The Commercial Appeal

Six developmen­t groups named as finalists to redevelop 100 N. Main

- Corinne S Kennedy

Six developmen­t groups have been named finalists to redevelop the tallest building in Downtown Memphis, 100 N. Main.

The finalists are 100 North Main Developmen­t Partners, led by Kevin Woods; Alexander Company, led by Joseph Alexander; Block Real Estate Services & Sunflower Developmen­t Group, led by Aaron Mesmer; Carlisle Developmen­t Company, LLC, led by Chance Carlisle; Flaherty & Collins led by David Flaherty; and Russell Glen & Mathews Southwest led by Terrence G. Maiden.

Downtown Memphis Commission president and CEO Paul Young announced the finalists during the State of Downtown presentati­on Wednesday.

While Carlisle and the 100 North Main Developmen­t Partners group are local, the four other finalists are all from out of state. Alexander Company is based in Madison, Wisconsin; Block Real Estate Services is based in Kansas City, Missouri; Flaherty & Collins is based in Indianapol­is; and Russell Glen & Mathews Southwest is a partnershi­p between two Texas-based developmen­t groups.

Woods, the project lead, Billy Orgel, Jay Lindy, Adam Slovis and Michael Mclaughlin comprise 100 North Main Developmen­t Partners.

The group wants to see the building as a “revitalize­d retail, office, hotel and multi-family apartment property, as well as build a new mixed-use project on the adjacent available parcels with parking,” according to its proposal to the Downtown Memphis Commission, previously

obtained by The Commercial Appeal.

In a previous interview with The CA, Carlisle declined to describe the specific uses he had in mind for the building, saying he wanted to let the DMC’S bidding process play out. But he said he did have a path to financing the transforma­tion of 100 N. Main.

Renderings showed a glass-façade skyscraper rising over Main Street.

The final decision about who will get to acquire the structure will be made by the Downtown Mobility Authority, the DMC branch that owns the building.

The decision likely will not come immediatel­y after a preferred firm is identified as the developer probably will not start a due diligence period until that time, Brett Roler, vice president of planning and developmen­t for the DMC, told The CA in a previous interview.

These are the other developers who bid on the property:

h 100 North Main Partnershi­p. Primary: Mark Carlson h 18 Main. Primary: Tom Intrator h Douglas Developmen­t Corporatio­n. Primary: Douglas Jemel

h Memphis Tower Group, LLC. Primary:

William Mccrary

h Summit Management Corporatio­n. Primary: Gregory Averbuch

Other Downtown Memphis news

During a panel discussion with Rick Shadyac, president and CEO of ALSAC — the fundraisin­g and awareness organizati­on for St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital; Kevin Kane, president and CEO of Memphis Tourism; Mark Resnick, acting executive director of the Brooks Museum; and Young discussed St. Jude’s planned expansion, the impact of tourism on the Memphis economy, the Brooks Museum’s move Downtown and how to attract young profession­als to the Bluff City, among other topics.

Young, Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland and Shelby County Mayor Lee Harris also touted other completed and ongoing economic developmen­t Downtown, including the convention center, Tom Lee Park renovation­s and the transforma­tion of the Gibson guitar factory into the new headquarte­rs for Fedex Logistics.

Wednesday’s update on the state of Downtown also highlighte­d two recent awards from the Internatio­nal Downtown Associatio­n. One was for Builddownt­own, the Downtown Memphis Master Plan. The second was for the DMC’S work with the city of Memphis and the city’s division of housing and community developmen­t for the South City Good Neighbor Grant program.

Corinne S Kennedy covers economic developmen­t, healthcare and soccer for the Commercial Appeal. She can be reached via email at Corinne.kennedy@commercial­appeal.com

 ?? ARIEL COBBERT/ THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL ?? 100 N. Main office building in downtown Memphis. Six developmen­t groups are competing to redevelop the structure.
ARIEL COBBERT/ THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL 100 N. Main office building in downtown Memphis. Six developmen­t groups are competing to redevelop the structure.

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