Richmond group opens $8M RV park and marina in Charles City

riversrestaerial

River’s Rest sits on a wide section of the Chickahominy River. Images courtesy NLLC.

Folks in Charles City weren’t sure what to make of National Land Lease Capital, when the Richmond-based firm came knocking at the rural county three years ago with a plan for a multimillion-dollar RV resort along the Chickahominy River.

The group, led by Yogi Singh, had an idea to rezone the old Blue Heron Marina into a revamped site with dozens of leasable RV lots, an upgraded inn and restaurant and modernized boat slips.

“We walked into Charles City County’s government center and I think most people thought we were crazy,” Singh said last week. “When you look back at the time before Covid, most people would have said, ‘What do you want to do, you want to rezone something in a county where people don’t do anything different and don’t think differently?’ We said absolutely.”

The result is River’s Rest Marina and Resort, which opened April 1 after an investment of more than $8 million. It includes 126 RV campsites, a 20-room inn, 68 boat slips and four slips for jet skis, and the spruced up Blue Heron restaurant.

ribbon cutting 2

(From left) NLLC includes Pushkal Basavaraj, Stewart Garland and Yogi Singh, who were joined last week by Charles City Supervisors Bill Coada and Byron Adkins and Jessica Nichols of Blue Water Development.

Singh’s group, which includes business partners Stewart Garland and Pushkal Basavaraj, acquired the 18-acre property at 9100 Wilcox Neck Road in June 2019 at a foreclosure auction for $1.26 million.

At an opening event held onsite last week, Bill Coada, chairman of the Charles City County Board of Supervisors, recalled the board’s initial reaction to NLLC’s plan.

“As with all good projects, then they first come to the board we’re really skeptical,” said Coada. “This week, when I came off the road up there, all of the skepticism that the planning commission had, all of our reserves that we had were put to rest.”

Supervisor Byron Adkins, whose Third District includes River’s Rest, recalled his first impression of Singh.

“When I first met Mr. Singh, I said, ‘My God.’ He was the most highly energetic, innovative, super-charged person I’ve met since I’ve been on the board.”

All parties involved seem to have since grown on each other and it helps that River’s Rest has had a steady flow of visitors to its inn and RV lots in its opening weeks.

“Charles City is a unique place to do business,” Singh said. “But we found it a place that was open to doing business with folks that were going to respect the history of the county and be open and honest with the county and our neighbors. We found our reception to be warm.”

RR2

River’s Rest’s inn was renovated and modernized and opened to visitors in March.

The opening of River’s Rest comes about a year later than hoped. NLLC had aimed to be ready in time for the 2021 camping season, but was hampered by pandemic-era slowdowns.

“It was the same things most people were dealing with: labor shortages and supply chain issues,” Singh said. “That affected the number of folks who could operate machinery on the ground, to sheetrock and mattresses for our inn.”

The project’s contractor, Coastal Construction, is still putting some finishing touches on the property, and Singh said his group has a few minor tasks to complete such as putting up additional fencing and assembly of additional playground equipment.

Going forward, day-to-day management of River’s Rest will be handled by Maryland-based outdoor hospitality company Blue Water Development. It’s the same group managing NLLC’s properties on the Gulf Coast in Texas, where it spent $20 million last year for two RV parks.

2.4R River Rest Yogi Singh

Yogi Singh

Aside from branching out last year into the cold storage business, Singh said NLLC continues a focus on RV parks, including acquisitions in the Northeast and expansions of the sites it owns. It has others in places like Smith Mountain Lake and the Shenandoah area of Virginia, and Singh said the goal is to reach 2,000 leasable RV sites across its portfolio. It has invested close to $100 million in such properties to date.

Singh said Charles City isn’t unique in being skeptical of the RV park and outdoor hospitality industry, which is having a boom moment in part thanks to the pandemic. Some equate such properties to trailer parks, although the parks NLLC is focused on offer seasonal leases to RVs and park model homes, which are akin to tiny houses.

“There are a lot of misconceptions of what an RV resort looks like and what it ends up being. There are concerns about long-term residency, lack of infrastructure, impact on roads, impact on schools,” Singh said.

“The outdoor hospitality industry is evolving rapidly as a result of Covid, and most of the time, when done right, these are assets to the communities and counties they’re located in.”

He said Charles City can be seen as progressive in allowing the rezoning that made River’s Rest possible.

“For a county that hasn’t had a huge change to its population since the late 1700s, that’s foresight,” he said.

riversrestaerial

River’s Rest sits on a wide section of the Chickahominy River. Images courtesy NLLC.

Folks in Charles City weren’t sure what to make of National Land Lease Capital, when the Richmond-based firm came knocking at the rural county three years ago with a plan for a multimillion-dollar RV resort along the Chickahominy River.

The group, led by Yogi Singh, had an idea to rezone the old Blue Heron Marina into a revamped site with dozens of leasable RV lots, an upgraded inn and restaurant and modernized boat slips.

“We walked into Charles City County’s government center and I think most people thought we were crazy,” Singh said last week. “When you look back at the time before Covid, most people would have said, ‘What do you want to do, you want to rezone something in a county where people don’t do anything different and don’t think differently?’ We said absolutely.”

The result is River’s Rest Marina and Resort, which opened April 1 after an investment of more than $8 million. It includes 126 RV campsites, a 20-room inn, 68 boat slips and four slips for jet skis, and the spruced up Blue Heron restaurant.

ribbon cutting 2

(From left) NLLC includes Pushkal Basavaraj, Stewart Garland and Yogi Singh, who were joined last week by Charles City Supervisors Bill Coada and Byron Adkins and Jessica Nichols of Blue Water Development.

Singh’s group, which includes business partners Stewart Garland and Pushkal Basavaraj, acquired the 18-acre property at 9100 Wilcox Neck Road in June 2019 at a foreclosure auction for $1.26 million.

At an opening event held onsite last week, Bill Coada, chairman of the Charles City County Board of Supervisors, recalled the board’s initial reaction to NLLC’s plan.

“As with all good projects, then they first come to the board we’re really skeptical,” said Coada. “This week, when I came off the road up there, all of the skepticism that the planning commission had, all of our reserves that we had were put to rest.”

Supervisor Byron Adkins, whose Third District includes River’s Rest, recalled his first impression of Singh.

“When I first met Mr. Singh, I said, ‘My God.’ He was the most highly energetic, innovative, super-charged person I’ve met since I’ve been on the board.”

All parties involved seem to have since grown on each other and it helps that River’s Rest has had a steady flow of visitors to its inn and RV lots in its opening weeks.

“Charles City is a unique place to do business,” Singh said. “But we found it a place that was open to doing business with folks that were going to respect the history of the county and be open and honest with the county and our neighbors. We found our reception to be warm.”

RR2

River’s Rest’s inn was renovated and modernized and opened to visitors in March.

The opening of River’s Rest comes about a year later than hoped. NLLC had aimed to be ready in time for the 2021 camping season, but was hampered by pandemic-era slowdowns.

“It was the same things most people were dealing with: labor shortages and supply chain issues,” Singh said. “That affected the number of folks who could operate machinery on the ground, to sheetrock and mattresses for our inn.”

The project’s contractor, Coastal Construction, is still putting some finishing touches on the property, and Singh said his group has a few minor tasks to complete such as putting up additional fencing and assembly of additional playground equipment.

Going forward, day-to-day management of River’s Rest will be handled by Maryland-based outdoor hospitality company Blue Water Development. It’s the same group managing NLLC’s properties on the Gulf Coast in Texas, where it spent $20 million last year for two RV parks.

2.4R River Rest Yogi Singh

Yogi Singh

Aside from branching out last year into the cold storage business, Singh said NLLC continues a focus on RV parks, including acquisitions in the Northeast and expansions of the sites it owns. It has others in places like Smith Mountain Lake and the Shenandoah area of Virginia, and Singh said the goal is to reach 2,000 leasable RV sites across its portfolio. It has invested close to $100 million in such properties to date.

Singh said Charles City isn’t unique in being skeptical of the RV park and outdoor hospitality industry, which is having a boom moment in part thanks to the pandemic. Some equate such properties to trailer parks, although the parks NLLC is focused on offer seasonal leases to RVs and park model homes, which are akin to tiny houses.

“There are a lot of misconceptions of what an RV resort looks like and what it ends up being. There are concerns about long-term residency, lack of infrastructure, impact on roads, impact on schools,” Singh said.

“The outdoor hospitality industry is evolving rapidly as a result of Covid, and most of the time, when done right, these are assets to the communities and counties they’re located in.”

He said Charles City can be seen as progressive in allowing the rezoning that made River’s Rest possible.

“For a county that hasn’t had a huge change to its population since the late 1700s, that’s foresight,” he said.

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Bruce Milam
Bruce Milam
2 years ago

Is that last quote correct? Since the late 1700’s?!!
I met Yogi when he first got his real estate license, fresh out of VCU, and you could see he would be successful in the business. I’m glad that he and Push have stuck together. Is Steve Garland the local restauranteur of the sports bars scattered around the City? Another protégée of Professor Wally Johnston?

Shawn Harper
Shawn Harper
2 years ago
Reply to  Bruce Milam

Interesting and well-put. When you hear a guy like this talk about a combo of him and “a place where people don’t think “differently” I don’t get pessimistic — I get optimistic. I think I may have known the old owner of this place from a coffeeshop we both frequented and my impressions of the business people in Charles City as being “content” — some are happy to be simple, and some have moved there from more complicated places and are glad to be done with those complicated places. I first drove out there in 2003 to buy a used… Read more »