Crosstown Concourse

Crosstown Concourse is a mixed-use development in Memphis, Tennessee. Originally built in 1927 as a Sears retail store and catalog order plant, the building was closed in 1993. A 2015–2017 renovation brought in retail, restaurants, office spaces, and apartments.

Building
Crosstown Concourse is at the intersection of Watkins and North Parkway in Midtown, Memphis, a few miles northeast of Downtown. The address is 495 North Watkins Street, Memphis, Tennessee 38104.

Designed by Nimmons & Co. in Art Deco and Art Moderne styles, the building is constructed of steel-reinforced concrete with a brick veneer. The main building is ten stories tall with a 14-story tower, considered a high-rise even by the standards of 1981.

Originally on 16 acre of land, the building was expanded in 1937, 1941, and 1965, ending up with an area of 1.5 e6ft2 on 19 acre. The basement had 75000 ft2 with 14 ft ceilings. Floors one and two had 17 ft ceilings with 227500 and 190100 ft2, respectively. Floors three through ten each had 139100 ft2 of area and 11 ft ceilings (excepting the tenth floor with 14 ft ceilings).

The building has a maximum height of 188.00 ft, and in 2017 was certified LEED Platinum. Of 1526 parking spaces, 1130 (74%) were in the parking garage, while 396 (26%) were surface spots.

Sears
In 1925, with the rate of automobile registrations outpacing available retail parking, Sears' vice-president of factories and retail&mdash;Robert E. Wood&mdash;decided that the company's new big stores would be built away from city centres, and instead in low-density areas where costs were cheaper yet car-owning customers could still reach. Sears Crosstown and Sears-Pico were among the first new constructions beholden to this edict. Sears scouted the site in secret to prevent price gouging by locals if it was learned in advance that the retail giant was interested in property. In the late 1920s, the chosen location was in a suburban neighborhood 2 mi from Downtown.

The building was originally dual-purposed as both the city's first Sears retail store and a catalog order plant. The original groundbreaking took place on February 21, 1927, and after only 180 days of construction, Mayor Rowlett Paine &mdash;who had allocated US$100000 (equivalent to about $ million in ) to build streetcar tracks specially for servicing the 640000 ft2 building&mdash;cut the ribbon on August 27, 1927. The very first day of business saw almost 30,000 shoppers.

At the building's busiest, as many as 45,000 catalog orders left each day. By 1981, the building was called Sears Crosstown, named for the intersecting streetcar lines. The first two floors were Sears retail, while the third was an outlet store; higher floors were concerned with the business of fulfilling catalog orders. In August 1983, employees were first informed about the impending closure of the retail store, though the surplus-goods outlet in the basement stayed open. Sears closed the distribution center completely in 1993, selling the building in 2000 to Memtech LLC for US$1.25 million (equivalent to about $M in ).

Renovation
Around 2007, Holliday Fenoglio Fowler listed the vacant building for sale, hoping to capitalize on the trend of renovating former Sears buildings into mixed-use development (as successfully done in Boston, Dallas, and Seattle). That same year, an group of anonymous Memphis investors doing business as Crosstown LLC bought the building for US$3.5 million (equivalent to about $M in ). Crosstown LLC have been described as "local investors who bought the property for civic reasons [and] are not involved for the publicity."

Crosstown LLC brought in a team of developers (the Sears Crosstown Development Team) to redesign and renovate the building. Dr. Todd Richardson was an assistant professor of art history at the University of Memphis, brought in as team lead. He was joined by McLean Wilson, vice president of Kemmons Wilson Inc.; Bologna Consultants; Carkuff Interiors; architectural firms Looney Ricks Kiss and DIALOG; construction firm Grinder Taber & Grinder; and the marketing firm of Doug Carpenter & Associates. Richardson later admitted that the team originally gave the project a five percent chance of success.

Structural
Approximately 500000 ft2 of space was earmarked for excision to provide the building with lightwells and atriums, and the remaining one million to be divided into 600000 ft2 for commercial use and 400000 ft2 for residential. Bologna Consultants determined that though the building was structurally sound, and asbestos wasn't a large concern, earthquake-girding and restoring the hundreds of windows would need addressing.

In 2015, Richardson enumerated some of the work performed. Already, 17200 ST of concrete, and 9 e6lbs of metal had been removed from the site. 3,200 windowpanes; 400,000 bricks; and 2000 ft of suspended scaffolding were earmarked for removal, while 360 mi of brick joints were planned for restoration. The renovation of the building occurred from 2015–2017. The brick façade was left in-place.

Realization
Groundbreaking for the renovation was on February 21, 2015. Metal from the Sears heating system was melted to form the new cornerstone.

After two years of construction costing US$200 million, Crosstown Concourse had its grand opening on August 19, 2017&mdash;almost 90 years after the building's original debut. The mayors of Memphis (Jim Strickland) and of Shelby County (Mark Luttrell) were in attendance. At 96% capacity, Crosstown Concourse had over 200 residents, 41 tenant businesses, and 700+ new jobs for Memphis.

Crosstown Concourse
At 11:55   a.m. on February 25, 2022, an accidental fire broke out at Pizzeria Trasimeno on the east side of the building. Memphis Fire Services extinguished the fire in 16 minutes, which caused no structural damage and an estimated US$20000 2022 of damage to building contents. The building was evacuated for 50 minutes, and there were no injuries reported.

Tenants
By August 2012, the first nine committed tenants for post-renovation had been secured. Church Health Center was biggest among these, planning to move its entire operation into the 14-story tower, though they would be joined at North Watkins by Methodist Le Bonheur Healthcare, St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, American Lebanese Syrian Associated Charities, and The West Clinic. The other four tenants were to be Gestalt Community Schools, committing to opening a 500-student charter high school; Memphis Teacher Residency, training and housing 100 of their teacher-trainees; Crosstown Arts' artist-residency program, art-making labs, and performance/exhibition spaces; and Rhodes College "send[ing] a flow of students to Sears Crosstown, integrating the health care, arts and grade school into its academic and community outreach programs."

Upon the grand-opening, much of the building's space had been leased: 60% of the retail space, 80% of apartments, and 98% of the office space. Tenants have included:


 * Area 51 Ice Cream
 * Church Health
 * Crosstown High School
 * Curb Market
 * Farm Burger
 * FedEx Office
 * Global Café
 * Lucy J's Bakery
 * Madison Pharmacy
 * Mama Gaia's
 * nexAir
 * The Parcels at Concourse
 * Pizzeria Trasimeno
 * YMCA