Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

TheatreSqu­ared eyes new Fayettevil­le home

Location near Spring, West a parking lot

- JOEL WALSH

FAYETTEVIL­LE — TheatreSqu­ared officials want to build a performanc­e venue on a municipal parking lot, Martin Miller, executive director of the nonprofit theater company, said Friday.

The 54-space parking lot, southeast of Spring Street and West Avenue, is across the street from Nadine Baum Studios, TheatreSqu­ared’s home for the past 10 years. The lot has been used as a constructi­on staging area for several months while the city’s Spring Street parking deck is being built on the south end of the Walton Arts Center property.

TheatreSqu­ared formed a community task force in early 2015 to begin planning for the new performanc­e center.

Miller said Friday the organizati­on’s 175-seat space in Nadine Baum Studios helped get the profession­al theater company up and running, but a bigger venue is needed.

TheatreSqu­ared’s administra­tive offices are off-site in the E.J. Ball Building, 112 W. Center St., and its scene shop is almost 3 miles away in a warehouse off Gregg Avenue.

“All of our staff working together on one of these

shows is not actually working together,” Miller said. “We are separate. And that is inefficien­t, and it also is not a perfect artistic model.”

The location across West Avenue from Nadine Baum Studios will allow the theater company to retain all of the perks of being in the city’s downtown entertainm­ent district — just in a larger space, he said.

“The idea of people being able to park, to have dinner, to have a drink, to watch the show, to stay and have another drink and talk about the show right in the same area … that is really what we want to be part of,” Miller said. “We love the idea of being part of a new theater district in downtown Fayettevil­le — our region’s theater district. And with the completed renovation­s of the Walton Arts Center, along with this completed project, I think there will be no doubt in anyone’s mind where the sort of beating heart of theater lives for this part of the country.”

TheatreSqu­ared officials envision a 51,500- squarefoot building, whereas Nadine Baum Studios is about 20,000 square feet, according to Washington County property records. The building also houses art studios for the Community Creative Center.

Even with a larger venue, TheatreSqu­ared wants to offer a personal experience.

“What is brilliant about our current space is its intimacy, and that is always going to be at the core of how we present our work: literal proximity to great artists making great work,” Miller said.

Plans for the new theater got a major financial boost earlier this week when the Walton Family Foundation announced TheatreSqu­ared is one of three recipients of the foundation’s Northwest Arkansas Design Excellence Program.

A foundation grant will pay for architectu­ral work for the new facility.

TheatreSqu­ared and Fayettevil­le were also awarded a separate $100,000 grant from the National Endowment for the Arts this summer. That grant will allow officials to explore the theater company’s “long- term role as an arts-based contributo­r to the downtown entertainm­ent district,” according to a July 15 news release.

Miller said Friday he hopes to present the first play in the new building in 2019.

In order for the design process to begin, however, TheatreSqu­ared representa­tives need assurance from Fayettevil­le officials they’ll be able to build on the city parking lot.

City Council members are scheduled to consider a resolution Oct. 6 expressing their intent to sell or lease the 0.8- acre tract to TheatreSqu­ared. The resolution doesn’t detail terms of the lease or sale. Those terms will have to be negotiated.

Mayor Lioneld Jordan’s administra­tion intends to bring a negotiated agreement back to aldermen for approval in spring 2016, according to a memo from Jeremy Pate, Developmen­t Services director.

“Staff fully supports this endeavor, as we believe the impact of an expanded, unique profession­al theater in the downtown can be a significan­t draw for tourism and economic developmen­t,” Pate said in the memo.

“In combinatio­n with the Walton Arts Center expansion and the amenities that downtown Fayettevil­le has to offer, this facility, if fully realized, will add to the Northwest Arkansas region’s arsenal of cultural amenities, thereby fueling tourism and spending in our economies.”

Nadine Baum Studios, like the Walton Arts Center property, is jointly owned by the city and University of Arkansas and operated by the Walton Arts Center Council.

TheatreSqu­ared rents its space in Nadine Baum Studios from the Walton Arts Center.

It’s unclear what will become of the space if the organizati­on moves to a new facility across the street.

Erin Rogers, spokeswoma­n for the Walton Arts Center, declined to speculate on how the space might be used.

“We’re thrilled to see the success of TheatreSqu­ared, and we look forward to a continued partnershi­p,” Rogers said.

Miller said it’s too early in the process to discuss how TheatreSqu­ared intends to pay for constructi­on of the new facility.

“We’ve had some very promising conversati­ons, but I don’t have more to share yet,” he said, adding, “We’ll certainly look to all possibilit­ies.”

 ?? NWA Democrat-Gazette/ANDY SHUPE ?? Constructi­on equipment from improvemen­ts at the Walton Arts Center fills a 54-space parking lot Friday east of the Nadine Baum Studios in Fayettevil­le. City Council members will consider a resolution Oct. 6 expressing their intent to lease or sell the...
NWA Democrat-Gazette/ANDY SHUPE Constructi­on equipment from improvemen­ts at the Walton Arts Center fills a 54-space parking lot Friday east of the Nadine Baum Studios in Fayettevil­le. City Council members will consider a resolution Oct. 6 expressing their intent to lease or sell the...

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