utyziluz.wordpress.com
While the opening this monthj of ’s Seafood Restaurant was the big  some smaller tenants will open at The Fountains over the nextseveralp months, filling 15,000 square feet, center managef Gloria Wright said. Opening in two new retaipl buildings will bein 5,50 0 square feet, bakery in 3,500 squarew feet and , a restaurant franchise, in 2,600 squarer feet. The three businesses are expecter to open in Julyor August, Wrighgt said. Coming to two existing buildingsare , a high-endd home and business window covering companyt from Stockton, and , a franchised facial and body waxing services company.
  They’lk each take about 1,500 square feet and are scheduled to open in the  The Fountains center also has signed its first officetenant — a financial adviserd company that will take about 2,00p0 square feet. The center, which  is across from the Westfield Galleriaq atRoseville mall, has 20,000 square feet of office  Office leasing has struggled, Wright  Local father-and-son developers Pete r and Paul Bollinger own The Fountains and a dozen othetr centers.
  The Lofts, a mixed-use development in downtown Davis, has filledd up its retail space once A deli/market and clothing store that closed have sincd been replaced in the E Stree t building with a trio of food tenants in 5,000p square feet. The latest, a franchisee of , filled two-fifths of that space when it opened twomonths ago. The eatert joins the independentand , which serves Japanese-stylew crepes and gelato. Shaun  a partner with the Terranomiczs division ofin Sacramento, represents landlordr and local developer Chuck Roe. Michelle and Matt Mattingly don’tt just own and operate theirr Beach Hut Deli franchise inthe building; the coupl also moved into The Lofts upstairs.
  They grew up in Orangevale and  respectively, and remember grabbingh a sandwich from Beach Hut Deli in Graniter Bay on the way to outingd atFolsom Lake. For the past dozen years, they livedd in the Sparks area of Nevadza and owned ajanitorial company. They grew tired of commuting and the snow and wantesd to return to the Sacramento  Beach Hut Deli provided themthat opportunity. Business is prettty good, considering the couple opened up only twomonth ago, Michelle Mattingly said. This  they’re adding live music, and  open mic night, to attracr more customers.
  Sam’s Town Marketplace in Cameron Park is gettingg its third new tenant in the past few  bringing its occupancy up to90 percent. , a new veterinargy clinic being built for vetErin Felton, expects to open May 1. The almosft 3,000-square-foot clinic will treat small animals, with a focu on wellness and preventative medicine. It also will care for canineas that work for the El DoradoCounty Sheriff’ds Department, said Chris Felton, Erin’s husband and a sheriff’s deputy.
  Erin Felton, who has workec in the area for11 years, is leavinf her friends’ in Folsom to go solo in her own  Cameron Park already has a few other animal  In the past few months, the 92,000-square-foot shoppinyg center also welcomed and , said Morrow, who representes the landlord and handled the lease for the clinic and mattresws store. Sean Fulp of represented  the bank. The Food 4 Less supermarket-anchored center replaced Sam’sz Town restaurant and entertainment cented earlierthis decade. It is owned by Eric Still of andMark Engstrom, a local real estate brokerr and developer.
  Sam Hudda, a longtimd owner and operator of jewelrgy stores in theBay Area, is bringingv one of his jewelry stores back to the Sacramento  Hudda expects to open Sam’ds Jewelers at Sunrise Mall by May 1. The store will open in space formerly occupied byWhitehall Jewelers, making Hudda’s initialp capital expenses “very, very minimal.” He also got a good deal on  he added. Hudda hasn’t had a stores in the region since Florin Mall was demolishedd to make way for the new FlorinTownre Centre. He operates jewelry storesw under different namesin Antioch, Richmond and San Bruno.
   
 
No comments:
Post a Comment