Major development
First phase gets under way on $40 million retail project
By LYNNETTE CURTIS
VIEW STAFF WRITER
Territory Incorporated, a local retail real estate development
and management company, broke ground Feb. 17 on the first phase of
Centennial Gateway, a $40 million retail center at U.S. Highway 95
and Ann Road.
The 400,000-square-foot center is adjacent to Territory's
90-acre, 900,000-square-foot Centennial Center that opened in
December 2000, anchored by Wal-Mart, Sam's Club, Home Depot and
Circuit City.
Gateway's first phase will include three national furniture
retailers: Lane Home Furnishings, Ashley Furniture and La-Z-Boy.
Krispy Kreme Doughnuts and In-N-Out Burger also plan to move into
the center.
Territory principal Terri Sturm said it was her intention all
along to build on the success of Centennial Center.
"Centennial Center is doing great," she said. "We're still
opening stores out there. We still have a couple of restaurants
coming in and then we will be at build-out. We don't intend to
duplicate what is available in Centennial Center, but rather to add
variety to what we already have."
At build-out, Centennial Center will contain about a million
square feet of retail space.
The first phase of the Gateway project is scheduled to be
completed in the fall and will include a 30,000-square-foot,
two-story office building that will house Territory's corporate
offices. There also will be a four-story Holiday Inn Express. The
entire project should be complete by fall 2006.
Sturm said her primary markets for both commercial centers are
the growing neighborhoods north of Cheyenne Avenue and west of
Decatur Boulevard.
"Retail follows growth," she said. "That's where rooftops are
being developed."
And Sturm has built a history of following growth, primarily on
the outskirts of town. She started Territory in 1993 and has since
developed the 650,000-square-foot Eastern Beltway Center at
Interstate 215 and Eastern Avenue, the Eastgate Power Center at
Sunset Road and Marks Street in Henderson, and the Southern
Highlands Marketplace near Decatur and Cactus Avenue, south of the
Las Vegas Beltway and anchored by a Smith's grocery store. That
marketplace, opened in late 2003, provided the area's first grocery
store.
"We have been where the new development has come," said Territory
President John Sullivan, adding that the company hasn't ruled out
building in more urban areas of the city. "We are interested in
being a full-service developer anywhere that makes sense."
"We are always looking for new deals," Sturm said. "We scour to
find projects that make sense."
As part of the Centennial Center/Centennial Gateway developments,
Territory agreed to make a 30-acre recreational facility out of an
adjacent water detention basin.
"We can't build anything in there yet," Sturm said. "But we can
do a driving range or something. We don't know what it will be
yet."
Burke & Associates will do Centennial Gateway's
infrastructure work, and Perkowitz + Ruth is the project's
architect.
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