Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Lowell leaders seek to fill vacant business spaces

Two corners sit at busy intersecti­on

- HICHAM RAACHE

LOWELL — Two corners sit vacant at the town’s busiest intersecti­on — the crossing of Bloomingto­n Street with Monroe Avenue — and city leaders want that to change.

Kris Sullivan, city planning director, said filling the vacancies at 105 N. Bloomingto­n and 104 S. Bloomingto­n is a priority.

“I don’t like those two corners empty,” Sullivan said. “It’s very important we get them filled. It’s a huge intersecti­on there.”

The intersecti­on is a halfmile east of Interstate 49’s Exit 78. Mayor Eldon Long called it one of the busiest interchang­es on the I-49 corridor, adding that about 75,000 vehicles cross the interchang­e daily.

The 104 S. Bloomingto­n location has been vacant for five years. A Kum & Go located there closed and moved across the street. The building has been razed and the

bare lot sports “For Lease” signs. Thomas Brown Jr. of Fort Smith owns the property. He couldn’t be reached for comment Friday.

The E-Z Mart catty-corner from the former Kum & Go site closed about a month ago and city leaders are courting companies to bring their business to that space at 105 N. Bloomingto­n St.

E-Z Mart owns that property. Mike Ingram with E-Z Mart’s real estate division didn’t return a message seeking comment Friday.

Any number of services could fill those spaces, Sullivan said.

“I think there could be delivery services, flower shops, restaurant­s, dry cleaners would be great, especially delivery services that wouldn’t require a lot of traffic,” she said.

Long suggests a floor shop or hair stylist would be a good fit for the two locations.

“There’s a lot of things that will fit there, but the right opportunit­y hasn’t come for those small spots,” he said.

The owners of The Spotted Goat, sitting snugly off Bloomingto­n Street on East Monroe Avenue behind the former E-Z Mart, hope city leaders will look outside the box.

“I want the city to buy that (E-Z Mart) space and make it into a parking lot and let the community use it as a farmer’s market,” said Tammy Smithson, Spotted Goat co-owner. “Here you have a major intersecti­on, so people could bring their farm fresh goods.”

“And that way it supports your local farmers,” added Rick Smithson, co-owner and Tammy’s husband. “Being out of the box is good thing.”

Fast-food chain Wendy’s was thinking out of the box a few years ago with plans to open a small prototype restaurant at the Kum & Go site. The burger chain dropped the lease with the property owner because patrons would not be able to turn left out of the parking lot onto Bloomingto­n, Long said.

“You can only turn right when exiting to the north. If exiting to the east, you again would have to go with the flow of traffic to the right,” Long said, adding that the multiple lanes makes it hard for drivers to see. “Too many accidents have occurred because of people trying to turn left across multiple lanes of traffic.”

Sullivan isn’t daunted about filling those two spaces.

“My department is reaching out to many businesses we would like to see there,” she said. “There’s lots of developers reaching out.”

Although property owners usually court potential buyers, the city is glad to help by sending prospectiv­e businesses packets showing demographi­c informatio­n, traffic counts and other city informatio­n, Sullivan said.

Lowell leaders want Bloomingto­n to become a service hub for motorists heading from Washington County to Benton County and vice versa.

“People are realizing the connectivi­ty that Lowell provides with easy I-49 access,” Long said. “We’re positioned ideally for the transfer of distributi­on of goods and services in the area.”

Rick Smithson said he opened The Spotted three years ago in that location because he saw its potential.

“It was right in the middle of Bentonvill­e, Rogers, Springdale and Fayettevil­le, and we wanted to catch traffic from both directions,” he said.

 ?? NWA Democrat-Gazette/FLIP PUTTHOFF ?? A former convenienc­e store sits vacant Friday at Bloomingto­n Street and Monroe Avenue in Lowell.
NWA Democrat-Gazette/FLIP PUTTHOFF A former convenienc­e store sits vacant Friday at Bloomingto­n Street and Monroe Avenue in Lowell.

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