

The Standard plans fresh and local gourmet market and deli on first floor
She’s looking great; wearing her age gracefully. Sure, she’s having some work, but it is being tastefully and skillfully done.
The elaborate white building at 509 Market, once the grande dame that dominated the Shreveport skyline, is preparing for her comeback as The Standard, an upscale mixed-use multifamily downtown destination.
The 105-year-old building’s first new retail tenant was recently unveiled as Street Corner Market, an upscale urban market for the first floor.
“This building was the first skyscraper in Shreveport, and it’s only fitting that it should house downtown’s first gourmet market,” said Neil Kapadia, a principal partner at ViaNova Development, the Chattanooga, Tenn., entity that bought the property earlier this year.
Street
Corner, a chain of franchise stores under the parent company Mc- Colla
Enterprises, Ltd. of Topeka, Kansas, has 43 upscale markets in popular
urban areas, according to Convenience Store Decisions, a trade publication.
Street Corner is rated the number one franchisor of the “urban superette” by the trade journal CSP Daily News. The innovative deli/markets are the crowning jewel of the $682 billion convenience retailing industry, according to CSP.
A
Street Corner Market opened in August at ViaNova’s The Clemons Lofts in
Chattanooga, Tenn. The Clemons is a beautifully restored 1918 property
originally built as a department store, said Kapadia.
The
Standard is a much larger building than The Clemons, which has 54
residential units and six stories. The Standard has 86 residential units
and 10 stories. Both feature luxury residences with cutting-edge
technology, rooftop dog parks, fitness centers and secured parking. The
mix of The Standard will be 90 percent housing and 10 percent retail,
said Kapadia.
The
Street Corner Market at The Clemons is 2,700 square feet and draws
heavily from fresh, local sources. The menu features freshly prepared
and packaged food, locally roasted coffees and bakery selections, floral
arrangements, exclusive crafts and jewelry, local craft beers,
groceries and a salad bar.
“We
absolutely plan to carry as much local product as we can including
produce, beers, coffees, pastries, etc. We like to strike a nice balance
between local as well as organic/healthy options while also carrying
some of the old convenience store standbys. We will also have a
full-service deli in place that will offer lunch and early dinner
options, catering and, eventually, delivery,” Kapadia said.
Biometric
fingerprint locks provide afterhours access to the markets for building
residents who need to shop after the markets close to the general
public. Online shopping allows The Clemons residents to pick up their
shopping on the way upstairs to their homes, according to The Times Free Press of Chattanooga.
The
modernization and habitation of one of Shreveport’s finest old
buildings is expected to drive development in the area around it,
according to Liz Swaine of the Downtown Development Authority and
Downtown Shreveport Development Corporation.
Plans
are being discussed by private investors for “the amazing
transformation of the club scene in the 200 block of Texas Street, just
outside the doors of The Standard,” said Swaine.
By
next summer’s opening, other retail tenants being courted by ViaNova
should be signed on. Kapadia said the company is hoping for a new bank
tenant for the ground floor of The Standard which would make use of the
massive bank vaults that remain intact since the building originally
opened with Commercial National Bank on the first floor.
ViaNova
principals Kapadia, Vic Desai and Nirav Shahwho all have hospitality
backgrounds and appreciate the beauty, elegance and refinement of
historic properties.
The
Standard and similar buildings of the early 20th century have become
ViaNova’s focus after the company initially renovated hotel properties.
By repurposing beautiful buildings a little down on their luck, they
turn them into beautiful, mixed-use, multifamily properties, Kapadia
said.
ViaNova
plans to invest more than $10 million to return The Standard to prime
condition. They recently acquired a property in St. Louis and plan to
restore it in a similar fashion. The company focuses on second- and
third-tier markets and strives to retain and restore the architectural
features that made them unique and beautiful in their glory days,
Kapadia said.
“Our
firm has a focus on gorgeous old buildings that have a rich history and
wonderful architecture, and we found a gem in Shreveport. The elevator
lobby was beautiful,” said Kapadia.
Mark
Williamson of Somdal Associates, the local architectural firm chosen by
ViaNova for the renovation, said before work began on the project that
both ViaNova and Somdal are committed to carefully and fully restoring
the structure.
“I think they are committed to doing the very best they can,” said Williamson.
“We
really want the store to reflect the local flavor of Shreveport, and we
want it to service the residents and employees of downtown, especially
since, currently, there aren’t many options out there that offer
something similar in terms of selection,” said Kapadia.
– Kathleen Ward