Construction under way on Fifth Avenue
Conor CHRISTOFFERSON<br | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 17 years, 3 months AGO
SANDPOINT - Sandpoint's Fifth Avenue is undergoing a sizable facelift and will soon play home to a Big 5 Sporting Goods store, a Jack in the Box restaurant and a 12,439-square-foot retail and office building known as Panhandle Mill Plaza.
The three structures, which are being developed by Sandpoint Enterprises LLC., will create a new retail area in Sandpoint and begin to expand what has historically been known as the downtown corridor.
When it is completed in late October, Panhandle Mill Plaza's first floor will host five retail spaces ranging in size from 966 square feet to 1,700 square feet. The second floor will offer 6,026 square feet of office space, according to building plans.
Marshall Clark, president of Clark Pacific Real Estate, represents the properties and said the construction process has been smooth and on budget. Clark credits Sandpoint associate planner Joan Bramblee for the work she did to help create a vision for the plaza, which he feels is fitting with its surroundings.
"The biggest thing was that the buildings fit within the community and have a Northwest feel. We wanted a lot of wood, exposed beams and stone," Clark said. "I think they look great and fit in nicely, too."
The Big 5 Sporting Goods store will open shortly before Thanksgiving, and the Jack in the Box recently began work on a 75-day building permit.
To learn more about the project and for information about renting retail space in Panhandle Mill Plaza, contact Clark at (509) 325-3333.
ARTICLES BY CONOR CHRISTOFFERSON<BR
ITD: Ruling only delays construction of bypass
SANDPOINT — The future of the Sand Creek Byway may be in jeopardy after the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals issued an emergency injunction Wednesday that halts construction on the polarizing project.
Local residents celebrate inauguration
SANDPOINT — On one of the nation’s most historic days, hundreds of area residents gathered to celebrate the inauguration of Barack Obama as America’s 44th president.
Group debating historic depot's future
Meeting set to discuss options
SANDPOINT — With reports of vandalism and hints that it will soon be abandoned, the future of Sandpoint’s train depot is uncertain at best. However, that hasn’t stopped a group of depot advocates from fighting to save the 93-year-old structure.