Sugar Land - Missouri City Edition | March 2022

CONTINUED FROM 1

6

Improvement breakdown

destination, said Matt Ragan, director of retail programming and operations for Rebees, the real estate company co-managing the development. “If you drive down there right now, the entire western half of City Walk is under construction,” Ragan said. Central to that transformation is the addition of the Department of Wonder, a new location-based entertainment concept that will combine interactive theater with emerging technologies opening April 23. The venue—located at 2180 Lone Star Drive in the former Z Gallerie space—will be the anchor tenant for thewestern endof CityWalk. The improvements and additions aim to draw in visitors from across the region, officials said. Directly benefiting from the improvements is Pat Houck, the owner of House of Blooms—a flower shop that has main- tained a presence in the shopping dis- trict since 2007. Her store is located on City Walk on the same block as the future Department of Wonder’s space, which has been empty since 2019. The feedback Houck has received from her customers who are seeing the changes taking place in the dis- trict has been positive, she said. “Every day they are asking, ‘Oh, my God—what’s going on?’ The feed- back we’re hearing here in the shop from some of the customers is, ‘It’s so exciting. I can’t wait to see what all is going to be put here,’” Houck said. Improving the experience According to Ragan, the Department of Wonder—an original concept unlike anything the property manager has overseen in the past—aims to bring in aligned local tenants. Rebees will also focus on improving the area around the Department of Wonder. The experiential quality that the Department of Wonder is bringing to Sugar Land Town Square is what Rebees, along with investment com- pany Lionstone Investments and developer Planned Community Devel- opers, is looking to spread to the rest of the district, Ragan said. Ragan described the venue as part interactive art exhibit, part “participate in your own movie or video game.” By early April, Rebees plans to have landscape improvements completed in front of Yesyoga, Art Museum TX, Loft and others on City Walk that include almost doubling the number of trees, lowering the tree canopy for shade and doubling the size of the tree walls. This joins several small green spaces

6

2

9

Sugar Land Town Square is undergoing a series of improvements across its 1.4 million square feet of office and retail space, including tenant facade upgrades, landscaping improvements and festoon lighting, also known as strung lights.

5

59

3

10

4

Available spaces

Businesses coming soon Facade improvements

11

Landscaping Lighting

12

Parking

Image

6

Facade improvements list

8

7

• State Fare Kitchen and Bar • Sweet Paris • Perry’s Steakhouse • The Rouxpour • Flying Saucer • Dept. of Wonder 1 2 3 4 5 6

• The Sweet Boutique • Baby’s & Kid’s 1st • Swirll • Mahesh’s Kitchen • Williams Smokehouse • B.B. Italia 7 8 9 10 11 12

N

MAP NOT TO SCALE

MAP NOT TO SCALE N

SOURCE: REBEES/COMMUNITY IMPACT NEWSPAPER PHOTO BY HUNTER MARROW/COMMUNITY IMPACT NEWSPAPER

called “parklets” that are in the works along the same stretch of City Walk where the landscaping improvements are going in, designed to connect to and expand upon the town square’s public gathering spaces, such as its plaza. The landscaping improvements, along with the parklets, are slated for a spring 2022 completion date. When the Department of Wonder opens, the district will also debut new festoon lighting, or strung lights, run- ning across the western block of City Walk, which will tie into the entrance to the Department of Wonder. “On the second floor, there are these faux windows,” Ragan said. “We’re replacing those with high-definition LED screens that we can do anything from fun colors to full animations. It’s tied into that festoon lighting and can choreograph that entire block.” Progress and partnerships Rebees did not originally plan to open the first Department of Wonder in Sugar Land Town Square. “The reason we pivoted to Sugar Land Town Square for this massive, very strategic and important brand launch was because of the city of Sugar Land,” Ragan said. “It was because of their want to do new and

ambitious things, their drive and desire to make this a tech hub and a city for the 21st century.” The city of Sugar Land’s office of economic development focuses pri- marily on office tenants, industrial users, manufacturers and distribu- tors. However, the city does have a public-private partnership arm that is focused on reinvesting in Sugar Land Town Square and other develop- ments, such as Imperial, Constellation Field and Smart Financial Centre, said Elizabeth Huff, the city’s director of economic development. As of March 2, of the 80 rental units in Sugar Land Town Square, 90% of those were leased, according to Ragan. These updates are coming after the city of Sugar Land reassessed the process for regulating its more popular pedestrian-friendly, mixed- use spaces, including Sugar Land Town Square, to encourage redevel- opment through a 2018 comprehen- sive land use plan. “We are not going to dictate what comes, but we want to be here as a resource to help attract the right kind of destination retailers that will not only benefit our residents, but also attract people from outside of the region,” Huff said.

In addition to city support, the town square has also garnered investment from many of its tenants on the potential benefits of the ongo- ing improvements, Ragan said. After holding conversations with Rebees on its vision for the town square, tenants are now adding to the improvements individually as they seek to align their facades with the rest of the district’s updates. Some of these businesses include Perry’s Steakhouse & Grille, Flying Saucer, The Rouxpour Restaurant & Bar and Vivaldi Music Academy. Perry’s, for example, completed earlier this year a $3.5 million store- front renovation, including new win- dows, a gutted interior, a new bar, a wood awning, and an expanded and modernized patio, Ragan said. Houck is also one of those tenants, though she has not committed to spe- cific updates at the House of Blooms. “We are working on that now,” Houck said. “We need to work with an architect and just have to sit down with them, but we’ve got some ideas.”

For more information, visit communityimpact.com .

21

SUGAR LAND - MISSOURI CITY EDITION • MARCH 2022

Powered by