The Commercial Appeal

Inside 100 N. Main

Here’s what awaits developers

- Corinne S Kennedy

Walk around the exterior of 100 N. Main and some of the challenges facing anyone who would try to redevelop the tallest building in Downtown Memphis become immediatel­y clear.

Cement is falling off the facade, and windows up and down the 37-story tower are broken out. Inside, the elevators don't function, there's no electricit­y, debris litters the stairwells and each floor and words that cannot be printed in this publicatio­n are graffitied across the walls.

Vacant since 2014, and partially vacant well before that, the inside of the building is like a time capsule. Straws are scattered across the floor of what used to be a restaurant, a dentist's chair from a decade long past sits alone on the 21st floor, books still line the shelves of a former law office, one which incidental­ly was the scene of a 2017 fire when people broke into the building and decided to burn said books.

On the top floor, the circular structure that was home to the former rotating restaurant, windows have been smashed by people throwing furniture out of the circular room and onto the rooftop, which was once home to a Japanese garden.

The property will also likely need serious environmen­tal abatement work. Since it closed seven years ago, it has only been used for tactical training for local law enforcemen­t — posters of people holding guns are scattered throughout the tower — and by people who have illegally entered the building.

However, 100 N. Main does have its virtues. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places, it's eligible for tax credits if it is redevelope­d. The property not only includes the 100 N. Main tower but the attached parking garage, several other buildings and a small dog park, presenting a rare opportunit­y to redevelop an entire city block.

And, of course, it offers unparallel­ed views of Downtown Memphis and the Mississipp­i River.

Glamor to ghost town

Ground was broken for the 438-foot tower in 1963, and 100 N. Main opened in 1965. The 37 floors offered 753,000 square feet of internal space. That included amenities like the health club, saunas and massage rooms on the 35th and 36th floors. At one time, the building also hosted a pool on the 36th floor with a retractabl­e roof.

The pool was later filled in and that floor eventually became the home of the Tennessee Club. A dusty pool table still sits in what used to be the billiard room. The 37th floor was once a Japanese garden and housed the base of the rotating bar and restaurant.

The tower is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and, according to the applicatio­n to the registry, is an example of the "late Internatio­nal style due to its pilotis base, rectangula­r form, and flat roof with garden, round projection for the top floor, ribbon windows, lack of ornamentat­ion, cantilever­ed projection­s, and open floor plan."

Over time, tenants vacated the building, sometimes leaving entire floors empty. By 2014, the building was only at 20% capacity, said Brett Roler, vice president of planning and developmen­t for the Downtown Memphis Commission. The building was sold that year and the new owner shuttered it.

The property changed hands multiple times in the past decade and, before being bought by the DMC, was most recently owned by New York-based Townhouse Management Co.

Who will redevelop 100 N. Main?

All that, the good and the bad, is what awaits one of the six developers who are finalists to get the property from the Downtown Memphis Commission and, the organizati­on hopes, transform it into something vibrant to breathe life back into one of the most prominent pieces of Memphis' skyline.

The DMC has whittled the 11 developmen­t groups who responded to a request for proposals for the tower to six, who were announced earlier this month. The finalists are undergoing additional interviews, and a winner is expected to be announced at the end of this year or early next. The

final decision about who will acquire the structure will be made by the Downtown Mobility Authority, the DMC branch that owns the building.

Two of the developers are Memphisbas­ed: 100 North Main Developmen­t Partners, led by Kevin Woods, and Carlisle Developmen­t Company, LLC, led by Chance Carlisle.

Alexander Company, led by Joseph Alexander is based in Madison, Wisconsin. Block Real Estate Services and Sunflower Developmen­t Group, led by Aaron Mesmer, is based in Kansas City, Missouri. Flaherty & Collins, led by David Flaherty, is based in Indianapol­is. Russell Glen & Mathews Southwest, led by Terrence G. Maiden, is a partnershi­p between two Texas-based developmen­t groups.

Whichever developer is selected would have to spend thousands of dollars examining the property with architects and contractor­s, creating renderings and completing other due diligence, before they could even think about starting work.

The proposals from each group vary somewhat, but multifamil­y use is one of the cornerston­es of each proposal. Some of the developers outlined plans to bring the rooftop back as a bar or restaurant, while others proposed making it an amenity for residents or guests if there is ever a hotel component.

Woods said in an interview his group was interested in the 100 N. Main property partly because of a desire to see further revitaliza­tion brought to that part of Downtown — on the heels of the convention center renovation — as well as the opportunit­y to preserve a piece of Memphis history.

"Our activation is built around preserving historic space through bringing more people to activate that space 18 to 24 hours a day," he said.

His group's proposal would include a combinatio­n of retail, residentia­l and hotel uses with a focus on increasing density within the city block.

"When you look out...100 North Main, you start to dream big and start to ask yourself what's possible," he said. "We believe this is a space worth saving. And that's something for the entire city and the region to get excited about."

Roler recently took a Commercial Appeal photograph­er and reporter on a tour of the building to show the current state of the structure and outline the assets of the building as well as the difficulties redevelopm­ent efforts could face.

While parts of the building might currently seem an ideal setting to shoot a horror film, Roler said a developer who approached it with some creativity might be able to create something special.

Except for some interior columns, much of the walls on each floor could be removed, opening up floors of what used to be narrow hallways, boardrooms and often cramped offices to be reconfigured in any number of ways.

While what happens to the building next is unclear, one thing is fairly certain. If the building were to be knocked down, it's extremely unlikely another building of its scale would be built, given the market conditions for new constructi­on in Memphis.

Roler has led almost 30 tours of the skyscraper and each tour group has been stunned by the views from the upper floors and rooftop.

“I haven't had anybody who made it up to the top and thought that there's not a reason to save it,” he said. “What does it say about us if we're willing to change our skyline in such a dramatic way?”

 ?? ARIEL COBBERT/ COMMERCIAL APPEAL ?? Nov. 8, 2021-Inside the derelict 100 N. Main Skyscraper, which the Downtown Memphis Commission will be selling to a developer early next year.
ARIEL COBBERT/ COMMERCIAL APPEAL Nov. 8, 2021-Inside the derelict 100 N. Main Skyscraper, which the Downtown Memphis Commission will be selling to a developer early next year.
 ?? BRAD VEST/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL ?? 100 North Main has long been vacant.
BRAD VEST/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL 100 North Main has long been vacant.
 ?? ARIEL COBBERT/ COMMERCIAL APPEAL ?? Nov. 8, 2021-Inside the derelict 100 N. Main Skyscraper, which the Downtown Memphis Commission will be selling to a developer early next year.
ARIEL COBBERT/ COMMERCIAL APPEAL Nov. 8, 2021-Inside the derelict 100 N. Main Skyscraper, which the Downtown Memphis Commission will be selling to a developer early next year.
 ?? ARIEL COBBERT/ COMMERCIAL APPEAL ?? Nov. 8, 2021-Inside the derelict 100 N. Main Skyscraper, which the Downtown Memphis Commission will be selling to a developer early next year.
ARIEL COBBERT/ COMMERCIAL APPEAL Nov. 8, 2021-Inside the derelict 100 N. Main Skyscraper, which the Downtown Memphis Commission will be selling to a developer early next year.
 ?? ARIEL COBBERT/ COMMERCIAL APPEAL ?? Nov. 8, 2021-Inside the derelict 100 N. Main Skyscraper, which the Downtown Memphis Commission will be selling to a developer early next year.
ARIEL COBBERT/ COMMERCIAL APPEAL Nov. 8, 2021-Inside the derelict 100 N. Main Skyscraper, which the Downtown Memphis Commission will be selling to a developer early next year.

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