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Mercedes Outlet Mall
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Best Buy headed for 10th and Trenton - 10/2/2006
(McAllen-Edinburg-Mission:
Retail)(McAllen) - The Plaza Del Norte shopping center, is set to be
built at the corner of Trenton Road and 10th Street by next summer. Best Buy and
an unnamed department store are slated to anchor the 45-acre shopping center at
the intersection's northwest corner. A bookstore, linens store, houseware store
and pet supply store are listed as possible major tenants for the location
Valley construction still sizzling - 9/22/2006
(McAllen-Edinburg-Mission:
Housing)News of a declining home construction front is starting to
sound like Chicken Little to local home builders. The latest national U.S.
Census Bureau estimates show the number of residential building permits taken
out in August was down 6 percent from July and at its lowest levels since 2003.
But to local builders those numbers look more like a falling acorn than a
crystal ball. "The construction level, in Texas, is still going about the same
pace as last year," said Jim Gaines, a research economist at Texas A&M
University's Real Estate Center in College Station. "The general slowdown that
is being reported by the national press doesn't appear to be present in Texas."
In fact, new homes are still hot in the Rio Grande Valley. The
McAllen-Edinburg-Mission metropolitan area had 4,603 new residential
construction permits from January through July of this year, according to Texas
A&M University's Real Estate Center. It is about a 10 percent increase over the
same period last year. Major developments are being planned in Edinburg, Pharr
and Alamo and home builders said smaller developments have not lost their
momentum. In June, McAllen-based Obra Homes opened the new phase of a large
development called Saddle Creek off North 29th Street and Oxford Road in
McAllen. "We had that opening back in June and we had probably 60 plus
registered buyers," said Jaime Garza, Obra Homes' marketing director. "There is
no lack of interest in the market place here." A strong job market and cheap
land is helping to fuel the sustained home growth, said Ramiro Garza Jr.,
executive director of the Edinburg Economic Development Corp. The Valley's lack
of a housing bubble has also helped regulate the market and avoid letdown, said
Gaines. With land prices relatively low throughout the Valley, building a home
is more affordable and buyers are not restricted to existing homes on the
market. But that could hurt builders if the market does slow, he said. "I would
say right now in Texas the real risk is that we've got, is that if builders are
a little slow to react, we might find ourselves in a slightly overbuilt
situation," he said. Some builders, however, said they can already see some
signs of a slowdown. "Right now the home market in the Valley is still going
well, but it's been slowing down," said Onesimo Martinez, owner of Designer
Homes in McAllen. "I think it's due to the higher interest rates and the price
of property has gone up," he said. But Gaines said the area shows all the
necessary signs to keep a strong construction market; a growing population,
cheap labor and a strong economy. However, he said he predicts the market may
start leveling off by the end of the year.
Valley among least expensive places to live - 9/17/2006
(McAllen-Edinburg-Mission:
Economy)The Rio Grande Valley's three largest cities are among the
nation's least-expensive places to live, according to a recent index compiled by
a national economic development research organization. It costs less for more
affluent middle-class people to live in McAllen, Harlingen and Brownsville than
it does in many other areas of the United States. The low cost of living also
makes it easier for the cities to attract investment, development professionals
said. The second quarter 2006 ACCRA Cost of Living Index places McAllen as the
fourth least expensive urban area in the United States, with a cost of living
more than 16 percent below the national average. For April, May and June,
Harlingen ranked tenth, at 15 percent below the national average. Brownsville,
while not cracking the top ten or ranked on the list, wasn't far behind at more
than 13 percent below the national cost of living. "You all are across the board
an enviable place to live," said Sean McNamara, administrative director for the
Arlington, Virginia based, Council for Community and Economic Research, a
research association that produces the index, which charts prices for housing,
utilities, groceries, transportation, healthcare and other goods and services.
The index measures the cost of living for a household where at least one person
earns between $70,000 to $100,000 a year. This group of households is in the top
fifth of the professional and managerial income bracket that includes
entry-level executives and project managers. Many people in the Valley don't
fall into that group, but they are nonetheless tied to the reasons why money
earned by the more affluent stretches further. Cheap labor is a major factor in
keeping the Valley's cost of living down, local economic experts say. The
Valley's relatively young population is also a factor in the area's low cost of
living. But in the Valley, demand for construction, retail and services workers
is high because those sectors are booming, Jose A. Pagan, an economics professor
at the University of Texas-Pan American, said. That demand can increase wages.
So, whether the cost of labor increases or decreases in those sectors depends on
whether the demand for labor is stronger than the supply of workers. The
Valley's lack of a strong union presence also helps keep labor costs relatively
low, he said. If the area's unemployment rates continue to fall, the area's cost
of living should rise compared to the national average because it will be harder
for employers to fill positions, and they will have to offer better wages, Pagan
said. For now, the Valley's low cost of living is a selling point for cities
trying to attract business. "That's obviously one of the big factors when
bringing companies into the area," said Orlando Campos, director of recruitment
and development with the Brownsville Economic Development Council. Firms that
relocate to the area have the option of paying lower wages to adjust for the
lower cost of living than they would in other areas of the nation, he said.
Keith Patridge, president and CEO of the McAllen Economic Development Corp.,
added that the low cost of living also benefits Winter Texans and other
retirees, a group that brings millions of dollars to the Valley economy. "From a
fixed income standpoint, it's a very attractive thing," he said.
Sales taxes in McAllen continue to rise -
9/15/2006
:
Economy)McAllen's revenues surged to $4.12 million from $3.56 million
over the same period. So far this year, the city has collected $22.8 million, up
from $20.3 million last year at this time. The following lists city sales tax
comparisons for August. *Brownsville: $2.38 million (2006), $2.06 million
(2005), 15.7 percent gain. *Harlingen: $1.38 million (2006), $1.27 million
(2005), 8.5 percent gain. *McAllen: $4.12 million (2006), $3.56 million (2005),
15.6 percent gain. Texas Comptroller Carole Keeton Strayhorn reported that the
state collected $1.64 billion in sales tax last month, a 10 percent rise from
the previous month.
[Brownsville Herald]Weslaco opens spec buildings for business -
9/15/2006
(McAllen-Edinburg-Mission:
Industrial)(Weslaco) - The City of Weslaco has unveiled two new
facilities, hoping to attract businesses looking for affordable options to
building ownership. The 3,000- to 5,000-square-foot buildings will be leased to
smaller businesses seeking a centralized location in the city's Mid Valley
Industrial Complex. Hernan Gonzalez, Executive Director at Weslaco EDC, said the
buildings consist of well-constructed "shells" of buildings that are easily
expandable to accommodate various uses. The location is strategically useful as
the industrial complex is positioned to accommodate any customer distance in the
Valley.
[Rio Grande Business Weekly]More stores revealed for Mercedes outlet
mall - 9/13/2006
:
Retail)(Mercedes) - Rio Grande Valley Premium Outlets mall announced
50 more stores set to inhabit the 54-acre facility just 50 days to go until its
opening. The announcement - including A'Gaci, Aeropostale, Carter's and Perry
Ellis - comes a little more than a week before a job fair in Mercedes to hire
many of the 800 to 1,200 employees they'll need to serve the millions of
visitors expected each year. Simon properties, the mall operator, announced the
first 14 stores last month. The 403,000-square-foot mall is scheduled to open
Nov. 2. The remaining 40 or so stores should be announced in the coming weeks.
[McAllen
Monitor]Mercedes outlet mall will need employees - 9/13/2006
(McAllen-Edinburg-Mission:
Employment)(Mercedes) - Rio Grande Valley Premium Outlets mall
announced 50 more stores set to inhabit the 54-acre facility. It is estimated
that 800 to 1,200 total employees will be needed to serve the millions of
visitors expected each year to the facility. The 403,000-square-foot mall is
scheduled to open in early November.
[The Monitor]9/11
Moves business to Valley area - 9/10/2006
(McAllen-Edinburg-Mission:
Economy)When shipping restrictions went up in Long Beach after 9/11,
many Asian manufacturers decided it was easier - and faster - to ship goods to
Mexico's western coast then truck them through central Mexico and into Reynosa.
Long Beach had been the key distribution center for goods coming into the
country, and in many ways still is. But when security concerns slowed down
business and paperwork mounted, some manufacturers had to shake up the way they
had done business for years, making the Rio Grande Valley a crucial stop for
goods coming into the United States. "We are seeing a lot of companies doing
North American distribution through the Rio Grande Valley," Keith Patridge,
president and CEO of the McAllen Economic Development Corporation. The economic
aftermath of the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks stunned the national economy
overall, but losses in other parts of the country helped the Rio Grande Valley
become a powerful industrial center. In the rest of the country, national
unemployment rates soared after the attacks to 6 percent in 2003, the highest in
ten years, and growth in U.S. exports dropped below zero in 2001. At the same
time, unemployment rates in the Rio Grande Valley continued to dip and have been
declining ever since, now at a record low 7.1 percent, about 2.1 percent lower
than before the attacks. Tax revenues, bank receipts and other economic
indicators show a similar surge. There were some immediate problems due to
security concerns, but those have since disappeared. Truck traffic entering the
United States at the Hidalgo International Bridge dipped in 2001 by about 6,000
vehicles from the previous year, mostly from tighter security at the border in
the months following 9/11. Traffic quickly rebounded the next year, though, to a
record of 390,000, according to the U.S. Department of Transportation, and
increased each year since to 491,000 in 2005. But the biggest changes for
maquiladoras are the increased security at the border. Customs broker Jim
McNamara of Maquilogistics said the added restrictions and security measures
have increased the time it takes to cross the border, threatening revenue. And
many maquilas have had to adhere to new sets of government rules to travel
across the border frequently.
STC
campus upgrade to fit 3,500 students - 9/5/2006
:
Education)(Weslaco) - The entire city is watching as South Texas
College's Mid-Valley Campus expands and reshapes the center of town. "It's
getting rid of facilities that were part of our old economy and giving them new
life," said Hernan Gonzalez, executive director of the Weslaco Economic
Development Corp. "A college is important to a community, but it is also a major
employer, a purchaser of goods and services." Monte Churchill, site coordinator,
said the campus is expected to fit about 3,500 students in the fall semester.
The campus has more than 40 acres bordered by West Huisache, North Border
Avenue, U.S. Business 83, and Calle de Colorado and has enough room to
accommodate students for at least the next five years. The most visible progress
is at the intersection of U.S. Business 83 and North Border Avenue across from
the post office. A paper warehouse and barbecue restaurant that once sat on 2.5
acres is being demolished to make way for parking and green space. The college
spent about $1.2 million on the property and demolition. The college is also
spending $489,000 on a parking lot on its eastern side accommodating 212
vehicles.
Pharr Value Place opens doors to extended stay property -
8/30/2006
(McAllen-Edinburg-Mission:
Hotel)(Pharr) - A Value Place extended stay hotel is now open in
Pharr, Texas - the first for the area and the fourth for the state. The 121-unit
extended stay property is located three miles west of the McAllen-Miller
International Airport at 207 W. Expressway 83, at the Sugar Road exit. Weekly
rates are $179. Three other Value Place extended stayed properties are currently
open in Lubbock, Killeen and Brownsville. Two additional Texas properties are
under construction in Harlingen and Fort Worth.
[Company News Release]$1.25M to South Texas border project - 8/28/2006
(McAllen-Edinburg-Mission:
Infrastructure & Transportation)Border communities McAllen and
Mission will receive $1.25 million in federal funding to help the cities make
ongoing infrastructure improvements in support of the Anzalduas International
Crossing. The Anzalduas International Crossing is a bridge project that will be
jointly undertaken by the communities of McAllen, Hidalgo and Mission. The
partners designed the project - with the backing of the U.S. and Mexican
governments - to ease traffic congestion between the two countries. The entire
project will span 2.7 miles. It will have two northbound lanes, two southbound
lanes and a pedestrian walkway. The bridge should open by 2008. The federal
investment should help create 81 jobs and leverage $2.6 million in private
investment.
Edinburg firefighters use GPS to change
traffic lights - 8/27/2006
:
Infrastructure & Transportation)(Edinburg) - Edinburg Volunteer Fire
Department has installed a new system installed that allows fire trucks to give
themselves green lights en route to emergencies. With a high-tech flick of a
switch inside any of the city's 17 trucks, a signal is transmitted through a
Global Positioning System (GPS) to satellites that tell the other end of the
system - posted on ten intersections throughout the city - not only how far away
the fire truck is, but also how quickly it is moving. The system will change the
light before fire crews reach the intersection and then return the crossroads to
normal rotation after the truck safely passes through. The system should help
alleviate the common panic drivers feel when stopped at an intersection with a
screaming, flashing truck coming up behind them. Now, instead of drivers making
the mistake of inching into the intersection - into oncoming traffic - to make
way for fire crews, cars traveling the same direction as the trucks can enjoy
the same green light and safely move out of the way. So far, the system has cost
the city about $115,000.
[McAllen
Monitor]Hidalgo courting stores - 8/27/2006
(McAllen-Edinburg-Mission:
Retail)(Hidalgo) - Hidalgo, the city of almost 11,000 that hosts
millions of travelers each year crossing in from Reynosa, is gearing up for its
very first full-service supermarket and a fast-food restaurant. The
25,000-square-foot Hidalgo Supermarket slated for the city is going up on the
corner of 15th Street and El Texano Drive, east of downtown and is expected to
be ready for customers in early November. Just down Highway 281, Stars
Restaurant is building its first location in Hidalgo. The fast-food spot should
also open in November and employ between 30 and 40 people.
[McAllen
Monitor]Hidalgo location draws Titan expansion - 8/27/2006
(McAllen-Edinburg-Mission:
Industrial)Hidalgo's location on maquila routes has drawn Titan
Industrial Development to expand an existing development on International
Boulevard west of Dodge Arena. Titan Industrial Development chose to expand an
existing development on International Boulevard west of Dodge Arena. Titan is
using 60 acres to build facilities for light manufacturing and distribution. The
location is on the main route for maquila managers and truckers going to Reynosa
and back.
[Brownsville Herald]Future neighborhood breaks ground - 8/24/2006
(McAllen-Edinburg-Mission:
Housing)(Edinburg) - La Sienna, a 700-acre development in the city's
north side, ceremonially broke ground last week. It will take at least seven
years to completely finish the project at the intersection of Monte Cristo Road
and U.S. Highway 281 behind the Flying J Travel Plaza. The development will be
home to municipal police and fire substations, commercial businesses and at
least 1,400 Spanish Colonial homes. The project will attract at least 4,500
residents and spur additional growth in the city. Some lots should be available
for purchase in the first quarter of next year, said Kent Burns of SKC
Development. The first phase calls for 97 homes, with Dan Sitterle Homes Inc. of
McAllen building about 70 of them. Home values should begin at $140,000.
[McAllen
Monitor]Edinburg construction activity $113 million - 8/24/2006
(McAllen-Edinburg-Mission:
Economy)(Edinburg) - Edinburg is poised to set another record for
total construction during a calendar year, with the latest figures from June
showing that the three-time All-America City has seen almost $113 million in
building activities midway through 2006. That figure compares to $87.5 million
in total construction activities during the first six months of 2005. The
construction of new commercial facilities leads the way between January and
June, approaching almost $46 million in activities, according to the Edinburg
Economic Development Corporation, while new homes built at that period were
valued at almost $38 million. During the same six-month period last year,
Edinburg had reported almost $25.4 million in new commercial buildings and more
than $36.3 million in new homes. Those figures do not include the value of any
construction activities at the University of Texas-Pan American. For the month
of June - the latest report compiled by the city's Code Enforcement Department -
Edinburg reported almost $11.7 million in new commercial construction, lower
than the almost $16.4 million mark set in June 2005. However, home construction
for June 2006 was slightly ahead of the pace a year ago, with the latest figures
showing $7.3 million in new homes built in June 2006, compared to $6.7 million
the same month last year.
[Edinburg
Economic Development Corporation]McAllen Industrial Market Overview -
8/22/2006
(McAllen-Edinburg-Mission:
Industrial)According to Verde Corporate Realty Services, as of Q1
2006, McAllen's industrial market size was 15,785,171 square feet with a market
occupancy of 97.8 percent. As of first quarter, the market has absorbed 301,624
square feet and has an average rental rate of $4.00 per square foot, up from
$3.96 in 2005. Currently, 204,000 square feet of industrial space is under
construction, with another 1,131,560 square feet planned. For Q1 2006, the
market has already delivered 47,000 square feet of space.
[Texas
Real Estate Business]The Economic Development Corporation of Weslaco
- 8/21/2006
(McAllen-Edinburg-Mission:
Economy)(Weslaco) - Economic development organizations are finding
ways to attract and retain the companies they seek. The population of Weslaco,
Texas, measures only 30,000 strong but the trade area population, which is about
200,000, shows just how successful the city's economic development efforts have
become. The Economic Development Corporation of Weslaco assists new businesses
by creating jobs, attracting investors and creating wealth. The companies that
the Economic Development Corporation of Weslaco retained during the past year
include Woodcrafters, a cabinet and vanity manufacturer, which created 350 jobs;
International Wood, a wood finishing company that created 125 jobs; and Southern
Mechanical Air Conditioning, a commercial Air Conditioning, Heating and
Ventilation contractor that created 40 jobs.
[Texas
Real Estate Business]Valley Housing market shows healthy signs -
8/21/2006
(McAllen-Edinburg-Mission:
Housing)(McAllen) - According to the McAllen MLS Residential Housing
Activity report, dollar volume for home sales in June 2006 was $34,140,000, an
all-time high. For the month, 261 sales were reported with an average price of
$130,800 and a median price of $107,000.
[Rio Grande Business Weekly]H-E-B Plus Superstore opens in Rio Grande
City - 8/21/2006
(McAllen-Edinburg-Mission:
Retail)(Rio Grande City, Starr County) - In Rio Grande City, home to
about 13,000 people, the area's second big-box grocery store opened its doors.
The Rio Grande City location is now the biggest H-E-B in the Rio Grande Valley.
The new store, about 112,000 square feet and employing about 350 people, is
about three times as large as the old grocery store in Rio Grande City. The
location of the new H-E-B Plus is set to serve the entire region.
[Brownsville Herald]
New Wal-Mart in the works for McAllen - 2/3/2006
(McAllen-Edinburg-Mission:
Retail)(McAllen) - Ewing Construction Co. of Corpus Christi is
building the Rio Grande Valley's newest Wal-Mart SuperCenter at the northeast
corner of Nolana and 29th Street. The 203,000-square-foot location is expected
to open this fall. The new SuperCenter will be a relocation from the current
Wal-Mart store at 23rd Street and Nolana. McAllen's third Target store,
scheduled to open this fall, is going up nearby at Nolana and Ware Road. Target
stores typically employ about 200 people. Ewing Construction also built the
Valley's first Kohl's department store at the Trenton North shopping plaza on
North 10th Street in McAllen. That store opened in October with more than 200
employees.
[The Monitor]Officials
negotiating to construct $17M complex - 1/14/2006
(McAllen-Edinburg-Mission:
Retail)(Alamo) - City officials are negotiating with a Dallas-area
real estate developer to construct a $17 million medical and commercial complex
on Tower Road, just south of Expressway 83. Under the proposal presented this
week, Guiding Angels Inc. in Addison would develop 200,000 square feet of
commercial space to house medical clinics, doctors' offices, restaurants, retail
shops and even a six-screen movie theater, according to City Manager Luciano
Ozuna Jr. Construction is expected to take between a year and 18 months, but
first the city must work out a sale price for the 20 acres of land, which sits
behind City Hall and is valued at roughly $330,000. Under the project's first
phase, which accounts for roughly one third of the total commercial space
available, Guiding Angels estimates 115 new jobs. Guiding Angels reports it
already has commitments from tenants to fill 45 percent of the commercial space.
[The Monitor]Palms
Crossing shopping development planned - 1/12/2006
(McAllen-Edinburg-Mission:
Retail)(McAllen) - P.F. Chang's China Bistro, Carrabba's Italian
Grill and BJ's Brewhouse are three of the seven new tenants confirmed for a
$17.2 million shopping development on South Ware Road and U.S. Expressway 83.
The city of McAllen sold 70 acres of the land - adjacent to where the new $38
million McAllen Convention Center is under construction - to Simon Property
Group Inc. for the company to build an approximately 600,000-square-foot Palms
Crossing shopping development. Simon expects to break ground in the summer and
complete construction in time for Palms Crossing to open some time in 2007.
[The Monitor]Edinburg
to see slew of new businesses - 12/6/2005
(McAllen-Edinburg-Mission:
Retail)Major Texas-based and nationally known businesses plan to open
locations in Edinburg in the next two years. Trenton Crossroads Plaza at the
northeast corner of Trenton Road and Jackson Road will be home to Quizno's Subs,
Applebee's, CVS Pharmacy, Big Apple Bagels and Alamo Drafthouse. Alamo
Drafthouse will be Trenton Crossroads' anchor. The six-screen business will
occupy 30,000-square-feet of the 101,653-square-foot development, said Paul
Garza, the developer of Trenton Crossroads. Katy-based Academy Sports & Outdoors
has tentative plans to build a 100,000-square-foot structure at the southwest
corner of Trenton Road and McColl's intersection. The other end of Trenton Road
is expected to be the location of a new retail development opening in late
spring or early summer 2007. Edinburg's planning and zoning commission gave
initial approval to changing the zoning of 61.25 acres at the northwest corner
of Trenton Road and U.S. 281 from single-family residential to general business
district.
[The Monitor]Health
and spa plans booming in Edinburg - 12/5/2005
(McAllen-Edinburg-Mission:
Retail)In early January, Six Hundred Plus, a combination gym and spa
on Trenton Road in the Cornerstone development is opening. Six Hundred Plus is a
24,000-square-foot two-floor gym-spa. Pump Inc. will open the 6,000-square-foot
Pump Diva for women and Pump Core at the intersection of Freddy Gonzalez Drive
and Sugar Road in February. By next November, Pump Kids will open a
10,000-square-foot in an upscale shopping development at the corner of Trenton
Road and McColl Road. Pump Burn in The District may be open by next spring at
the corner of McColl Road and Fern Avenue in McAllen.
[The Monitor]McAllen/Mission
retail market - 12/1/2005
(McAllen-Edinburg-Mission:
Retail)The retail market has been strong along the United
States/Mexico border, with the McAllen/Mission MSA having the largest increase
in activity. It is anticipated that all the developments will break ground
within the next 12 to 18 months. Vacancy rates in the prime retail centers in
McAllen and Mission are less than 10 percent. The northeast quadrant of
Sharyland area's Hunt master-planned community of residential and industrial
development has a 500,000-square-foot retail power center being developed by
Weingarten/RIOCO. The northwest quadrant of Expressway 83 and Shary Road has a
new The Home Depot with pads including a national bank and a Denny's Restaurant
as a neighbor. The hard northwest corner is being developed into a pad site for
Chase Bank. The southeast quadrant has attracted a Bed Bath & Beyond contiguous
east of the Wal-Mart SuperCenter. There are more than 500 acres just south of
Wal-Mart that are being positioned for commercial development. The new Anzalduas
International Bridge is projected to be completed by the fourth quarter of 2007.
A new loop from the Monterrey-Reynosa Toll Road to this bridge will expedite the
crossing time for Mexican shoppers. The city of McAllen has sold off the
northeast corner of the Expressway 83 and Ware Road intersection for a Simon
power center. The southwest corner of Expressway 83 and Ware Road has a 16-acre
tract that is under contract and being developed into a hotel/retail site with
more than 250,000 square feet to be leased or sold. At the southwest quadrant
development at Expressway 83 and Jackson Road, new activity is expected on a
12-acre tract being marketed by a local hospital on the northwest corner of
Jackson and Jackson, to the north of Best Buy. The northwest corner of North
McColl and Trenton is being developed by Davis Real Estate and will be anchored
by a Wal-Mart SuperCenter with shadow boxes and pad sites. This area will have
more than 250,000 square feet of retail space. Weingarten/RIOCO is developing
the northeast corner of Nolana and North 29th Street, which spans 40 acres.
AMREIT is developing a 30-acre tract on the northeast corner of North 10th and
Dove. In Mission, on the new North Conway Corridor, a 40-acre tract has been
developed at North Conway and Three Mile Line. In Edinburg, on the northeast
corner of Expressway North 281 and Monte Cristo, the La Sienna master-planned
community will be developed on 740 acres. La Sienna will have more than 1,900
home sites and about 100 acres of commercial development.
[Texas
Real Estate Business]Wingstop opens first store in Mission -
10/20/2005
(McAllen-Edinburg-Mission:
Retail)Wingstop Restaurants, Inc. has opened its first Mission
location. Johnny Collins, of South of the Border Wings, Inc., opened the new
location at 2310 E. Expressway 83, Suite 4 (Shary and Highway 83).
[PRNewswire]Hundreds
line up for grand opening of Kohl's - 10/7/2005
(McAllen-Edinburg-Mission:
Retail)The 88,000-square-foot Kohl's department store kicked off its
grand opening celebration at the Trenton North shopping plaza at the 7900 N.
10th St. The one closest to McAllen is in Corpus Christi. Initially expected to
provide 150 area jobs, the new Kohl's now has 205 employees, said Rudy Treviño,
the store's manager. He said base pay is $6.50 an hour.
[The Monitor]New
Target, H.E.B. coming to Mission - 10/4/2005
(McAllen-Edinburg-Mission:
Retail)A new Target store and an H.E.B. will soon open in Mission.
The new H.E.B. and Target stores will be two of the many retailers in a new
commercial subdivision on the northeast corner of the intersection of Shary Road
and Expressway 83. The Mission Planning and Zoning Commission approved the
commercial subdivision for water and sewer lines and other improvements, and the
department commission planned to rezone the area for commercial use next week.
Mission has had substantial growth in the past 15 years, with a population that
grew from 28,000 in 1990 to 45,000 ten years later. The current population is
almost 60,000. Target and H.E.B. are the anchor retailers who plan to open at
the new location, which is about half a million square feet. There are no
numbers available yet on how many sales tax dollars either store will bring into
the community or how many jobs they would create.
[The Monitor]Construction
begins for Rio Grande Valley Premium Outlets - 9/29/2005
(McAllen-Edinburg-Mission:
Retail)(Mercedes) - Simon Property Group, Inc. announced that its
Chelsea Property Group division broke ground on Rio Grande Valley Premium
Outlets. Officials from Roseland, NJ-based Chelsea Property Group were present
as construction began on the 400,000-square-foot upscale, fashion-oriented
manufacturers' outlet center located at the southwest corner of U.S. Expressway
83 and Mile 1-1/2 East Road in the city of Mercedes, Hidalgo County. The 54-acre
property will include the outlet center and several parcels for complementary
uses. Rio Grande Valley Premium Outlets, scheduled to open in fall 2006,
represents an investment of over $50 million, will create approximately 800
quality jobs, and will generate millions of dollars in sales tax revenue. It
will house over 100 outlet stores and will feature high-quality national brands
serving the area's permanent population as well as visitors to the area.
[PRNewswire]Dallas
firm to bring stores to Weslaco Kmart - 9/17/2005
(McAllen-Edinburg-Mission:
Retail)Clearview Investments LLC of Dallas has purchased the
abandoned Kmart building and will bring several stores to Weslaco. The
190,000-square-foot structure has been empty since 2003. Among the tenants
expected to move into the building are stores like Dollar Tree, Ross, Melrose,
as well as what is expected to be the largest Bealls store in the Valley.
Additionally, a bank, a Starbucks and other retail stores are expected to
eventually move in. The stores should begin opening by January. The stores will
join several new businesses along the northwest side of Weslaco where a Home
Depot, Chili's restaurant and Denny's restaurant have set up shop. Additionally,
the city is preparing for the construction of a 150-shop outlet retail center
that will include a hotel and 15,000-seat open-air entertainment center. The
outlet center is expected to create 1,000 to 1,500 new jobs.
[Mid Valley Town Crier]Food bank buys Pharr property - 9/13/2005
(McAllen-Edinburg-Mission:
Retail)The Food Bank of the Rio Grande Valley has purchased a 14-acre
site in downtown Pharr, setting up their move out of McAllen in early 2007. The
news is a welcome development for the Pharr Main Street Program. Once the
nonprofit moves to Pharr, an eventuality that will be delayed by an estimated $4
million in renovations, it will bring with it 45 full-time employees, as well as
between ten and 100 volunteers a week. In keeping with Pharr's efforts to create
a historic downtown, the food bank will restore what was once the Valley Fruit &
Vegetable Co. packing facility at the intersection of Business 83 and Cage
Boulevard to its original 1930s look. And adding a further boon to the Main
Street Program, the sale of the old Medco building across the street from City
Hall is scheduled for later this week with plans for development.
[McAllen
Monitor]Downtown garage expected to ease parking congestion (McAllen)
- 8/16/2005
(McAllen-Edinburg-Mission:
Retail)Downtown parking may get relief in spring 2007 with the
opening of a $6.1 million, five-story parking garage on the east side of Main
Street between Beaumont and Chicago avenues. The McAllen City Commission
proceeding with design development, the second of the five major phases in the
parking garage's development. The city hopes to bid out the construction in
early December and break ground in January. The parking garage will have more
than 15,000 square feet of leasable area on the first floor for offices,
restaurants and public restrooms, and four levels of parking which will
accommodate 435 cars. The city already has received letters of intent from
Burger King and Pollo Loco. Dairy Queen and House of China also have expressed
interest. Depending on the success of the parking garage, the city of McAllen
may build another just two blocks east, between South Broadway and South 12th
streets.
[McAllen
Monitor]Mercedes leaders confirm outlet mall on its way to city -
7/29/2005
(McAllen-Edinburg-Mission:
Retail)A multimillion-dollar outlet mall is headed to the Queen City.
The first phase of construction for Rio Grande Valley Premium Outlets is still a
couple of months away. The past project, formerly known as the Rio Grande Valley
Factory Stores, Inc., took a slight detour earlier this year when developers
merged with Chelsea Property Group. Chelsea, a subsidiary of Simon Properties,
which owns La Plaza Mall in McAllen and Valle Vista Mall in Harlingen, plans to
open the outlet mall in fall 2006. Plans for the center include a single-level,
village style project with a southwest architectural theme. The 54-acre
property, on the southwest corner of Expressway 83 and Mile 1 1/2 East, will
house more than 100 brand name stores with amenities and a tourist center on
site. The outlet center is expected to bring approximately 800 jobs to the city.
While plans in Mercedes move along in the next several months, construction for
a second outlet mall about five miles away in Weslaco is set to begin the first
week of September. The Weslaco outlet will be completed in one phase. The
project is expected to be complete in 18-20 months.
[McAllen
Monitor]Changing face - 7/8/2005
(McAllen-Edinburg-Mission:
Retail)The City of Pharr attributes the floundering residential and
commercial construction -- indicators of economic prosperity -- to running out
of land and not being able to attract high-dollar construction projects. By the
end of May, Pharr recorded $20.3 million in residential building permits while
Edinburg had $44.8 million and Mission $49.2 million, according to Rio Grande
Valley Partnership Chamber of Commerce statistics. All three cities experienced
a drop in these figures from the same period last year. Commercial construction
permits in Pharr declined by nearly 75 percent to $3.3 million as of May from
the same time in 2004. Edinburg's and Mission's declined as well but remained
relatively stable at $15.5 million and $10.3 million. There have also been more
high-dollar construction projects in Mission and Edinburg than in Pharr. That
can inflate the total value of building permits even if fewer are issued because
some properties can be worth far more than others.
[The Monitor]Officials
approve residential complex (San Juan) - 6/16/2005
(McAllen-Edinburg-Mission:
Retail)A 12.5-acre residential development on the north side of the
city is expected to begin construction shortly. The South Ridge Estates
subdivision, which will maintain housing for 112 families and ten commercial
businesses, was given final approval by the City Commission. Located at the
intersection of Raul Longoria Street and Nolana, South Ridge Estates is only the
second major residential complex within the city limits.
[The Monitor]March
building permit numbers (McAllen) - 5/20/2005
(McAllen-Edinburg-Mission:
Retail)McAllen led the Valley in residential building permits issued
during March with $19,573,790, according to the Rio Grande Valley Partnership.
McAllen was also second in commercial building permits with $25 million, just
behind Brownsville's $26 million. The Valley's four counties combined for
$39,095,634 in commercial building permits during March, bringing the year to
date numbers to $149,321,075. Other Valley numbers included: EDINBURG - $12
million commercial permits; MISSION - $11 million commercial permits and $9
million residential permits; WESLACO - $3.18 million commercial permits
[Brownsville Herald]Texas retail update- McAllen (Hidalgo County) -
5/1/2005
(McAllen-Edinburg-Mission:
Retail)Developer AmREIT and owner El Pistolon II Ltd. are planning
Las Fuentes, a 30-acre project at 10th and Dove streets - a prime retail corner
in McAllen. El Pistolon II Ltd. owns the land; AmREIT will manage the
development, construction and leasing of the project, which will be an estimated
400,000 square feet. Las Fuentes will break ground in January 2006 with the
opening planned for fall of 2006. Simon Property Group is developing Palms
Crossing, a 70-acre project located on Highway 83 between Ware Road and 29th
Street in front of the new $50 million McAllen Convention Center. The project is
scheduled to open in spring of 2006.
[Texas
Real Estate Business]Chili's set for summer construction (Edinburg) -
4/26/2005
(McAllen-Edinburg-Mission:
Retail)Construction is scheduled to start this summer on Chili's
Grill & Bar on University Drive next to Denny's in Edinburg. The developer,
Bricker International, is putting about $1.6 million into the project, which
should be ready for business by early next spring. The amount includes the costs
of infrastructure improvements. The restaurant typically employs 120 people,
according to a fact sheet prepared by the company.
[McAllen
Monitor]New Palmhurst Wal-Mart opens for business (update) -
4/14/2005
(McAllen-Edinburg-Mission:
Retail)The new 40-acre Wal-Mart SuperCenter opened at Conway Avenue
and Farm-to-Market Road 1924 in Palmhurst. The store is employing about 400
people and serving a population that has increased from 236 in 1990 to 4,872 in
2000. The new store will bring in about $1 million in annual sales tax revenue.
[McAllen
Monitor]
"What I would say to anyone applying at a job fair is, get
information about the products and the business first," said Edda Urrea, equity
advocate counselor at Texas State Technical College. "Find out the hours, find
out if it may or may not be a fit for you."
As many as 80 retailers will be present from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. at a Sept. 21 job
fair scheduled for the Rio Grande Valley Livestock Show Grounds Conference
Center.
The 400,000-square-foot shopping center, which will open Nov. 2, is expected to
hire 800 to 1,200 workers, said Jason Moreno, director of business services for
WorkFORCE Solutions in Edinburg.
Persons looking for full-time positions should ask about
insurance and benefits, Urrea said,
By Kyle Arnold
The McAllen Monitor
September 22
MCAllen, Texas - MERCEDES —
Showing up for a job interview four and a half hours early is a heck of a way to
impress a potential employer.
That’s what more than 700
hungry job-seekers did Thursday morning for a shot at up to 1,600 positions
available at a job fair to staff the Rio Grande Valley Premium Outlets shopping
center.
By noon, officials estimated
more than 2,000 people had come out for the event at the Mercedes Livestock
Showgrounds, with yet still another seven hours worth of interviews to go. And
more than 3,000 people were expected throughout the day.
At 10 a.m., police were
directing traffic and lines outside the showgrounds snaked through the area.
"We’re thrilled with the
turnout," said A.B. Barrera, marketing manager for the new shopping center.
More than 1,000 people
pre-registered with Workforce Solutions for the fair, their resumes tailored and
pre-screened for the 70-plus employers in attendance.
Rio Grande Valley Premium
Outlets is scheduled to open in six weeks. Most of the 100-plus store managers
hoped to hire the 1,200 to 1,600 employees needed to run the shopping center
during Thursday’s event.
The commerce is welcome in
Mercedes, a city with an unemployment rate at 16 percent that until recently was
still known as a suburb of Weslaco.
The jobs created are also an
economic boost to the surrounding cities, as 4 to 5 million shoppers are
expected at the center each year, said Mercedes Mayor Joel Quintanilla.
Merchants say whole class of shoppers has vanished
Saturday Sep 30 | Austin American-Statesman
Luxury sport-utility vehicles bearing Mexican license plates dot
the retail centers of border cities such as this one, but the bus station that
used to bring scores of low-income shoppers is nearly empty.
INDIANAPOLIS, Oct. 27 -- Simon Property Group, Inc. (the
"Company" or "Simon") (NYSE: SPG) today announced results for the quarter and
nine months ended September 30, 2005:
* Diluted funds from operations ("FFO") of the Simon portfolio for the quarter
increased 26.7% to $351.9 million from $277.7 million in 2004. On a per share
basis the increase to $1.19 from $1.04 in the third quarter of 2004 was 14.4%.
Diluted FFO of the Simon portfolio for the nine months increased 29.3% to $1.035
billion from $800.5 million in 2004. On a per share basis the increase was 15.9%
to $3.49 per share from $3.01 per share in 2004.
* Net income available to common stockholders for the quarter was $74.4 million
as compared to $74.1 million in 2004. On a diluted per share basis, earnings
decreased 5.6% to $0.34 from $0.36 in the third quarter of 2004. Net income
available to common stockholders for the nine months increased 48.1% to $286.2
million from $193.2 million in 2004. On a diluted per share basis the increase
was 38.3% to $1.30 per share from $0.94 per share in 2004. The increase in net
income for the nine months is primarily attributable to net gains on the sale of
two Chicago office building complexes.
The Company considers FFO a key measure of its operating performance that is not
specifically defined by accounting principles generally accepted in the United
States ("GAAP"). The Company believes that FFO is helpful to investors because
it is a widely recognized measure of the performance of real estate investment
trusts ("REITs") and provides a relevant basis for comparison among REITs. A
reconciliation of GAAP reported net income to FFO is provided in the financial
statement section of this press release.
The Company's core fundamentals continue to demonstrate strength as evidenced by
strong operating metrics within its three domestic business platforms
"We are pleased to report another quarter of strong financial and operational
results," said David Simon, Chief Executive Officer. "Our growth in FFO can be
attributed to the productivity of our high quality portfolio, the 2004
acquisition of Chelsea Property Group, and the completion and opening of several
new development projects. During the first ten months of 2005, we opened two
open-air regional shopping centers, one community center and two Premium Outlet
centers -- one in the U.S. and one in Japan. Our development pipeline continues
to be robust with five additional projects comprising nearly 3 million square
feet of gross leasable area under construction and projected to open over the
next 12 to 18 months."
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