Westchester Commons’ opening marks transition from rural to urban

Westchester Commons’ opening marks transition from rural to urban

MARK GORMUS/TIMES-DISPATCH

Amy Kirby helps prepare the Target at Westchester Commons in Chesterfield Co. for the opening.

 

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Tenants Some of the stores and restaurants coming to Westchester Commons and the expected opening date:
Target: Wednesday
Jo-Ann Fabric and Craft: Friday
Gold’s Gym: late March
Petco: March 23
Regal Cinema: April 24
OfficeMax: April 30
Books-a-Million: June
Red Hot & Blue: July

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When John Watkins looks out across the wide open landscape that used to be his playground, he doesn't see Westchester Commons, one of the largest retail developments in the Richmond area.

The Republican state senator from Powhatan County points over a half-built row of retail stores. "That is where my parents lived. Where I grew up."

Then he turns to another spot a few hundred yards north, this one between two buildings. "That's where my house was. Where I raised three kids," Watkins said.

The land has changed since Watkins was boy.

Acres of trees spread out as far as the eye could see back then. He and his cousins camped out in the woods and had the run of the place.

His family had owned the property since 1876. Watkins Nursery operated there before moving to Amelia County.

Now, the land has been stripped of those trees and is becoming one of the Richmond area's newest shopping centers.

Westchester Commons is the retail component of the Watkins Centre development at state Route 288 and Midlothian Turnpike in Chesterfield County.

Watkins Centre was zoned in 2006 for 1.3 million square feet of retail space and 2.1 million square feet for offices on 640 acres.

In the next year, construction is expected to begin on the Village of Westchester, a 1,500-residential-unit development on an adjacent 280 acres.

The first phase of the 975,000-square-foot Westchester Commons center opens this week with Target and Jo-Ann Fabric and Craft stores.

Other tenants, some of which will open later this month or next month, include Gold's Gym, Petco, OfficeMax and Regal Cinema.

When the shopping center is finished later this year, its size will be slightly bigger than Virginia Center Commons mall. Westchester Commons sits on 150 acres.

Adjacent to the new shopping center is The Shoppes at Westchester, where a CVS drugstore and a three-story office building have opened. More stores, a hotel and offices are planned there.

At entrance to the Watkins Centre office park on the south side of the Midlothian Turnpike, Village Bank and Trust has opened its corporate offices.

Watkins said it's bittersweet to look at the land where he once played turned into a shopping center.

He and his family sold the land where Westchester Commons sits but still owns several hundred acres south of Midlothian Turnpike where the office park is slated to go. They are still looking for a developer for the office portion of the project.

Watkins said it was inevitable that development would come to his property, particularly after Route 288 opened.

"My father said years ago that [development] was going to come this way," Watkins said.

. . .

When Chesterfield first began thinking about the Watkins development, county officials hoped the center would draw higher-end retailers similar to those at Stony Point Fashion Park in South Richmond and Short Pump Town Center in western Henrico County. Both malls opened in 2003.

Instead, Westchester Commons is a type of a lifestyle center where residents can stroll along a Main Street corridor, eat at restaurants, be entertained and shop at larger retailers. But the center has yet to land any of the high-end tenants it had hoped for originally.

"The center has undergone different variations since we began four years ago," said Gary Hough, senior director of shopping centers for Zaremba Group LLC, the shopping center's Cleveland-based developer.

"For instance, we originally sought a full-line department store. We have since landed an excellent tenant mix and quality center that the community will enjoy."

Local real estate officials said in mid-2007 that Boscov's, a family-owned department-store chain based in Pennsylvania, was considering locating at Westchester Commons. The chain filed for bankruptcy protection last year, closed 10 of its 49 locations and stopped its expansion plans.

The downturn in the economy, which has slowed or stopped expansion plans for many national retailers, hit just as the developers were looking for tenants.

Zaremba says the center is 76 percent leased.

"The Westchester site is coming on line at an inopportune time," said Rob Black, vice president and director of retail services at real estate broker CB Richard Ellis.

Black said the upscale retailers that the county and developer wanted never signed on to the project. "The developer had to settle for some tenants that didn't have as much of a 'wow' factor. It is a shame because it is really an excellent site," he said.

Consequently, Westchester Commons won't be as much of a regional draw as Short Pump or Stony Point, he said.

"The Regal Cinemas, however, will draw from a large trade area. That may be a saving grace," he said.

C. Lee Warfield III, executive vice president for real estate brokerage Thalhimer/Cushman & Wakefield in Richmond, said Westchester Commons will pull from the nearby Midlothian area, but will be particularly attractive to people in Powhatan County.

"About 20,000 people [from Powhatan] head that way toward the city, and they're all going to go past that project," he said.

Zaremba's Hough said Westchester Commons has a good mix of tenants.

"As we progress in leasing the center, we are talking with numerous national and regional players that will fit well into," the center, Hough said.

. . .

As the first stores open this week, Watkins looks across the land with a resigned sort of happiness.

He said the development is a way to help the community where he grew up and still lives. He lives in Powhatan, but is quick to point out that it's still a Midlothian mailing address.

"You have to have a balance" between businesses and residents, he said. "And in order to have that balance, you have to have businesses. They will pay taxes that will go toward our schools, toward our police."

Still, his face on a recent cold February morning shows that he wouldn't mind going back to the days when he could romp across the land.



Contact Louis Llovio at (804) 649-6348 or .

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Reader Reactions

Flag Comment Posted by graydon on March 05, 2009 at 8:19 am

I wonder how people make the leap from things I post to what they post.  I never said I wanted everything to be concrete.  In fact, a better design for this project could have used LESS concrete. 

Density does not mean no yards.  The Fan is a very dense neighborhood and people have yards, and those yards are actually more private than suburban yards.  Also high density allows for more shared open space, such as Byrd Park, which is a short walk from my house.  And you have many stores and restaurants within walking distance that doesn’t involved walking across oceans of parking lots.

And another benefit to truly urban, dense cities is that there is MORE countryside for those who want open spaces and less concrete.  Suburbia just gets you more concrete and more people but less efficiently.

Flag Comment Posted by james on March 04, 2009 at 4:35 pm

yes, graydon, let’s build like they do in Europe—build everything on top of everything else. Cram everyone into as tight a space as possible. No need for yards—cement is fine for the kiddies. Let’s live like Europeans! WOO-HOO!!!

Fact is Westchester Commons is a VERY WELL PLANNED property. It’s in a prime location, set to keep county retail dollars from going to Short Pump. Looking at that area, I’m not sure where else they could have run the road farther in toward Richmond. When it’s done it will have a residential component that will allow people to walk back and forth, and it will generate millions in tax revenue every year that the county needs badly.

Flag Comment Posted by mjrichmond on March 04, 2009 at 4:22 pm

.....I could wipe away the tears with $100 bills…boo hooo sob sob.

Flag Comment Posted by mjrichmond on March 04, 2009 at 4:20 pm

The beginning of this article is pathetic. I’m sure the guy who spent a dollar on a winning lottery ticket misses that dollar sooo much.  Watkins got them to run 288 through his land so the surrounding land would increase value ten-fold. 

You know what…if they found a couple million dollars of gold underneath my house, I’ll be “sad” to bulldoze it but I think I will live. **SARCASM**

Flag Comment Posted by hetrjo on March 04, 2009 at 3:01 pm

The person photographed in the picture is NOT AMY KIRBY.  She spelled her name out to you…..AMY RYAN..Try to pay attention next time!

Flag Comment Posted by graydon on March 04, 2009 at 12:23 pm

One can be critical of a project without it being inconsiderate of a person involved with it.  I’m a very considerate person, but I also call bad projects as I see them, and this one is bad.

If something had to be built there, it could have been done in a much better fashion—that’s what I’m saying.  You like the stores?  Great.  But the development itself is not very well planned, and is just more sprawl that has ruined the appearance of this country and encourages more driving and such.

And what about the people who move that far away from the city to get away from all of that?  Now it’s at their doorstep, bring more traffic their way and ruining what used to be a scenic view. 

I am a planner, and I can assure you I could have done a better job on that site.

Flag Comment Posted by pomsmoma on March 04, 2009 at 11:11 am

We are thrilled to have the shopping at Watkins (Westchester). We are 78+ and have lived neaarby for 35+ yrs. To have this near us is a BLESSING!!Now we don’t have to drive very far with all the impatient, inconsiderate folks on the road. Oh, yes, we were young, too,  but were taught to be considerate of others. Ad my husband did serve 20 years in the A.F.so we’ve lived in many cultures.

Flag Comment Posted by graydon on March 03, 2009 at 9:51 am

What an development.  Nothing urban about it, if you check out the site plan.  More huge parking lots, parking everywhere, and no residential development can be walkable to this commercial area. 

It’s disgusting to me that the guy says it’s bittersweet to see it as it is now, when he could have protected the property and kept it wooded if that’s how he wanted it to remain.  Conservation easements are always available to prevent this kind of thing from totally devouring beautiful rural areas.

And did you see the huge intersection at Rte 60 and Watkins Centre Parkway?  Awful.

Flag Comment Posted by FSquirrels on March 02, 2009 at 2:56 pm

Here’s a sort of history of Rt 288 found on the Internet.

http://www.roadstothefuture.com/VA288_Construction_Western.html

I don’t see anything that indicates it was ever planned as a federal project.

Flag Comment Posted by blackbeered on March 02, 2009 at 1:57 pm

to “Virginian” ...

the only link I can suggest is that article in the Sunday edition of the RTD ... it was the front page of the Metro [?] section ... complete with map, diagrams, names/ownership, values before and after, and the rerouting facts.  As I said, maybe c 2004/2005?

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