. The project includes a 249-room hotel and a four-story residential-and-office building overlooking left field in the stadium. Boise Mayor David Bieter, city economic development director Nic Miller, Capital City Development Corp. Commissioner Dana Zuckerman and Derick O’Neill, director of Boise Planning & Development Services, visited Fort Wayne in early September.
In North Augusta, construction recently started on the 4,300-seat SRP Park set to open in April. The stadium is part of the $195 million Project Jackson, a Greenstone development that includes a 180-room Crown Plaza hotel, 280 apartments and 24 additional units overlooking the stadium’s left field, a 125-unit senior living building, 72,000 square feet office, and 50,000 square feet retail, restaurant and a 1,558- space garage.
Boise Sports Park is set to share many of these features, including the apartments in left field. There is no hotel in this preliminary Boise proposal. But Schoen is trying to acquire neighboring property beyond the 11 acres of St. Luke’s property that he has under contract. “We’ve got to acquire a little more land (to do a hotel),” said Schoen, adding he’s had conversations with hotel operators. “It’s a really high quality hotel that has visited Boise a couple times in the past.”
Who holds the bag?
If Agon Sports and Entertainment falters in the years after a stadium opens and walks away from the Boise Sports Park, does the stadium sit empty with nobody paying back the bond?
That’s not likely to happen, said Chris Schoen, managing member of Agon Sports and co-owner of the Boise Hawks.
The Boise Hawks are affiliated with the Major League Baseball Colorado Rockies franchise, and the Rockies have part ownership in the Hawks. This is the first time the Major League team has had a vested interest in the Hawks, noted Bill Connors, CEO of the Boise Metro Chamber of Commerce.
Schoen will have to win a number of local government approvals before stadium construction starts. But Schoen added he will also need Class A Northwest League to sign off on the plan, as well as Minor League Baseball and Major League Baseball.
“If something were to happen (to Agon), the league would take over operations of our team,” Schoen said. “(One of them) would operate the team.”
There is precedent for this. The faltering Montreal Expos were owned by Major League Baseball before the team moved to Washington, D.C., in the 2000s.
Connors at the Boise Chamber has championed a downtown baseball stadium for the past eight years as a member of Better Boise Coalition. The coalition had an artistic rendition drawn up for a stadium but never gained momentum.
“I think there is a lot more there than we’ve seen in the past,” Connors said about Schoen’s proposal. “We’ve never seen the parent organization (the Major League team) have a vested interested. We haven’t had a development group this experienced.”
The stadium appears headed toward financing from a bond acquired by the Capital City Development Corp. Early talks between the city, CCDC and Schoen detailed a $1 million a year lease with Agon Sports to operate the stadium.
Boise City Council member Scot Ludwig said debt service on the bond likely would be $2 million a year. Agon’s $1 million lease would pay half and $1 million in estimated taxes generated by the Boise Sports Park property could pay the other half.
“In a beautiful world, they pay all the debt service,” Ludwig said about the Greenstone development.
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