Henrico forms financing authority for arena-anchored GreenCity

10.13R GreenCity 2

A conceptual rendering shows the arena in relation to other buildings in the proposed GreenCity mixed-use development. (File images courtesy of Green City Partners)

Another step toward development of the massive GreenCity project was taken this week in Henrico, as county supervisors established a community development authority to help finance initial work for the mixed-use project that’s to include a new arena for the region.

At their regular meeting Tuesday, supervisors adopted a resolution creating the CDA and appointing its initial five-member board.

The CDA is tasked with issuing 30-year bonds to finance a portion of the arena and infrastructure improvements within the 93-acre Best Products site, which makes up an initial phase of the larger 200-acre GreenCity development. Tax revenue generated from that phase would be used to pay off the bonds, along with revenues generated from the arena.

Similar to TIFs, or tax-increment financing districts, CDAs are a financing tool that governments can use to generate tax revenue to support a development as it progresses. Henrico has used CDAs with three other developments in the county: Short Pump Town Center, White Oak Village and Reynolds Crossing.

In presenting the resolution to supervisors Tuesday, County Manager John Vithoulkas described the creation of the GreenCity CDA as “a significant moment in this county’s history.”

10.13R GreenCity site plan

A site plan of the GreenCity project.

In addition to the arena, which would anchor the development, GreenCity is planned to consist of 2.2 million square feet of office space, 280,000 square feet of retail, two 300-room hotels, green space, and up to 2,400 residential units.

Pegged at $2.3 billion, the so-called “ecodistrict” village would take shape along the east side of Interstate 95 between Parham Road and Interstate 295, filling 200 acres that include the Best Products site and Scott Farm, currently owned by Bill Goodwin’s Riverstone Properties.

The Best Products site is owned by Henrico’s Economic Development Authority, which in November amended a purchase agreement with Green City Partners that allows the developer to purchase the 93-acre site in three installments over a two-year period. The agreed-upon purchase price remains $6.2 million – the amount the county paid for the property in 2011.

Scott Farm would be purchased separately by the developer from Riverstone, which bought that land in 2015 for more than $6.4 million.

While restricted to the Best Products site initially, the CDA district could be expanded to include additional property over the course of the project, according to the resolution.

The non-recourse bonds that the CDA would issue are estimated to total $295 million. Proceeds from the sale of the bonds would be leveraged with private equity obtained by the developers, Green City Partners, to finance the $250 million arena.

The 17,000-seat arena would effectively replace the shuttered Richmond Coliseum, a 50-year-old venue that’s set to be demolished as part of Richmond’s planned City Center redevelopment project.

GreenCity1

A rendering of the former Best Products headquarters repurposed as a ‘living building’ with sustainable development features such as solar energy panels.

Initial development for GreenCity also would include repurposing the 300,000-square-foot former Best Products headquarters as a so-called “living building,” meaning it would generate more energy than it would use, among other environmental sustainability features.

The Best Products building rehab is slated for completion in 2024, while the arena, the first of the two planned hotels and other initial development are targeted for completion in 2025. Full buildout of the entire GreenCity project is anticipated in 2033.

The CDA scenario is different than Richmond’s former Navy Hill proposal, which hinged on taxpayer support through a proposed TIF that would have stretched well beyond the project area. That plan, which a majority of the Richmond City Council rejected in 2020, was centered on a new arena to replace the Coliseum.

1.14R CCP Eastridge and Hallmark

Susan Eastridge and Michael Hallmark in 2019. (BizSense file)

Green City Partners is led by principals Michael Hallmark and Susan Eastridge, who also worked on Navy Hill. Hallmark, of Richmond-based Future Cities, and Eastridge, of Northern Virginia-based Concord Eastridge, are also leading a redevelopment of Richmond’s Public Safety Building site at 500 N. 10th St., while Future Cities is planning a mixed-use rehab of an old power substation in the city.

‘Important milestone’

Hallmark on Wednesday called the GreenCity CDA “a really important milestone for the project.”

“It’s been super-helpful for us to hit these key dates, and we’re looking forward to working with the CDA board members,” he said.

Appointed to lead the CDA are county residents Ed Baine, president of Dominion Energy Virginia; Bruce Kay, vice president at Markel Corp.; Sal Mancuso, executive VP and CFO at Altria Group; Harold Parker Jr., president and CEO of Old Dominion Electrical Supply Co.; and Tom Tokarz, retired county attorney for Henrico. Their terms expire Dec. 31, 2026.

GreenCityCDA

CDA members Harold Parker Jr., left, and Tom Tokarz were sworn in during Tuesday’s meeting. (Screenshot)

Hallmark said construction on the initial phase remains scheduled to start this year. He said the Best Products building is in design now and occupancy is expected by the end of 2025. He’s submitted the rehab for the Living Building Challenge, a recognition program under the Seattle-based International Living Future Institute.

He said work on the arena also is advancing, and he noted the site purchase is scheduled to close late next month. According to the purchase agreement amendment that was approved in November, the first installment of $500,000 is due Feb. 28,, while another $500,000 would be paid a year after that. The remaining balance of $5.22 million is to be paid the year after that.

The previous agreement had called for a payment of $5 million on April 12 and $1.2 million on Oct. 12 of next year, with a possible extension for an additional year. Asked why the agreement was amended, Hallmark said it was an option that was made available to the group and allows it to put assets toward other needs.

“It gives us opportunity to invest capital in other aspects of the project, rather than just sinking it into land on day one,” Hallmark said. “We wanted to put capital to work on other aspects of the project: paying consultants and fees and doing additional studies. The county was generous in not needing all of this money on day one.

“That’s really been the county’s attitude toward this project from the beginning: what can we do to help you advance the project in a way that you want to advance it,” he said. “We said if we could plow our resources into the design studies and other consultant things on day one, that would be super-helpful, so they agreed to do that.”

Architecture firm ZGF is leading the design for the Best Products building out of its D.C. office. Mechanical, electrical and plumbing engineering work is being handled by PAE, out of Portland, Oregon, and by CMTA’s Richmond office. D.C.-based Silman is the structural engineer.

Future Cities is the project planner. A contractor has not been announced.

10.13R GreenCity 2

A conceptual rendering shows the arena in relation to other buildings in the proposed GreenCity mixed-use development. (File images courtesy of Green City Partners)

Another step toward development of the massive GreenCity project was taken this week in Henrico, as county supervisors established a community development authority to help finance initial work for the mixed-use project that’s to include a new arena for the region.

At their regular meeting Tuesday, supervisors adopted a resolution creating the CDA and appointing its initial five-member board.

The CDA is tasked with issuing 30-year bonds to finance a portion of the arena and infrastructure improvements within the 93-acre Best Products site, which makes up an initial phase of the larger 200-acre GreenCity development. Tax revenue generated from that phase would be used to pay off the bonds, along with revenues generated from the arena.

Similar to TIFs, or tax-increment financing districts, CDAs are a financing tool that governments can use to generate tax revenue to support a development as it progresses. Henrico has used CDAs with three other developments in the county: Short Pump Town Center, White Oak Village and Reynolds Crossing.

In presenting the resolution to supervisors Tuesday, County Manager John Vithoulkas described the creation of the GreenCity CDA as “a significant moment in this county’s history.”

10.13R GreenCity site plan

A site plan of the GreenCity project.

In addition to the arena, which would anchor the development, GreenCity is planned to consist of 2.2 million square feet of office space, 280,000 square feet of retail, two 300-room hotels, green space, and up to 2,400 residential units.

Pegged at $2.3 billion, the so-called “ecodistrict” village would take shape along the east side of Interstate 95 between Parham Road and Interstate 295, filling 200 acres that include the Best Products site and Scott Farm, currently owned by Bill Goodwin’s Riverstone Properties.

The Best Products site is owned by Henrico’s Economic Development Authority, which in November amended a purchase agreement with Green City Partners that allows the developer to purchase the 93-acre site in three installments over a two-year period. The agreed-upon purchase price remains $6.2 million – the amount the county paid for the property in 2011.

Scott Farm would be purchased separately by the developer from Riverstone, which bought that land in 2015 for more than $6.4 million.

While restricted to the Best Products site initially, the CDA district could be expanded to include additional property over the course of the project, according to the resolution.

The non-recourse bonds that the CDA would issue are estimated to total $295 million. Proceeds from the sale of the bonds would be leveraged with private equity obtained by the developers, Green City Partners, to finance the $250 million arena.

The 17,000-seat arena would effectively replace the shuttered Richmond Coliseum, a 50-year-old venue that’s set to be demolished as part of Richmond’s planned City Center redevelopment project.

GreenCity1

A rendering of the former Best Products headquarters repurposed as a ‘living building’ with sustainable development features such as solar energy panels.

Initial development for GreenCity also would include repurposing the 300,000-square-foot former Best Products headquarters as a so-called “living building,” meaning it would generate more energy than it would use, among other environmental sustainability features.

The Best Products building rehab is slated for completion in 2024, while the arena, the first of the two planned hotels and other initial development are targeted for completion in 2025. Full buildout of the entire GreenCity project is anticipated in 2033.

The CDA scenario is different than Richmond’s former Navy Hill proposal, which hinged on taxpayer support through a proposed TIF that would have stretched well beyond the project area. That plan, which a majority of the Richmond City Council rejected in 2020, was centered on a new arena to replace the Coliseum.

1.14R CCP Eastridge and Hallmark

Susan Eastridge and Michael Hallmark in 2019. (BizSense file)

Green City Partners is led by principals Michael Hallmark and Susan Eastridge, who also worked on Navy Hill. Hallmark, of Richmond-based Future Cities, and Eastridge, of Northern Virginia-based Concord Eastridge, are also leading a redevelopment of Richmond’s Public Safety Building site at 500 N. 10th St., while Future Cities is planning a mixed-use rehab of an old power substation in the city.

‘Important milestone’

Hallmark on Wednesday called the GreenCity CDA “a really important milestone for the project.”

“It’s been super-helpful for us to hit these key dates, and we’re looking forward to working with the CDA board members,” he said.

Appointed to lead the CDA are county residents Ed Baine, president of Dominion Energy Virginia; Bruce Kay, vice president at Markel Corp.; Sal Mancuso, executive VP and CFO at Altria Group; Harold Parker Jr., president and CEO of Old Dominion Electrical Supply Co.; and Tom Tokarz, retired county attorney for Henrico. Their terms expire Dec. 31, 2026.

GreenCityCDA

CDA members Harold Parker Jr., left, and Tom Tokarz were sworn in during Tuesday’s meeting. (Screenshot)

Hallmark said construction on the initial phase remains scheduled to start this year. He said the Best Products building is in design now and occupancy is expected by the end of 2025. He’s submitted the rehab for the Living Building Challenge, a recognition program under the Seattle-based International Living Future Institute.

He said work on the arena also is advancing, and he noted the site purchase is scheduled to close late next month. According to the purchase agreement amendment that was approved in November, the first installment of $500,000 is due Feb. 28,, while another $500,000 would be paid a year after that. The remaining balance of $5.22 million is to be paid the year after that.

The previous agreement had called for a payment of $5 million on April 12 and $1.2 million on Oct. 12 of next year, with a possible extension for an additional year. Asked why the agreement was amended, Hallmark said it was an option that was made available to the group and allows it to put assets toward other needs.

“It gives us opportunity to invest capital in other aspects of the project, rather than just sinking it into land on day one,” Hallmark said. “We wanted to put capital to work on other aspects of the project: paying consultants and fees and doing additional studies. The county was generous in not needing all of this money on day one.

“That’s really been the county’s attitude toward this project from the beginning: what can we do to help you advance the project in a way that you want to advance it,” he said. “We said if we could plow our resources into the design studies and other consultant things on day one, that would be super-helpful, so they agreed to do that.”

Architecture firm ZGF is leading the design for the Best Products building out of its D.C. office. Mechanical, electrical and plumbing engineering work is being handled by PAE, out of Portland, Oregon, and by CMTA’s Richmond office. D.C.-based Silman is the structural engineer.

Future Cities is the project planner. A contractor has not been announced.

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Bruce Milam
Bruce Milam
1 year ago

Will the 2200 residential units be encumbered by the CDA? As I recall, Henrico refused to allow such financing for the planned Wilton development in Henrico’s east end because it feared new home owners wouldn’t be aware of their onerous surtax obligations after the transfer. What responsibilities will these homebuyers bear if the cost and interest due for public improvements (and arena) are not covered by commercial entities?

Justin Ranson
Justin Ranson
1 year ago
Reply to  Bruce Milam

As I’ve read it, not as it’s currently planned, it only covers the former Best site

Brian Glass
Brian Glass
1 year ago

Henrico County, once again, has shown a “can do,” Attitude. When the arena opens there will be a one two punch for attracting major sports and entertainment related events, with the Virginia Center sports and convocation facility already booking sports competition. for 2024.

The future is bright for the County attracting additional revenue at out of state visitors expense, for the most part.

Michael P Morgan-Dodson
Michael P Morgan-Dodson
1 year ago
Reply to  Brian Glass

Side note: I am sure Henrico will get it done but this project was announced fall/winter 2020, CDA was set up this week, the arena will open Spring 2025. If it took 2 years to get authority set up why does anyone connected with the City and Diamond District still think the stadium will open in Spring 2025. Construction needs to start THIS summer to have the stadium ready for spring training in 2025. And that CDA board is no where on the Council Agenda. Let alone have they sold the first bond.

Polgar Concertado
Polgar Concertado
1 year ago

The 2nd paragraph of this article says the Best Products building is slated for completion in 2024 (and that the Arena is targeted for completion in 2025). But later on in the article Hallmark is noted as saying the Best Products building is scheduled for occupancy by the end of 2025, so something is not jiving here. My guess is that the Arena is no longer scheduled for completion in 2025.

Henrico has a lot on the line here, and so far all the public has seen is a bunch of pretty pictures.

Bruce Milam
Bruce Milam
1 year ago

There’s no way the city’s ballpark or the county’s arena are open for business by Spring 2025. They’d need to underway by now. My guess is spring 2026 or 2027 for either of them.

William Willis
William Willis
1 year ago

Excited to see more movement on it, my eagerness to see work started is making it feel like everything is move slowly. Like watching water boil!

Frank Wood
Frank Wood
1 year ago

With a $2.3 Billion development why are the principal developers having to rework a $6.22 million dollar payment?

Terry Hill
Terry Hill
1 year ago

I sure hope the Board of Supervisors and County Manager have a plan to increase staffing in critical areas like teachers, police officers and fire fighters and retain their current employees. 2400 new homes with this development, 800 new homes in Varina approved, another large development on brook rd with possibly 700 new homes and short pump continuing to add housing wherever it can find an inch of space. These communities want and deserve great schools and to feel safe!

C Jay Robbins IV
C Jay Robbins IV
1 year ago

Stadiums and arenas are money-losing eye candy for upper income people. If this development is such a great idea, why do private for-profit developers need my money in the form of subsidized loans to make money? This is a straight income transfer from Henrico taxpayers and Henrico politically disconnected businesses to politically connected businesses.

https://www.planetizen.com/news/2022/08/118245-sports-stadiums-bring-few-economic-benefits

https://www.brookings.edu/articles/sports-jobs-taxes-are-new-stadiums-worth-the-cost/

https://www.forbes.com/sites/jeffreydorfman/2015/01/31/publicly-financed-sports-stadiums-are-a-game-that-taxpayers-lose/?sh=3c8299224f07

steve cook
steve cook
1 year ago

I’ve heard that Richmond’s moniker – City of Monuments – is being replaced with “Richmond – City of Artists’ Renderings.”

Ed Christina
Ed Christina
1 year ago
Reply to  steve cook

I heard “Confederate Traitors Participation Trophies” were going to be replaced with monuments to patriotic real Americans.

Michael P Morgan-Dodson
Michael P Morgan-Dodson
1 year ago
Reply to  Ed Christina

City has no active plan and is doing no planning to do anything else other than the plantings. Stoney said “more to come” but with him it never happens.

Tucker Conley
Tucker Conley
1 year ago
Reply to  steve cook

I heard it was “City of Doing the Same Study Over and Over,” which has been going on since the 1960’s.