Ballpark on south bank of James pitched

Ballpark on south bank of James pitched

CB RICHARD ELLIS

The area shaded in blue is the proposed site of a new baseball stadium for Richmond’s planned Eastern League team.

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SPECIAL REPORT: Baseball in Richmond

Williams: A museum is better for the bottom

Eastern League not yet ready to identify Richmond's new franchise

The owner of almost 18 acres of prime property on the south bank of the James River is pitching Manchester as the place to play ball in Richmond.

Reynolds Packaging Group has mentioned to city officials informally the possibility of a minor-league baseball stadium in South Richmond.

The stadium site would be part of a 17.5-acre property between the Manchester and 14th Street bridges, with a clear view of the river and downtown skyline.

"How good would a ballpark look there?" asked John T. "Trib" Sutton III, senior vice president of CB Richard Ellis of Virginia, a real estate brokerage that is handling the sale of the property for Reynolds.

Margaret A. Bowen, vice president of human resources at Reynolds, said she pointed out the property and its potential as a stadium site to Richmond Mayor Dwight C. Jones and key aides David Hicks and Suzette P. Denslow while at an unrelated event last week overlooking the river and the property from the 24th floor of the SunTrust building in downtown Richmond.

Bowen also mentioned her experience in Pittsburgh, where the Pirates' major-league franchise opened PNC Park in 2001 with a view of the city skyline and Allegheny River.

The event, introducing then-prospective Chief Administrative Officer Byron C. Marshall to the local business community, occurred the day before the collapse of a proposal to build a stadium in Shockoe Bottom.

However, Richmond officials say they didn't consider the casual conversation a pitch for a new stadium site and that they don't have any formal proposal to consider.

"Unequivocally, we are not considering any proposal for a baseball stadium on that site," Tammy D. Hawley, the mayor's press secretary, said yesterday.

CB Richard Ellis is making its first pitch for potential buyers of the South Side property next week. The brokerage also is handling the sale of another Reynolds site, a key property on the downtown Canal Walk.

CB Richard Ellis representatives say they already have shown the 6-acre property on the north side of the James to 12 potential buyers and have scheduled private tours for an additional 10. Reynolds will ask for proposals from as many as 30 potential buyers later this month and could select a purchaser by Labor Day.

Reynolds currently packages and distributes Reynolds Wrap aluminum foil in a series of buildings that lie over part of the Kanawha Canal and abut the Haxall Canal, which extends up the river to Brown's Island. The complex stands between the two sections of the Canal Walk that Richmond long has sought to develop as a tourist attraction.

"It's central to completing that vision," said Robert A. Dirom III, first vice president at CBRE.

Bowen is a member of the board of directors of Venture Richmond, a nonprofit organization that advocates riverfront development and operates a canal boat on a portion of the Kanawha that currently is open. She hopes the development of the property will allow people to walk the two historic canals without detouring around the industrial property, as they do now.

"The two canals will never physically meet -- they never did before," she said. "It creates a connected walkway."

Reynolds Packaging, now a division of Rank Group, plans to close its operations on both sides of the river this year. The closings, currently envisioned in the quarter that began yesterday, will cost about 490 employees their jobs.

The company, through CBRE, has been talking to city officials and other interested economic development organizations about how to develop the properties in ways that are consistent with the new Downtown Master Plan, which for the first time encompasses the Manchester area of South Richmond.

Hawley said the city doesn't generally comment on impending real estate transactions, but she acknowledged the importance of the master plan in considering potential redevelopment of the property on the north side of the river along the Canal Walk.

"Reynolds always had been a good corporate citizen," she said. "I would anticipate no less than some eye toward the [city's] best interests and best use of the space."

Charlie Diradour, a Fan District businessman who advocates keeping baseball on North Boulevard, said yesterday that he wasn't surprised that the South Richmond property, formerly owned by Alcoa Corp., is being mentioned for a stadium site.

"I have been informed all along the way that if the Bottom site didn't work out, the Alcoa site would be the next target for a baseball stadium," he said yesterday.

Diradour, who plans to announce a new Web site called Friends of Richmond Baseball at a press conference today in front of The Diamond, said the real issue is who would buy the property and who would pay to build a stadium there.

"The question always has been a question of money," he said. "Who is going to build the stadium?"



Contact Michael Martz at (804) .

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Reader Reactions

Flag Comment Posted by stevew999 on July 03, 2009 at 4:11 pm

jerrylinda… have fun at the kl… er… family outing

Flag Comment Posted by Dr. Strangelove on July 03, 2009 at 3:46 pm

A real estate agent makes a comment that is obviously just sales puffery, somebody from Reynolds makes a casual remark at a social function, and you report that as front-page news, in the face of a clear statement from the City that the City isn’t condidering that site? 

Maybe the fact that the Reynolds property is on the market is newsworthy, but the ballpark angle is just fluff.

Flag Comment Posted by jerry78linda on July 03, 2009 at 3:19 pm

stevew999 - Well done, you made no sense.  No need to explain myself?  Then why ask me to.  I thought you just didn’t get it.

YOUR KIND will continue to hack away at people you don’t even know because you have nothing better to do.  Your second paragraph describing me in such a way just shows me what a sad insecure individual you really are.

By the way, your remark was definitely meant as a euphemism no matter how you deny it.

MY KIND is now going to leave for this July 4th weekend, sit back with a brew, enjoy my many friends, the water, the sun, and my grandchildren.

Have fun being by yourself.

Flag Comment Posted by stevew999 on July 03, 2009 at 2:41 pm

no need to explain yourself jerrylinda. your post was quite clear. it’s always easy to read between the lines with YOUR KIND…

in fact, YOUR KIND has been around since the days of Nero. a brew. watch a few slaves hack away at each other. feed some christians to the lions and go home. all the while the city crumbles due to lack of maintenance

and by the way, there was nothing euphemistic about my post

Flag Comment Posted by a63roni on July 03, 2009 at 2:16 pm

Manchester is where I always thought the ballpark should be!

Flag Comment Posted by jerry78linda on July 03, 2009 at 2:03 pm

My post SAID, “pessimists.  Their kind are the reason things “don’t” get done.“  “Their kind” meant “pessimists”.  Last time I heard pessimists were not a protected class.  You took “their kind” out of context and played your rhetoric game by saying “and your referring to opposing posters as “their kind” sounds like you’ll be getting out the bedsheets and going for a ride tonight”.  You might consider your remark as a euphemism (inoffensive term), but I don’t.

Flag Comment Posted by stevew999 on July 03, 2009 at 1:21 pm

perhaps jerrylinda we should consider the source, your post -

i posted a long comment detailing issues of the city needing to improve from the ground up before tax dollars are spent on entertainment and enriching landowners, mentioning first the schools and public safety and you referred to me as “their kind”

exactly what did you mean by “their kind”

have you ever heard the word euphemism?

Flag Comment Posted by Winterhill on July 03, 2009 at 12:52 pm

Just another example from the “good folks” at Rank (new owners of Reynolds)
trying to squeeze the last dollar out of the total shut down of the plant that employed 500 workers.  Their jobs were transferred down south while the greedy new owner in New Zealand rapes the local employees for all it is worth.  The article is an example of the Richmond Times giving valuable print space to a greedy company and its real estate firm seeking potential buyers.  A wasteful story with no real chance of success.  Besides - you would not beleave how much dirty oil liability problems that could be assoicated with that manchester site.  Also - is it not nice that Reynolds contacted not one soul in the city of Richmond for tax breaks to keep the plant operating (as they did in Louisville ) but yet went forward to whisper into the ears of city officials the potential benefits of selling the property for a baseball field. What was that about “good corporate citizen Reynolds”?

Flag Comment Posted by jerry78linda on July 03, 2009 at 12:47 pm

Your remark about bedsheets and going for a ride tonight shows the level you’ll stoop to with your rhetoric.  Are you having fun taking my posting and twisting my words into something as vile and racist as that remark. But all I need to do here is consider the source.  You just like to play rhetorical games.

Flag Comment Posted by dubiousthoughts on July 03, 2009 at 11:36 am

Alot of people forget that part of the allure to baseball in Richmond was the AAA assocation with the Braves, who were winning division titles every year and going to the World Series regularly in the 1990’s. The “stars of tomorrow” were on display like Dave Justice, Chipper Jones, etc. Atlanta Braves were the only team close, and their fan base was the whole South. That was huge in terms of interest for the general fan, and without that association and going down to AA, I’m not sure the same interest will be there except hardcore fans of baseball and people who just go on a random summer night once per year.

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