The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Hotel designed by Kenny Rogers may come to Norcross

Plans would put facility in project near I-85 and Jimmy Carter Blvd.

- By Arielle Kass akass@ajc.com

The singer Kenny Rogers may be building a hotel as part of a movie studio project planned in Norcross.

The project’s developer, Jim Jacoby, suggested as much at a Gwinnett Chamber of Commerce breakfast Friday. He told a story about talking with a business partner who got a message “for the gambler” during a recent meeting.

“Both my partner and myself reached for the message, if that gives any hint to who might be coming here,” said Jacoby, chairman of Jacoby Developmen­t. Rogers is known for his song “The Gambler.”

Rogers, who in September announced his next tour will be his last, told Rolling Stone later that month that he was about to start a project called “Kenny World” with a friend, but couldn’t talk much about it.

“We’re going to do a hotel, and I’m going to design it,” he told the magazine. “I’m going to decorate all the rooms.”

The hotel would be one piece of the Atlanta Media Campus, a redevelopm­ent near I-85 and Jimmy Carter Boulevard where OFS now makes fiber optic cables. Gwinnett commission­ers approved the project last November, and movie franchises like “The Hunger Games,” “Divergent” and “Fast and Furious” have been renting space from OFS to film on the site.

“This is where the action is,” Jacoby said.

But the redevelopm­ent has been delayed, and Jacoby has not yet closed on the property. He said the project is “taking a little bit longer” than planned

because OFS’ business has been improving, and the company is reconsider­ing how much land it wants to give up.

“They want to expand a little bit, but we’re trying to lay out our master plan,” he said.

No one from OFS returned calls seeking comment on Friday.

Jacoby said he now expects to close in the first quarter of 2016. In addition to movie sound stages and a hotel, the redevelopm­ent plan includes retail and office space, multifamil­y housing and college dorms. The company has signed memorandum­s of understand­ing with some colleges or universiti­es to bring classes to the campus where students can learn the craft, intern on movies and mingle with profession­als.

Beyond that, Jacoby envisions a media incubator with new technology companies; a cottage industry for commercial­s; space for game makers, illustrato­rs and animators; and other creative uses.

He said on Friday it may even make sense to resurrect Georgia’s shut- tered Music Hall of Fame on the property.

A motion capture theme park, virtual reality experience and microtheat­ers where gameand filmmakers can debut their work may also be part of the long-term plan.

“There are a lot of new things we’re hopefully going to announce in the next 90 days,” he said.

Jacoby also said he is considerin­g creating a film society, where some people can have early access to movies and a chance to be extras in the films they will later see.

“The future is now,” Jacoby said. “With such a large project we have there, it offers synergisti­c opportunit­ies for entertainm­ent and education.”

The project has long been considered a catalyst for the area, which has suffered as OFS shrank in previous years, and businesses closed. Already, millions of dol- lars of developmen­t have flowed into the area based on the vision, said Chuck Warbington, director of the Gwinnett Village Community Improvemen­t District.

“I wish it would happen sooner, but we go through the process to make sure we do it the right way,” he said.

Jacoby said he has been discussing a public-private partnershi­p with Gwinnett leaders, but there is some fine tuning and tweaking to be done to the financial model. The property is in an Opportunit­y Zone and a Tax Allocation District, and both of those designatio­ns may help with the financing.

In the end, Jacoby said, he wants to build a hub for media businesses of all kinds.

“We’re having conversati­ons to bring it all under one area,” he said. “People should never have to leave.”

The project has long been considered a catalyst for the area, which has suffered as OFS shrank in previous years.

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