Press
WTVR CBS6 • Diradour announces website
Last modified on 2009-07-03 20:51:01 GMT. 0 comments. Top.
Originally aired on WTVR CBS6, July 2nd, 2009.
(The random clicks experienced during this video are in the source video by WTVR6)
http://friendsofrichmondbaseball.com/wp-content/video/WTVR-CDiradour-FORB.flv
Baseball debate turning into a full season of speculation
Last modified on 2009-07-04 20:09:25 GMT. 0 comments. Top.
Originally printed HERE on richmondbizsense.com, on July 2, 2009 by Al Harris
As soon as it seems dead in the water, the baseball debate in Richmond keeps coming back.
Charlie Diradour extended his hand in peace today to those in the opposite dugout at a news conference he called.
Connecticut, the giant Indian sculpture, looked down over the scene, a thick layer of pollen dusted over its head and shoulders.
“The arguments are over with,” Diradour said to a small audience of reporters gathered in front of the Diamond this morning.
Diradour was an outspoken critic of the downtown stadium plan recently dropped by Highwoods Properties. He founded his own website, BaseballontheBoulevard.com, as an advocacy platform for bringing baseball back to the stadium abandoned last year by the Richmond Braves. Diradour also owns a development company, Lion’s Paw Development,BizRi that is active primarily in the Fan District.
Today he announced he was shutting down the Baseball on the Boulevard site and launching Friends of Richmond Baseball to take its place.
“What I want to do is bring both universes together,” Diradour said.
He invited corporations to post their logo on the site to show support of bringing an Eastern League team to Richmond. He also announced he was shutting down his Facebook group and replacing it with Friends of Richmond Baseball, inviting supporters of the Shockoe Center plan to join as well.
Diradour made it clear he still was personally in support of redeveloping the Diamond, in particular a plan by Maryland-based Opening Day Partners owned by Peter Kirk for $28 million. The company has developed as many as 14 ballparks along the East Coast.
“Peter Kirk sent a plan to the administration,” Diradour said. “I call on the administration to at least call Peter Kirk.”
But that plan could have some competition.
The Times-Dispatch reported today that the Reynolds Packaging Group is pitching their property on the south bank of the James River, directly across from downtown, as a possible site for a new stadium.
The T-D reports that a Reynolds executive “pointed out the property” to Mayor Dwight Jones and other city leaders as a good location for a stadium. Real estate firm CB Richard Ellis is marketing the sale of the 18-acre property.
City officials said no one has proposed to them an official plan to build a stadium at that location.
NBC12 NEWS • Thursday, July 2nd
Last modified on 2009-07-03 01:44:55 GMT. 0 comments. Top.
The video may be found on their site here, or simply click the play button below!
http://friendsofrichmondbaseball.com/wp-content/video/WWBT_Pre-press-conference2009-07-02.flvRTD • Baseball advocate encourages unity
Last modified on 2009-07-03 22:48:26 GMT. 0 comments. Top.
Published: July 2, 2009 with full text and comments HERE.
By Staff Reports
Charlie Diradour today held a news conference at The Diamond to encourage unity and reception of the new minor league baseball team headed for Richmond.
“We want this to be the most welcoming city that a minor league franchise has ever seen,” Diradour said.
Diradour, owner and operator of Lion’s Paw Development Company, which owns and manages real estate, also called on the city to contact Opening Day Partners about its plan to transform The Diamond.
Diradour also announced the launch of his new Web site, FriendsofRichmondBaseball.com, which encourages fans to get excited about professional baseball in Richmond.
Overhaul of Diamond is last plan standing
Last modified on 2009-07-03 19:38:16 GMT. 2 comments. Top.
By Will Jones
Published: June 24, 2009 on timesdispatch.com, with original article HERE.
A plan for baseball in Shockoe Bottom has struck out again. With the Shockoe Center dead, a proposal to transform The Diamond and bring baseball back to Richmond is now the only game in town.
Developers of the proposed Shockoe Center project announced yesterday that they’re walking away from the project, as well as a proposal for development along the Boulevard.
“We have carried these projects as far as our collaborative team can under the present circumstances,” the group led by Highwoods Properties said in a statement.
The developers lamented that their efforts to revitalize Shockoe Bottom and the Boulevard with about $800 million of development were “overshadowed by debate over the ballpark.”
The collapse of Shockoe Center leaves Opening Day Partners’ $28 million plan to overhaul The Diamond as the only publicly released plan for a ballpark in Richmond.
On Shockoe Center’s demise, the Highwoods developers added that the “good faith” but ultimately unsuccessful effort by a group of local investors to buy a baseball team had “fundamentally altered the way minor-league baseball will now return to Richmond. The city will need to negotiate directly with any new team owner on such issues as location, timing and financing of a new ballpark.”
Minor League Baseball and the Eastern League are in the process of identifying a franchise to relocate to Richmond with current or new ownership. An Aug. 1 deadline to clarify those issues is in effect.
In a statement yesterday, Mayor Dwight C. Jones praised the Shockoe Center developers for their vision, and he underscored their conclusion that ballpark financing “is just not possible in today’s revenue bond market.”
“At this time, the situation affords us an avenue to fully re-engage our regional partners in the discussion of the direction we, as a region, wish to move in,” Jones said. “We know there is excitement about Richmond as a baseball town and we have a commitment from the Eastern League that there will be a team on the ground in The Diamond next spring.
“What we must do now is to determine what our long-term solution will be and the best way to go about accomplishing that goal.”
The $318 million Shockoe Center project was announced last October after then-Mayor L. Douglas Wilder selected Highwoods Properties as the master developer for city property in Shockoe Bottom and on the Boulevard following a request for proposals. Wilder had nixed another private proposal for baseball in Shockoe Bottom earlier in his term.
Jones took office in January and proceeded cautiously on Shockoe Center, initially persuading the developers to push back a deadline for preliminary city approval from March 1 to Aug. 1.
The idea of baseball in the Bottom had its supporters as well as its critics, many of whom argued that Richmond’s plans for baseball should focus on refurbishing or replacing The Diamond, the longtime home of the Richmond Braves’ home on the Boulevard.
In March, the Jones administration hired consultants to review the financial viability of Shockoe Center, specifically its plan to finance the $60 million ballpark without city backing using tax revenues generated by restaurants, residences and other new private development around it.
However, the consultants, led by Davenport & Co., concluded that the project would be “highly feasible” with city credit support and “highly unlikely” to be financed otherwise.
In yesterday’s statement, the developers said the study “validated our fundamental premise” for ballpark financing and acknowledged that the plan “is not possible in today’s revenue bond market.” The developers emphasized that they had never intended to pursue financing in the current market.
“We are convinced, however, that the coming economic recovery would allow revenue bonds to be sold without the city’s general obligation backing, possibly as early as next year,” the statement said. “We have always maintained that the city’s debt capacity should be used for public projects like schools, streets and a new jail, and not for a new ballpark.”
Last month, Jones called on the Shockoe Center developers and other groups to resolve differences between their plans for Shockoe Bottom. Those projects also include high-speed rail, the city’s slave trail and a bus-transfer center in the train shed at Main Street Station.
In their statement, the Shockoe Center developers said they had reached a preliminary agreement allowing their project and the bus transfer center to co-exist. They also noted that they had dropped Shockoe Center’s $90 million third phase to accommodate the slave-trail project and related activities to commemorate the area’s importance in black history.
“We believe heritage is compatible with baseball, high-speed rail and some level of bus transit,” the Shockoe Center developers said. “However, all of these issues require further research, and important decisions must be made by all stakeholders before the private sector can be truly effective in the process.”
- Will Jones