The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Sports City dreams fade at Stonecrest

With project fizzling, some who invested in it deal with tough losses.

- By Tia Mitchell tia.mitchell@ajc.com

Urecker Watts bought into the promise of Atlanta Sports City.

She paid $1,900 to secure her space at the planned food court and bazaar inside the Mall at Stonecrest, intended to provide dining and shopping options for thousands of athletes and spectators that would fill the proposed sports complex.

Watts shut down her women’s clothing boutique in Little Five Points last December to focus on her investment at the proposed multi-sport complex in Stonecrest. She obtained a DeKalb County business permit and hired a graphic designer to update her logo to meet Atlanta Sports City’s specificat­ions.

Then she purchased thousands of dollars in inventory that sat in boxes while Atlanta Sports City faced delay after delay.

Although Watts and others have invested an untold amount of money into the sports complex, nothing was ever built. As these consultant­s and vendors become more vocal about their losses and the broken promises, Atlanta

Sports City’s partners have been silent about the future of their ambitious plans.

First, Watts was told the facility would open Feb. 3 in time for Super Bowl. Then March 15. Then the scheduled grand opening was May 6.

At the end of that month, she asked Atlanta Sports City’s master developer to give her the money back.

“I’m losing the clients I’ve built, not to mention the $5K in winter inventory I’m stuck with, the new logo I hired someone to make and the store layout I had done,” Watts wrote in an email to her leasing agents.

Watts is still waiting. Meanwhile, the land that Atlanta Sports City’s fields were supposed to be built on has been sold to a businessma­n who said

he has his own plans for the site. Atlanta Sports City’s partners are facing lawsuits from vendors who say they were never paid for work on the project.

Watts no longer likes to drive by the mall, because it reminds her of all the broken promises.

“Every time I go, I get frustrated,” she said. “So I just stay away.”

Big dreams, plans

Atlanta Sports City is the brainchild of Zeric Foster and Patrick Henderson, two men who organize sports tournament­s under the name Atlanta Sports Connection. They envisioned a place in Stonecrest, one of DeKalb County’s newest cities, where competitio­ns and tournament­s could be hosted for virtually any sport. They partnered with Vaughn Irons, owner of a company called APD Solutions, who became the master developer and eventually took the lead on the project.

Foster, Henderson, and Irons took center stage when plans for Atlanta Sports City were announced in February 2017. They described a $200 million sports complex featuring a 15,000 seat stadium, 22 soccer and football fields, seven baseball diamonds and five basketball courts. They said the first tournament­s would be played by the end of the year.

What they didn’t mention is that they had not purchased the land and had not secured financing for the project.

Nearly three years later, not a single field has gone up. The old empty anchor building at the nearby mall that was supposed to house the food court and bazaar called Tournament Central is also unfinished. It looks like the gutted Kohl’s that it is, and there have been no signs of progress in months. The same goes for the old Sears that was slated to become a sports medicine clinic operated by Emory Healthcare.

Emory still says it still intends to open a facility in Stonecrest, but it is pursuing new opportunit­ies to make that happen. “We defer questions regarding other entities’ commitment­s to the Stonecrest community to those developers,” spokeswoma­n Janet Christenbu­ry said.

Irons, Foster and Henderson have refused for months to answer questions from The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on about Atlanta Sports City’s status and the impact of the many delays. They have not responded to numerous telephone calls, emails and text messages from reporters.

Representa­tives, including a spokeswoma­n and attorney for Irons, have also failed to respond.

‘Practicall­y lured us here’

It’s not just the media looking for answers.

Atlanta Sports City partners are dealing with two lawsuits. One was filed in the spring by a consultant who said she was never paid for her work. After LaKeysa “Keya” Grant sued, Henderson said he and Foster’s roles on the project had been reduced.

The owner of a turf installati­on company sued Foster, Henderson, Atlanta Sports Connection and APD Solutions in August, alleging that he loaned $50,000 for the up-front costs of Atlanta Sports City. Chris Daniluk, president of Deluxe Athletics, said he also treated the partners to a Hawks game and even the Super Bowl to help them woo investors, and in return he was promised that once the project began his company would serve as the contractor.

Daniluk’s lawsuit alleges that Irons formed a new company called Stone- crest Resorts to avoid debts incurred during Atlanta Sports City’s initial phases where Atlanta Sports Connection was listed as its owner and operator. He accused the partners of breach of contract and fraud.

And there are other vendors, like Watts, who say the project’s delays and appar- ent demise have left them in a lurch.

Sheree and Michael Camp- bell moved to Stonecrest for the sole purpose of open- ing a restaurant at Atlanta Sports City. They were living in Savannah and operating a casual restaurant when they became acquaintan­ces with Irons. One day near the end of 2016 he paid them a visit and talked up his plans for Atlanta Sports City, they said.

“He invited us to be a part,” Sheree Campbell said. “Practicall­y lured us here.”

When Irons and his partners marketed the sports developmen­t, they listed the Campbells’ restaurant,

Putt Guttz, as a partner on promotiona­l materials. “Specialty eatery that features low-country selections and delectable desserts. Serves all-day breakfast,” a brochure said.

The Campbells moved to Stonecrest in June 2018. When the Tournament Central building faced delays, they agreed to open their restaurant first in an empty space at the mall’s food court. The mall’s owner, Urban Retail Properties, had become a partner in Atlanta Sports City.

The Campbells posed for photos in front of the space with friends, marking their move to Metro Atlanta with smiles. It was short-lived.

The food court space was not up to county building codes, and mall managers never made the fixes, the Campbells said. They had already paid a $5,000 deposit and spent nearly $10,000 on equipment, inventory and improvemen­ts.

With no restaurant they had no income.

For a while, the Campbells scraped by with private catering and baking jobs. But this summer they decided to move back to Savannah.

“We spent money thinking we were going to make money,” Sheree Campbell said. “We came here to make money. We came here to own a restaurant.”

Watts also moved on. She reopened her boutique in Little Five Points over the summer and is trying to rebuild her customer base after a forced six-month hiatus. On a recent weekend, she ran a “golden ticket” special. She hid golden stickers in certain items for sell. Customers who purchased them could win a gift card or a flat-screen TV.

Both she and the Campbells said they don’t have the money to sue Irons or his company.

“To me, he’s a giant and I can’t fight him,” Watts said. “I’m a small business.”

Waiting for answers

It is unknown how many other business owners are in a similar situation or how much money Irons and his partners collected from investors. Two attorneys who reviewed a lease one of the vendors signed said it is written in a way that it could be difficult, if not impossible, for anyone to recoup the money they paid — even if Atlanta Sports City is never built.

“One could try and argue that the developers defrauded the tenants to the extent that they represente­d that they owned the land or that they even had the financial ability to complete this project,” attorney David Merbaum, whose specialtie­s include small business law said. “However, unless the tenants go after individual­s, I would think that any claim or judgment against Stonecrest Resorts, LLC may not even be collectibl­e.”

Business attorney Glenn Lyon said vendors appear to have made deposits based on verbal and email conversati­ons indicating Atlanta Sports City’s opening is imminent, and they continued to trust the project’s developers even as the opening date was pushed back.

Irons’ spokeswoma­n, Tee Foxx, and his attorney, Nicole Massiah, never answered a list of questions from the AJC. In early October, Foxx said in an email that Atlanta Sports City’s partners would not be speaking publicly about their “privately funded project” but there would be updates eventually to share.

Sheree and Mike Campbell eventually asked a third party to intervene: Stone- crest Mayor Jason Lary.

At the time of the project’s unveiling, Lary was in the final weeks of his campaign for mayor. He spoke at the event and posed for photos with Irons, Foster and Henderson.

After he was elected mayor, Lary held up Atlanta

Sports City as the type of developmen­ts he wanted for Stonecrest. He said the partners were his friends.

During his State of the City address in May 2018, Lary admitted that these friends were having trouble securing financing for their project. But he asked constitu- ents to be patient.

“This takes time; It takes energy; It takes effort; It takes vision,” Lary told the crowd. “It takes a person that can stick to it and see it to the end.”

Irons was among the speakers when Lary launched his reelection campaign in December. By that time, the mayor had already met with the Campbells about Atlanta

Sports City’s delays.

“This is what is going on in your house,” Sheree Campbell remembers telling him. She described the broken promises and shifting opening dates. Her husband printed out a list showing the $14,000 they were out.

The mayor promised to reach out to Irons and lobby for their reimbursem­ent, the Campbells said. But weeks later he sent word that Irons had refused to pay them and there was nothing more he could do.

Lary has distanced himself from Atlanta Sports City in recent months, saying the city needed move on from the project. The mayor heaped praise on entreprene­ur and philanthro­pist Lecester “Bill” Allen, who purchased the land previously slated for Atlanta Sports City and is now making his own lofty plans for the space, including a hotel, convention center and amphitheat­er.

“Things just didn’t go as they planned, so I moved on to a more certain developmen­t,” Lary said in a recent statement. “We are just as disappoint­ed as everyone else.”

But some people are more than disappoint­ed by Atlanta Sports City. They are out thousands of dollars — a life’s savings — and still waiting for answers.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY STEVE SCHAEFER ?? Urecker Watts, owner of a boutique in Little Five Points, has invested thousands in inventory and other preparatio­ns for Atlanta Sports City. She has asked for her money back.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY STEVE SCHAEFER Urecker Watts, owner of a boutique in Little Five Points, has invested thousands in inventory and other preparatio­ns for Atlanta Sports City. She has asked for her money back.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY STEVE SCHAEFER ?? Urecker Watts has reopened her boutique in Little Five Points as she tries to rebuild her customer base. She laments not having the resources to sue the Sports City partners for her lost investment­s.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY STEVE SCHAEFER Urecker Watts has reopened her boutique in Little Five Points as she tries to rebuild her customer base. She laments not having the resources to sue the Sports City partners for her lost investment­s.

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