Other editors: Charleston Town Center s future uncertain herald-dispatch.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from herald-dispatch.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Veteran demolition man Rodney Loftis says a $1 million project to tear down the former Sears building in the Charleston Town Center mall will be âa pretty big job, the kind that doesnât come around in Charleston all that often.â
Calls to KM Hotels developer Mayur Patel went unreturned. Loftis said the plan to tear down the Sears building for a hotel is back on after a two-year delay.
Asked if the project developer was still Patel, Loftis said âYes, thatâs the man Iâm working for.â
Under officers, Patel is listed as a member and organizer of QUARRIER ST LLC on the business and licensing section of the Secretary of Stateâs website. QUARRIER ST LLC owns the Sears building on Kanawha County tax maps, having purchased it in 2018. The limited liability corporationâs business purpose is listed as âaccommodation and food servicesâ and âtraveler accommodation [hotels, motels, casino hotels, bed and breakfast inns.]â
Charleston mayor: Town Center Mall has buyer in Georgia-based group By
May 10, 2021 - 11:11 am
CHARLESTON, W.Va. Charleston Mayor Amy Shuler Goodwin announced on MetroNews affiliate 580-WCHS in Charleston Monday morning that a Georgia-based real estate group is buying the Charleston Town Center Mall.
Appearing on 580-LIVE with Goodwin, Jim Hull, the Owner and Managing Principal of the Hull Property Group expressed excitement with the move from his group to come to the capital city.
“We are so excited about joining the Charleston community. That will entail us having our first property in West Virginia. We think there is so much to be accomplished and it’s going to be a fun ride,” Hull said to Goodwin and 580-LIVE host Dave Allen.
Dean Mazzarella
Columnist
It’s no secret. The vaccine process is far, far from easy or efficient. This country hasn’t faced anything like this pandemic in more than 100 years. No one person is to blame and no one person can fix it. There are country-wide distribution problems and production has to get ramped up for us to succeed.
As the mayor of Leominster, one of my jobs is to do everything I can to bring the resources we need to our residents. In this case, it’s protecting people’s health and working toward returning the city back to normal, or at least a new normal. When the vaccine got approved late last year, we immediately called the Hull Group, who owns The Mall at Whitney Field, to ask if we could use a space to start vaccinating our police and fire departments. They were happy to do it. The space worked perfectly and allows for potential expansion as our vaccine supply gets ramped up. The City of Fitchburg is working with the owners of the former Kmart building to
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