Texarkana Gazette

SPRUCING UP

Upgrades latest chapter in Landmark Building’s long history

- By Karl Richter

TEXARKANA, Ark. — A $250,000 renovation effort is the latest improvemen­t to one of the city’s oldest buildings, as well as another piece in the downtown redevelopm­ent puzzle.

Owner David Potter is adding the Landmark Building to the list of structures spruced up during the recent downtown renaissanc­e. The plan is for a new facade on the building’s northeast wall, as well as new air-conditioni­ng equipment and elevator repair, to keep the building at East Broad Street and North State Line Avenue a significan­t Texarkana fixture.

Built in 1903 as a bank, the Landmark has survived fire, vacancy, multiple changes in ownership and the general exodus from downtown now being reversed by major projects such as the rehabilita­tion of the Hotel Grim a block away and the restoratio­n of the former Texarkana National

Bank across the street. It now houses the offices and newsroom of the Texarkana Gazette, among other tenants.

Central to the building’s resilience is its steel-reinforced concrete constructi­on. It was the first Texarkana building put

up using the method, an improvemen­t over the masonry exteriors and wood-frame interiors typical at the time, Potter said.

That superstruc­ture likely prevented the building’s complete destructio­n in 1980, when a fire gutted its fifth floor. Water used to put out the fire made the rest of the building unusable.

By 1997, when Potter bought the building, its owners had done a basic rescue of the interior, adding new elevators and bathrooms on each floor. But it was otherwise open and empty, “nothing but concrete ceilings and concrete floors,” he said.

“We were probably the first to make any serious effort at restoring downtown or rebuilding downtown,” he said. “We just starting working toward redevelopi­ng it without any purpose, without any tenant, without any expectatio­ns or knowing which way we were going, except I just bought a building I thought was a good buy.”

A stroke of luck gave Potter the financial boost he needed to fully bring the building back to life. A billion-dollar federal lawsuit involving a subsidiary of AT&T would be tried in Texarkana, and a horde of lawyers needed office space fast.

Potter approached the city for help with financing and eventually secured a $70,000 loan from federal Community Developmen­t Block Grant funds — all the CDBG money the city had available at the time — to pay for finishing out two of the building’s floors.

“I drew out the floor plans myself on my kitchen table,” he said.

Two framing contractor­s on each floor, along with crews working literally 24 hours a day, seven days a week, finished the job in 60 days. Then the new tenants asked for a third floor, prompting another 30 days of nonstop work.

The suit was eventually settled, and another took its place. Texas had filed a massive federal suit against the tobacco industry that also would be tried in Texarkana.

More attorneys became the Landmark’s new tenants as soon as it was available, eventually leasing the whole building for $54,000 a month.

Potter never looked back, leveraging the leases into the building’s long-term financial stability. But there would be another challenge.

When the adjacent building burned to the ground, the heat melted carpet in the Landmark through 16-inch brick walls. In the fire’s aftermath, the empty lot became “a big hole in the ground, and it was filling up with water” that seeped into the Landmark’s basement, Potter said. The odor of the ashes permeated the

Landmark, and something had to be done about the debris.

Eventually, the burned building’s owner deeded the property to Potter, who cleaned it up, filled it in and first tried making it a grassy park space. Drainage issues nixed that plan, and Potter paved over the spot and built a retaining wall fronting Broad.

The fire damage to the Landmark’s northeast wall has been at least partially visible ever since, but now that is changing. Work has begun on a new facade that will match that on the triangular building’s other two sides. The lot will get new lighting and electrical outlets, and Potter plans to eventually refinish the wall across the lot, too.

Along with repair of elevator wiring and an overhaul of the building’s air-conditioni­ng system, Potter hopes the upgrade will make the Landmark a vital part of downtown for another century-plus.

He has been around long enough to see how completely — though gradually — Texarkana’s once-desolate downtown has changed.

“It’s just so slow you’d hardly notice it. But if you two took two photos, then to now, it’s a dramatic difference,” he said.

 ?? Staff photo by Karl Richter ?? ■ Work on the Landmark Building’s northeast wall is shown Thursday in Texarkana, Ark. The building at East Broad Street and North State Line Avenue is getting $250,000 worth of upgrades, including a new facade for the wall to match the rest of the exterior.
Staff photo by Karl Richter ■ Work on the Landmark Building’s northeast wall is shown Thursday in Texarkana, Ark. The building at East Broad Street and North State Line Avenue is getting $250,000 worth of upgrades, including a new facade for the wall to match the rest of the exterior.
 ?? Staff photo by Christy Busby Worsham ?? ■ A worker drills a hole near the base of the Landmark Building Friday afternoon. The northeast wall of the building is getting a new façade.
Staff photo by Christy Busby Worsham ■ A worker drills a hole near the base of the Landmark Building Friday afternoon. The northeast wall of the building is getting a new façade.

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