Shopping Bonanza
BY SUSAN BURGESS
IMAGES PROVIDED BY CORE
COMMUNITIESWhen Angel Tyrrell moved to Port St. Lucie 25 years ago,
she had to jump in her car and go out of town to do most of her
shopping.
Today it’s a different story. More than two million square
feet of shopping centers are in the planning stages or under construction for a
population that exceeds 163,000. “It is just so different” she said.
“There have been tremendous changes, especially in the amount of retail
shopping available.”
In contrast to modest beginnings as a two-lane
road mostly known for model homes, bustling six-lane Port St. Lucie Boulevard is
filled with shops and professional businesses, with more shopping centers under
way.
Sleekly efficient Gatlin Boulevard, formerly a two-lane country
road connecting to Port St. Lucie Boulevard to Interstate 95, is the hub of
commercial construction that no one even dreamed of 20 or 25 years ago when the
population was a mere 16,000. Looming on the horizon from Gatlin to Becker Road
on the southern edge of the county are major shopping centers that will rise
between now and 2012.
“I have waited a long, long time for this,”
Tyrrell said. “I hear there’s a regional mall coming and it will be on
Becker right in my neighborhood. Right now I have to drive to Martin County for
everything. But the gas prices are so high, and I think it’s also important to
keep our money local. I am really happy about this.”
Tyrrell is right
about the regional mall. Core Communities, developer of Tradition at Gatlin
Boulevard and I-95, sold 220 acres on the north side of Becker Road to Taubman
Centers Inc., the developer of the Mall at Wellington Green. In 2012, Tyrrell
will be a hop, skip and a jump from 1.4 million square feet of retail shops,
400,000 square feet of office space, 250 hotel rooms and 900 residential units.
Across the street from the regional mall, Core is self-developing a 400,000
square foot shopping center called Becker Commons.
Carolyn Hendricks, who
lives in Tradition, is tickled with The Landing, which opened earlier this year
on the development’s eastern edge. “There’s just tons of stuff there,”
she said. “For anyone who lives in or near Tradition, it’s great. You
don’t have to drive anywhere. They have a Target, some shoe stores, Petsmart,
Dress Barn, Bed Bath and Beyond, Pier 1 Imports, Office Max, Sports Authority,
TJ Maxx and a lot of others,” she said. “When they added The Landing it made
this like a whole new community.’’
Village Pointe, with 400,000
square feet of retail space and 200,000 square feet for offices, will be
completed within Tradition in 2010.
With all the retail construction on
Gatlin Boulevard, just outside of the Tradition development near Interstate 95,
“everything has just been springing up all around here,” Hendricks
said.
Gatlin will be home to three of the biggest shopping centers in the
city, with a combined total of more than 1 million square feet.
In
Gatlin Plaza, Home Depot is already open. Kohl’s is planning to begin
construction on a department store in the plaza in a few months. Tanger Outlet
Mall will open in the same vicinity. Gatlin Commons is home to Wal-Mart, and a
Sam’s is under construction.
“If it’s not in St. Lucie West or
Tradition, it’s on Gatlin,” said Angel Tyrrell, who frequently drives
between her home on Becker Road and St. Lucie West to do her shopping. She gets
on I-95 at Gatlin.
Port St. Lucie Mayor Pat Christensen estimates that in
the last 18 months $150 million to $200 million has been spent on commercial
construction in the city.
“It’s providing such a lot of jobs,” she
said. “Right now 40 percent of our residents go south to work. But we’re
still more affordable than the counties to the south. When these shopping
centers are completed, 60 percent of our sales taxable money will be spent here
instead of outside the county.”People who live in the U.S. 1 vicinity will
probably still travel to Jensen Beach to shop, she said.
The 120-store
Treasure Coast Square mall in Jensen is the area’s only regional mall right
now. A 25,000 square foot expansion is in the works, scheduled to open in
August, 2008, said spokeswoman Erin Holley. It will include an Ann Taylor Loft,
Christopher & Banks, C.J. Banks, and Sam Seltzer Steakhouse.
For the
past two years, St. Lucie West has been inundated with commercial construction.
Office buildings, professional plazas, light industrial buildings, and retail
stores are filling up property fronting on St. Lucie West Boulevard and Peacock
Boulevard.
Town Center of St. Lucie West, under construction at the
corner of St. Lucie West and Peacock boulevards, already has several open
stores, including a Starbucks, but construction is nearing completion behind
them for a Beall’s, Steinmart, Staples, Circuit City, Petco, AC Moore craft
store, and a Fridays, said Benderson Development spokesman Mark
Chait.
“We expect to open in the summer of 2008,” he
said.
Margo Groff, who lives in the Country Club Estates section of St.
Lucie West, will be happy when some clothing stores open in St. Lucie West. She
has to travel to Jensen Beach or Vero Beach to find a good selection of
women’s clothing now. “There was just no place to buy a little black
dress,” she said.
That’s been a complaint voiced by the women who
live in St. Lucie West for years.
But fortunately, the days when Groff,
Tyrrell and others have to jump in their cars and drive to another county to
find a good department store are numbered.
“I can’t wait,” Tyrrell
said, thinking of the bonanza of shopping delights that are on their way. “I
just can’t wait.”