Here's how I see it:Michael Deneen wrote:Well, I stand corrected....Wendy's is definitely trying to move in.
I stick to my belief that this would mean closure of the W. 117th location.
The swarms of panhandlers on W. 117 (particularly by the convenience store on the Cleveland side, next to the tracks) have made that area feel very unsafe for many people.
Here's how I see it.....
BENEFITS
Lakewood steals a business from Cleveland.
Lakewood turns a tax exempt church property into a taxable commercial property.
Lakewood would add some jobs, albeit most of them very low wage.
Frosty-loving Lakewoodites would no longer need to drive to Rocky River (or dodge the W. 117 panhandlers) for their fix.
NEGATIVES
Traffic will be a nightmare on that stretch of Detroit Ave.
Folks on the adjoining side streets will see a lot more traffic. Woodward already has major issues.
Lakewood loses another piece of its cultural heritage. (Although to be fair, every church can't be saved).
City Hall is bringing in another national chain to undercut our local businesses.
If the fast food industry has its way, most of their workers will be replaced by automation. So most of those new jobs could be gone in a few years.
I know someone that works at Wendy's corporate- he is in bldg efficiency and operations so not affiliated with real estate purchases.... but I can tell you that when they purchase property for new locations, they often do it anonymously through a broker so the sellers do not know who is buying it to avoid issues like the price being raised due to them being seen as a national chain with deep pockets.If the church did indeed sell to Wendys, they may or may not have known it.
I would love to see the church property saved and reuse, but it's been up for sale since 2015. I can understand the church wanting to sell to anyone willing whether the building stays or not.
As I remind people all of the time when these conversations veer toward 'blame the city,' ala Detroit Theater, it is a private real estate transaction and the city doesn't have a say in that. If the parcel is zoned or can be zoned for this use, the city cant do anything about it. We can hope the BZA and ABR do the work to get the best possible outcome out of the creation of a new building.
The drive through regulations put in place after McDonalds makes these project difficult.
The Wendy's on West 117th is more than a mile away and in a different city, technically, so my bet is the West 117th is not poached and stays open. It is also pretty busy and they don't pull businesses away from successful franchisees.
Which national chain did the 'city bring in' prior to this and on which property?
That's not really how this works. You know these national chains have real estate departments and independent brokers that find these properties for them, right?