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Axe-throwing range opens at Richmond mall
Stumpyâs Hatchet House
Stumpyâs Hatchet House, at Stony Point Fashion Park, has 10 throwing lanes and serves food and beer.
By: Richmond BizSense
and last updated 2021-05-20 08:53:12-04
RICHMOND, Va. Cutting through the pitfalls of the coronavirus pandemic and a change in management at Stony Point Fashion Park, the mallâs new axe throwing bar has made its debut. Stumpyâs Hatchet House opened Wednesday at the Southside mall, offering 10 throwing lanes in a 6,700-square-foot space on the Dillardâs concourse. In addition to axe-throwing, Stumpyâs serves food and has 20 self-serve beer taps. Click here to continue reading on Richmond BizSense.
“We think we’ll bring in a younger crowd to the mall. You can’t throw an axe on the internet,” said local Stumpy’s Hatchet House franchisee Joe Szymczak.
Fairlane Town Center value plunges by more than 50 percent
Dearborn mall appears headed for sale as owner struggles to pay CMBS debts
Dearborn s Fairlane Town Center appears headed for sale as owner Starwood Capital Partners struggles to pay its CMBS debts.
As a sale appears likely following a mortgage default, the Fairlane Town Center shopping mall in Dearborn is worth less than half what it was when it was bought more than six years ago.
Data provided by New York City-based Trepp LLC shows that Fairlane, located at 18900 Michigan Ave., is worth just $42.75 million, according to an August 2020 appraisal.
That s down 57.7 percent from $101 million when Miami Beach, Fla.-based owner Starwood Capital Partners bought it from what was then Taubman Centers Inc. as part of a $1.4 billion deal that also included The Mall at Partridge Creek in Clinton Township and five other malls.
Henrico spotlights Short Pump Town Center with virtual planning sessions
Courtesy of Henrico County)
As two of Henrico’s older shopping malls undergo redevelopment transformations, the county’s newest mall is getting its own second look as part of a larger zoning code update that’s nearing the finish line.
The public is invited to weigh in on what the future could hold for Short Pump Town Center in a weeklong charrette that kicks off tonight. The series of intensive planning workshops will be held virtually at henricoconnects.com.
The charrette is the last of five that the county has held as part of a years-long effort to update its code to include what’s known as form-based zoning, aimed at allowing more flexibility in development, redevelopment and infill projects in certain areas than the county’s existing, decades-old zoning code.