The Signal

Business wavers

Castaic Village sees sharp decline since grocery store closed its doors in 2014

- By Andrew Clark Signal Staff Writer

The carcass of a Burger King drive-thru display, the worn paint bearing the footprint of a long-gone Baskin Robbins sign and an abandoned supermarke­t space all call Castaic Village home.

The sprawling shopping center on the northeast corner of Lake Hughes and Castaic roads used to have a number of businesses, but since a Ralphs grocery store closed in March 2014, the center has seen a sharp decline. Three months later, in June 2014, a Rite Aid closed after the company decided not to renew a lease.

“Since then, the occupancy at this center

has declined,” said Jack Crawford, who manages the UPS Store in the shopping center. “The current owners seem to be making more of an effort to get businesses in here, but they’re looking at more non-traditiona­l, non-retail. At least, that’s what they’ve brought in so far.”

Dean and Gwen Gallion, the former owners of Gallions Corner market, both said the area’s growth did not match what was originally anticipate­d.

“The building quit so, consequent­ly, they couldn’t keep the businesses going,” Gwen Gallion said.

Business owners noted some of the smaller businesses started to close when the housing market crashed in 2008, but the decline was accelerate­d in 2014 with the closure of the anchor stores. A Chase bank is also among the locations that have closed.

“The Ralphs didn’t completely surprise us just because it happened after they built the new one down at Hasley Canyon,” Crawford said.

“When Ralphs was here and Rite Aid was here, this center went well,” he said. “There was a time when this center was full, the (location) where Starbucks is was full, the (location) where Walgreens is was full.”

When asked what most of his customers would want, some of whom travel from residences in Frazier Park and Pine Mountain Club to use Castaic businesses, Crawford said a grocery store.

“The biggest thing would be to have a supermarke­t of some type, whether it’s one of the main stores like an Albertsons or a Vons, or whether it is a Food 4 Less or a Vallarta,” Crawford said. “All of those have been mentioned. They would just like to have a supermarke­t at this end of Castaic.”

Crawford said businesses want the supermarke­t to draw traffic in, while residents want a more convenient place to shop.

“With the Northlake developmen­t moving forward, slower than we would all like to see, but it is continuing to move forward. I think with that, the high school moving forward, I think there’s a lot to be optimistic about,” he said. “It’s just that it’s a couple years out.”

Crawford estimated that time to be shortly before the Great Recession housing crash, which also tripped up the buildout of the proposed Northlake developmen­t.

“There were problems with the Northlake developmen­t at that time,” he said. “It was a domino effect after that.”

Calls to several brokers at NAI Capital, the company that has been trying to attract businesses to the shopping center, were not returned.

Hope for Northlake

Crawford and several other Castaic residents said the town’s economic future hinges on Northlake, a 3,150-home planned community on 1,330 acres between Interstate 5 and Castaic Lake. The first phase of the developmen­t’s specific plan is up for a vote before the Los Angeles County Regional Planning Commission at 9 a.m. Feb. 21 in the Hall of Records in downtown Los Angeles.

The developmen­t is broken up into two phases, the first totaling 720 acres consisting of 1,974 units, most of which are multi-family apartments, a fire station, nearly 415 acres of open space and about 20 acres of mixed commercial and industrial use. A second phase will be built later.

Castaic Town Council member Jeff Preach said he was optimistic about Northlake, but aware of the extensive approval process.

When asked about Castaic Village, Preach said he was sympatheti­c for a number of area businesses and schools, many of which are well below capacity.

“Poor guys, how they’re hanging on, I don’t even know,” he said. “I bet half the town is vacant.”

Preach called the Northlake developmen­t “a huge savior” and “a huge asset.”

“It’s not rocket science, we need more housetops,” he said. “This town needs to be prosperous again.”

When asked if there was any formal opposition in town to Northlake, Preach said he did not know and that Northlake representa­tives regularly attend town council meetings.

“I’m not aware of anybody who is against it,” he said.

Calls to representa­tives for Northlake were not returned Monday.

 ?? Nikolas Samuels/The Signal (See additional photos at signalscv.com) ?? A sign indicates the availabili­ty of space at the Castaic Village on Lake Hughes and Castaic roads on Monday. The shopping center has seen a sharp decline since the Ralphs grocery store closed in March 2014.
Nikolas Samuels/The Signal (See additional photos at signalscv.com) A sign indicates the availabili­ty of space at the Castaic Village on Lake Hughes and Castaic roads on Monday. The shopping center has seen a sharp decline since the Ralphs grocery store closed in March 2014.

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