Instead, almost three years â and one worldwide pandemic later â the building and space remains empty. The previous tenant, Borresonâs News Service, is now located in American Canyon.
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The most recent owner, Napa Brew LLC, essentially gave the property back to the second most recent owner, Michael L. Holcomb, in whatâs called a âdeed in lieu of foreclosure.â
Holcomb bought the property from a Gelow company in 2017 for $2.8 million.
In 2018, a Michael L. Holcomb entity sold the property to Napa Brew LLC for $3 million.
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Napa s Food City redevelopment gets new partner, goes back to the drawing boards
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Editorâs note: This is one of an occasional column by Visit Napa Valley.
As our tourism businesses come back to life, so does the wanderlust of our Napa Valley residents. That makes now the perfect time to safely explore and enjoy the world-renown attractions in your own backyard.
To make your daycation or staycation planning easier, Visit Napa Valley has reopened the Napa Valley Welcome Center and improved its website, VisitNapaValley.com.
Youâll find the Napa Valley Welcome Center in its brand-new location on First Street in downtown Napa. Itâs a valuable resource even if youâve lived in the valley for decades.
For decades two of the Napa Valleyâs most endearing people were the late Belle and Barney Rhodes, who planted Marthaâs Vineyard with Cabernet and who hosted dozens of visitors long before the valley made world-class wine.
In the early 1980s, Belle told me a charming tale about one of the valleyâs early successes â a white wine called Green Hungarian. It was made by Souverain in Rutherford (later renamed Burgess Cellars) by pioneering winemaker Lee Stewart.
It was an unlikely success since the obscure grape Green Hungarian is rather ordinary. The wine was pale, sweet, and lacked distinction.