Phone +1 913-499-1926 | ||
Address 6917 W 135th St #29, Overland Park, KS 66223, USA Hours Open today ยท Open 24 hoursMondayOpen 24 hoursTuesdayOpen 24 hoursWednesdayOpen 24 hoursThursdayOpen 24 hoursFridayOpen 24 hoursSaturdayOpen 24 hoursSundayOpen 24 hours |
Disc golf at corbin park post falls idaho
Corbin Park is an outdoor retail village in Overland Park, Kansas. The first phase of the development opened in 2008.
Contents
- Disc golf at corbin park post falls idaho
- Rpg pondering corbin park
- Initial Development Bankruptcy
- Sale Redevelopment
- Future or recently opened Tenants
- Cancelled Former Tenants
- References
Rpg pondering corbin park
Initial Development & Bankruptcy
Omaha-based Cormac Co. began developing Corbin Park, with preliminary planning work starting in 2004. The official groundbreaking for the project took place August 30, 2007. The development was planned to have a "modern Tuscan" design with numerous landscaped water features and an amphitheater. It was intended to have J.C. Penney, Von Maur, Best Buy, Barnes & Noble, Old Navy and The Sports Authority as anchor stores. Of these, only J.C. Penney and Von Maur were developed before construction stalled on the project. The mall's developer declared bankruptcy in 2010 and development was stalled. An auction of the project was set to take place on August 30, 2011, but it failed to happen because no bid deposits were received. Leawood-based developer Mike Schlup had submitted a bid for the August auction, but he withdrew the offer after a dispute with Overland Park about development incentives. Bankruptcy court approved a second auction to take place on October 24, 2011 with an opening bid price of $5 million.
Sale & Redevelopment
Developer Mike Schlup completed purchase of the Corbin Park development for $8.1 million on November 29, 2011, rescuing the 1.1 million-square-foot development out of bankruptcy. In December, Schlup announced that Corbin Park would be renamed Aspen Square and Copaken Brooks would be brought on as a development consultant. The Aspen Square name change never came to fruition, and when development resumed later in 2012, the Corbin Park name remained in place. In October 2012, Copaken Brooks was replaced by Block & Co. to handle leasing and marketing of Corbin Park. In December 2012, Scheels All Sports announced that it would open a 222,000-square-foot flagship store in Corbin Park. Corner Bakery Cafe opened a second Kansas City area location at Corbin Park in March 2014.