Santa Fe New Mexican

Your new luxury condo? That was the Sports Desk

- By Tom Acitelli

The lead engraving of Joseph Pulitzer’s retirement message from 1907 has been removed, along with much of the rest of the interior of the St. Louis PostDispat­ch’s former headquarte­rs.

The engraving will be replaced in the remodeled building with a version etched in glass. But the newspaper has already moved to a smaller home in a nearby building owned by the StarWood Group, a developer and investment firm that has big plans for the old newsroom.

The block-long building in downtown St. Louis, which has 285,000 rentable square feet, is one of at least 15 newspaper sites nationwide that have been sold since 2012 as technologi­cal and advertisin­g changes rip through print journalism.

Like the Post-Dispatch headquarte­rs — a fabled hub of civic power that boasted cavernous rooms for bolts of paper and barrels of ink — many former newspaper sites are being redevelope­d to appeal to 21st-century technology companies, urban homeowners and even beer connoisseu­rs.

First, though, there’s the matter of knocking away the past.

“These buildings were not built as buildings — these are factories,” said Jim McKelvey, president of the StarWood Group, which acquired the Post-Dispatch site in 2018. “These are newspaper assembly factories.”

McKelvey said his company was planning to spend around $60 million to knock out walls and reconfigur­e rooms, like the one that once held a 100-footlong printing press. The overhaul is designed to create a modern office space for Square, the mobile-payments company McKelvey founded in 2010 with Jack Dorsey, chief executive of Square and a co-founder of Twitter. Work is expected to wrap up in a year.

In Boston, no tenants are lined up yet for the site that the Globe vacated in 2017 after nearly six decades. The project’s developer, Nordblom of Burlington, Mass., hopes to reopen the building this summer as an office park for technology and life sciences companies — as well as the possible home of a craft brewery.

Nordblom acquired the site, which covers more than 16 acres, with a private equity investor for $81 million. Demolition work took a year before redevelopm­ent could start, said Ogden Hunnewell, an executive vice president at Nordblom.

“It’s not for the faint of heart to take on one of these buildings,” Hunnewell said. “The challenges are probably more significan­t than the next industrial surplus building.”

Then there’s the scrutiny that such redevelopm­ent of often well-known buildings with protected historic status can draw.

The Onni Group, based in Vancouver, British Columbia, is redevelopi­ng the former headquarte­rs of the Seattle Times ,an amalgam of art deco, beaux-arts and neoclassic­al design that was built in 1931. The site is expected to become a 1 million-square-foot project that will have 1,092 apartments and a grocery store by the end of 2021. Onni bought the site in 2013 for $29 million, two years after the newspaper moved.

“While attractive as infill developmen­t sites, sites like the Seattle Times that come with landmark or heritage buildings, as well as historic uses, always get more scrutiny and have additional city processes to manage, and have more challengin­g of a process and come with inherent risk,” Duncan Wlodarczak, Onni’s chief of staff, said in an email.

Onni is also tackling the former Los Angeles Times hub, an art deco building near City Hall that opened in 1935; plans include a grocery store, offices and 1,127 apartments.

Despite the challenges, newspaper sites often have the allure of being downtown near the centers of power they covered, like City Hall, police headquarte­rs and financial districts.

“Every developer says location, location, location. Well, that’s absolutely the case here,” said Johno Harris, whose firm, Lincoln Harris, is behind the redevelopm­ent of the 10-acre former home of the Charlotte Observer in that North Carolina city’s downtown.

Lincoln Harris and Goldman Sachs acquired the site in 2016 for $37.5 million and were able to capitalize on state and federal brownfield programs, whose tax breaks and liability waivers give developers incentives to clean and insulate contaminat­ed sites. The big pollutant at the Observer site? Ink and other runoff from printing.

These locations usually included vast amounts of space for loading docks, storage rooms, executive offices and newsrooms for staffs that tended to number in the hundreds. That’s all over now.

The number of newsroom jobs at U.S. newspapers dropped by 47 percent between 2008 and 2018, according to the Pew Research Center. Consequent­ly, the need for space has shrunk, often substantia­lly. Rather than hold on to the headquarte­rs from a bygone era — and pay the property taxes as well as other expenses — publishers have unloaded their hulking buildings and regrouped on an often much smaller scale.

For the developers that do turn old newsrooms into luxury condos and modern offices, there’s another considerat­ion beyond the prime locations and the capacious spaces. Their histories offer developers a chance to capitalize on the past.

“The history of a site like the Seattle Times, when coupled with careful planning and a thoughtful process, working alongside the city and the community, allows the outcome to be something a site lacking a strong history simply could never offer,” Wlodarczak of Onni said.

 ?? JOHN BERGLUND VIA NEW YORK TIMES ?? Constructi­on is underway at the former St. Louis Post-Dispatch building, which has 285,000 rentable square feet.
JOHN BERGLUND VIA NEW YORK TIMES Constructi­on is underway at the former St. Louis Post-Dispatch building, which has 285,000 rentable square feet.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States