A new grand entrance could reorient the building towards Bull Street, and commercial tenants could flank this entry, as with the Fox Theatre in Atlanta. Credit: Rendering by Jason Combs

ALDIN LEE has some interesting ideas. Like many people, he doesn’t think we have any real need for the boondoggle Cultural Arts Center (CAC).

First, there’s no evidence that current facilities are over-taxed. Second, the City already wants to cuts arts funding, so what’s the point of a new CAC?

However, if the City insists on going forward with the plan, Mr. Lee has a much better proposal for doing so—put it in the Old Sears Building (OSB).

The OSB is one of those conspicuous structures that everyone in Savannah knows, and since it’s been empty and unused for many years, everyone in Savannah has a pet idea for it.

A new grand entrance could reorient the building towards Bull Street, and commercial tenants could flank this entry, as with the Fox Theatre in Atlanta. Credit: Rendering by Jason Combs

I actually helped a would-be developer look into it several years ago, and in the course of doing so found out that the current owner of the OSB is apparently very unmotivated to sell. From every appearance, he just sits on the building and happily pays the meager (for its size) property taxes each year.

This is obviously an obstacle, but not an insurmountable one, so let’s talk possibilities.

The first plus of using the OSB is the most obvious: It re-activates a beast of a building, in the very heart of the burgeoning South of Forsyth neighborhoods.

If the CAC is meant primarily for locals anyway, it makes much more sense to put it south of the park, away from the congestion of the downtown core.

Also, the OSB has lots of parking, something conspicuously missing from the current CAC plan. Further, the OSB is adjacent to the current Department of Cultural Affairs office, classrooms, and black box theater.

The use of these spaces could continue, leaving room in the new OSB/CAC to consolidate some other City offices (and sell off more redundant properties), something that new City Manager Rob Hernandez has indicated he’s very eager to do.

The other side of the location coin is that we avoid putting a low-density, architecturally controversial new building on prime downtown real estate. Style preferences are of course subjective, but I think most observers agree that the proposed CAC design does not mesh with downtown’s traditional architecture.

Let’s put that land back in private hands instead. Alderman Bill Durrence, for one, has expressed interest in seeing more workforce housing constructed downtown —perhaps the City could do something to incentivize that at this location.

Anything but another hotel, right?

Other advantages of the OSB are plenty of square footage and a very adaptable floor-plan. It can house everything intended for the downtown CAC, as well as having room left over for street-level commercial tenants.

A new grand entrance can easily be created to reorient the building towards Bull Street, and commercial tenants could flank this entry, as with the Fox Theatre in Atlanta. This would help to fill the gap in sidewalk activity on Bull Street between Forsyth Park and Starland.

Finally, the OSB even has a loading bay off Drayton Street to accommodate the comings and goings of troupes with their sets, equipment, and whatnot.

Mr. Lee also suggests some re-programming of the proposed OSB/CAC. This venue could also act as a theatre for the showing of art house and foreign films, for which he argues there is a market, but not enough revenue generated for a standalone private venture dedicated to the genres.

He further suggests that it be named for Florence Martus, better known as “The Waving Girl,” its purpose in welcoming foreign films echoing her greeting of ships from all the ports of the world.

Not a bad idea, if you ask me.

Aldin Lee asserts that this alternative plan could save the City as much as $8 million dollars over the current plan, and would avoid making a mistake that would have negative externalities that cannot be measured in dollars and cents.

Also, it would put valuable downtown real estate back into private hands—to pay property taxes to the City, County, and School Board. These new property taxes would far outweigh what is currently paid year-to-year by the fallow OSB.

One might ask, but hasn’t a lot of money been spent on the design? Hasn’t site preparation already begun? Yes and yes.

Is this justification for continuing with a flawed plan? Absolutely not.

Thinking that previous investment is sufficient justification for action is known as the “Sunk Cost Fallacy.” Of all the logical fallacies (and I love them all) it is probably the one that we all talk ourselves into the most often, on decisions both large and small.

It is also the first thing officials will cite when presented with the alternative plan—“we’ve spent too much time and money on the current plan. We must carry on.”

Not true. Besides, Mr. Lee’s alternative could reap savings over and above what has already been spent, AND result in a Cultural Arts Center that is far more useful to the community, and to the City.

The Cultural Arts Center does not fill an essential need. Pausing to consider a better alternative hurts no one, though it may frustrate those with the contracts to build it.

If we are going to build it (and I’m still not convinced we need to), let’s put it where it makes the most sense.

cs

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Jason Combs is a consultant, entrepreneur, and writer with masters degrees in City Planning & Urban Design from the Georgia Institute of Technology. He is a long-time resident of the Thomas Square Streetcar...

9 replies on “Old Sears Building is a potential answer to several problems”

  1. This is a wonderful idea that old building holds many wonderful memories it’s got great bones needs to be utilized

  2. Thanks to Jason Combs and Connect for publicizing this proposal. To make it a reality the current CAC site work MUST be STOPPED. This proposal is totally premised on it being an alternative to the current CAC design and site; it is NOT proposed as a future commercially viable option, nor as a future public project.

    If the $20 million of public dollars are wasted on the current project, then this is never going to happen.

    Your City Council members have acted disingenuously, all having been offered this idea well before design work on the project was completed. Their motivations differ from our motivations.

    It will, UNFORTUNATELY, take very vocal protestations to have them act in the city’s best interest and not in the best interest of the special moneyed interests for whom this project was initiated.

    ONLY YOUR active, and PERSISTENT outcries will move our intellectually lazy elected officials to behave responsibly.

    I’m all for reducing aldermanic terms to two years or even one. No reason to keep poor decision makers in a position to spend YOUR dollars foolishly.

  3. The fact that this idea makes any form of sense what so ever, means it will not happen…..SLOWVANNAH!!! Seriously though if anyone needs a good laugh one day just watch a city council meeting. PURE COMEDY.

  4. CAC is a horrible idea. Savannah already has plenty of cultural programming and SCAD more than puts it over the top.

    Theater, retail, residential are all much better uses of the property. Anything private. Can you even imagine the palm-greasing, money-burning insanity that would go on if this became infected with local politicians (who produce NOTHING) propping up a taxpayer-funded job program for connected unemployable morons disguised as a community culure center? Ugh!

  5. I have talked with someone who dreams of this building as a place for unwed mothers who choose to keep their child and raise them instead of abortion. The dream is to turn this place into a transition home for the mothers who have no other option than to return to the abusive environment, in some cases, that helped to create their dilemma. And puts the new child in the same environment, helping to continue the never ending cycle of abuse, etc.
    Included in the building with housing could be some retail businesses to help train these new moms to be self sufficient members of the community.

  6. Washington DC has Union Market where local and regional products/restaurants and stores sell their wares on an application based system. New and unique offerings abound such as “B’ doughnuts, Peregrin Coffee, Trickling Springs milk products, Salt and Sundry retail store, a fish market, a butcher, a bookseller, local bagels and a Raw Oyster bars that is incredible, a chocolatier, you name it and it is likely to have been there, is there or going to open a booth there. It is packed all week and has a movie night in the parking lot on Friday nights. Other days it has outside seating and has small planters with vegetation and vegetables. This is the vision that should be explored for the old Sears building. Savannah has an abundance or people looking for a platform for their products and it needs places where people can go to find the best of Savannah and the surrounding low country in one place.

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