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First Phase Of Construction Complete For Meridian Town Center




MERIDIAN, Idaho/LOS ANGELES –– Construction has completed on the first phase of Meridian Town Center, a 970,000+-square-foot shopping center in Meridian, Idaho. Phase one consisted of building a 325,000-square-foot power center, designed by Nadel Architects, on 30 acres of land next to the city’s new, 60-acre Julius M. Kleiner Memorial Park. In phase two, the adjacent 49 acres will house a 645,000-square-foot, up-scale shopping village featuring retail, entertainment and office space.

CenterCal began the project in 2006, but was halted due to the recession. Now the entire project is expected to be completed by 2014, delivering a gathering place and one-stop shopping experience for the rapidly growing community of Meridian on what was originally 140 acres of undeveloped land.

Situated on Meridian’s busiest intersection, N. Eagle Road and E. Fairview Avenue, the Nadel Architects-designed power center includes five big-box buildings with national tenants Gordman’s, Petco, Toys-R-Us, Gap Factory and Marshalls facing the main road. With CenterCal pushing the project forward quickly, Nadel Architects worked closely with the general contractor, Russell Corporation and Anderson Construction, to create a design that was feasibly constructed in less than eight months.
Nadel Architects-designed Marshalls
“With the quick turnaround required by the project, our team really had to economize and be smart and efficient with our design,” said Nadel’s Greg Palaski, managing director. “Therefore, in addition to finding cost-effective design that satisfies each of the national tenants’ prototypes, we had to make a concerted effort to eliminate production related redundancies and focus on a design that could go from drawing board to field quickly.”

 Nadel’s design blends into the greater project’s design theme and will compliment the style and first-class feel of the village, while maintaining the economical aspect of the power center. The team utilized an integral colored block to match the plans for the village and similar but more cost-effective materials. In addition, Nadel incorporated cap-stone cornices, smooth plaster finishes and iron trellises to mirror the rich, up-scale effect of the village.
 
“We brought Nadel on board for their ability to execute efficiently and within our cost structure,” said Jean Paul Wardy, President of CenterCal Properties. “Given our experience with projects of this scale, we knew that we needed a team that would work as seamlessly as possible. Once completed, this new center will bring so much value to the city and the people of Meridian.”

Nadel Architects-designed GordmansWith the power center currently open to the public, CenterCal moved quickly to begin the construction on phase two, which is scheduled for opening in the Fall of 2013.

In order to efficiently manage the project and keep overall costs down, Los Angeles-based Nadel worked closely with a number of Idaho-based consultants the firm had work with on previous retail centers.  The firm’s first project in Idaho, Nadel’s project team includes Brent Bland, project manager, and Norman Viray and Fernando Trinidad, design team.





Contact FacilitiesNet Editorial Staff »   posted on: 1/25/2013


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