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Does anyone know what a planned opening time frame is?
By the look of it, 2022, which might actually be good timing
Tentatively October.
Turns out we were both essentially correct. The Starbucks will indeed be a full Starbucks as opposed to a "proudly serving," but it is not a corporate Starbucks. Instead it will be operated by the hotel itself, under a licensing agreement. Starbucks basically doesn't franchise in the US but they do have a minority number of licensed locations, which are relatively difficult to acquire and mostly indistinguishable from corporate stores.
Says a lot about the hotel developer in this case, and also quite a bit about Starbucks' outlook on Bricktown and on the location of the hotel, as they also intend to maintain the corporate Starbucks in Lower Bricktown.
this is not unusual. There are several locations in Vancouver BC where there's two or more Starbucks at an intersection. .,.,
Good news for Bricktown. I'd argue the OKC's cbd could use a few Sbucks as well, particularly in City First tower if CoolGreens leaves that location would be perfect
Oklahoma City, the RENAISSANCE CITY!
God what a home run this project is. If we filled MIdtown etc. from 4th to 8th and from Oklahoma to Shartel with this kind of development, OKC would feel like it's punching way above its weight.
teo, I think if we filled Midtown like this then OKC would be punching AT where it should be. Peer cities have dense urban development in their cores, OKC does not but should.
In all fairness, OKC used to have a dense core but tore it down over the years. Now, we are just infilling what used to be there. So we're not punching above our weight, we're instead punching above OKC-thought.
Oklahoma City, the RENAISSANCE CITY!
Not sure if it was already mentioned but the restaurant will also by the way be serving a full breakfast, lunch and dinner seven days a week. This by itself is a very welcome addition to the district.
who are you comparing OKC to? MOST cities OKC's size (and even smaller) have dense urban areas in every direction for several blocks next to their downtowns. OKC is actually one of the few that doesn't.
But I totally agree with you that it will be nice once OKC does have several dense 4X6 block areas N,S,E,W of the CBD. THEN I'd agree OKC is pulling above its weight.
Oklahoma City, the RENAISSANCE CITY!
That's pretty sharp. This is just a huge win for Bricktown, gaining a true full-service hotel right in the heart of the district.
Some of the exterior lights have been switched on:
That’s going to be nice
Great shot Pete. That architecture really works perfect for that location. I need to make a list of buildings to go by next time I am in town (maybe in a few weeks). It will have been a year since my last visit and there are a ton of areas I haven't been to in years.
This building is looking very sharp in person. Does anyone know if the rear facade will be bricked or is the grey material the final product?
That's a good looking hotel.
Saw it in person Monday for the first time since the facade has really looked close to complete. Just a completely different feel on that street corner now and such an improvement. Can't wait for the parking lot to be eventually developed.
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