The day after Virginia Commonwealth University held a groundbreaking ceremony for its long-planned Athletic Village, VCU Health closed on a nearly $10 million purchase of the former Pet Dairy industrial property next door.
The VCU Health System Authority now owns the 6-acre assemblage at 1501-1507 Robin Hood Road, which it purchased for $9.5 million in a deal that closed Oct. 31, according to city land deeds.
The property is adjacent to the 42-acre Athletic Village site, where work has gotten underway in recent weeks.
It’s also beside a VCU Health-owned property at 1500 Sherwood Ave., which the health system purchased in 2013 for $1.3 million. The area is just west of VCU Health’s Brook Road Pavilion, the Northside campus of the Children’s Hospital of Richmond at VCU. The sites are on opposite sides of the interstate but connected by Sherwood Avenue via an underpass.
A VCU Health spokesperson said the purchase was made using funds generated from health system operations and said the authority bought it due to the property’s “strategic location and adjacency” to the Athletic Village.
“There are no approved plans or timelines for development at this point,” the spokesperson said.
The seller in the deal was Thalhimer Realty Partners, the local development firm that is leading the initial mixed-use portion of the nearby Diamond District development. Site work on that 67-acre project’s anchor ballpark to replace The Diamond also is underway.
TRP purchased the Pet Dairy site in 2018, years before it vied for and won the Diamond District project as part of a team that included D.C.-based Republic Properties and Chicago-based Loop Capital. Both of those firms have since bowed out of the project, leaving TRP to lead a new iteration of the team that will develop a non-ballpark portion of the overall project.
TRP paid $5.5 million for the Pet Dairy property six years ago and has since leased the building to local retailer Evergreen Enterprises, which has used it as warehouse space.
The three parcels that make up the property are currently assessed by the city at $7.83 million combined.
Matt Raggi, a principal with TRP, said the firm had been in discussions with VCU Health “for quite some time” about a potential sale. When TRP first purchased the site, Raggi said its long-term plan was to redevelop it and lease it in the meantime.
“In parallel with those conversations (with VCU Health), we had been evaluating a redevelopment of the site,” Raggi said. “Ultimately, we decided a sale made the most economic sense right now. VCU Health was great to work with and we’re looking forward to seeing their plans for the site come to fruition.”
In addition to the Diamond District, TRP has been active in the area around The Diamond with projects including the recently completed Novel Scott’s Addition apartments, which TRP co-developed with Crescent Communities. It also developed Scott’s Walk, a cluster of restaurants that have popped up farther north along Arthur Ashe Boulevard.
Adjacent to that site, TRP earlier this year sold 1.2 acres it had planned for 150 apartments to HCA Virginia, which is planning an emergency center there.
BizSense reporter Mike Platania contributed to this report.
The day after Virginia Commonwealth University held a groundbreaking ceremony for its long-planned Athletic Village, VCU Health closed on a nearly $10 million purchase of the former Pet Dairy industrial property next door.
The VCU Health System Authority now owns the 6-acre assemblage at 1501-1507 Robin Hood Road, which it purchased for $9.5 million in a deal that closed Oct. 31, according to city land deeds.
The property is adjacent to the 42-acre Athletic Village site, where work has gotten underway in recent weeks.
It’s also beside a VCU Health-owned property at 1500 Sherwood Ave., which the health system purchased in 2013 for $1.3 million. The area is just west of VCU Health’s Brook Road Pavilion, the Northside campus of the Children’s Hospital of Richmond at VCU. The sites are on opposite sides of the interstate but connected by Sherwood Avenue via an underpass.
A VCU Health spokesperson said the purchase was made using funds generated from health system operations and said the authority bought it due to the property’s “strategic location and adjacency” to the Athletic Village.
“There are no approved plans or timelines for development at this point,” the spokesperson said.
The seller in the deal was Thalhimer Realty Partners, the local development firm that is leading the initial mixed-use portion of the nearby Diamond District development. Site work on that 67-acre project’s anchor ballpark to replace The Diamond also is underway.
TRP purchased the Pet Dairy site in 2018, years before it vied for and won the Diamond District project as part of a team that included D.C.-based Republic Properties and Chicago-based Loop Capital. Both of those firms have since bowed out of the project, leaving TRP to lead a new iteration of the team that will develop a non-ballpark portion of the overall project.
TRP paid $5.5 million for the Pet Dairy property six years ago and has since leased the building to local retailer Evergreen Enterprises, which has used it as warehouse space.
The three parcels that make up the property are currently assessed by the city at $7.83 million combined.
Matt Raggi, a principal with TRP, said the firm had been in discussions with VCU Health “for quite some time” about a potential sale. When TRP first purchased the site, Raggi said its long-term plan was to redevelop it and lease it in the meantime.
“In parallel with those conversations (with VCU Health), we had been evaluating a redevelopment of the site,” Raggi said. “Ultimately, we decided a sale made the most economic sense right now. VCU Health was great to work with and we’re looking forward to seeing their plans for the site come to fruition.”
In addition to the Diamond District, TRP has been active in the area around The Diamond with projects including the recently completed Novel Scott’s Addition apartments, which TRP co-developed with Crescent Communities. It also developed Scott’s Walk, a cluster of restaurants that have popped up farther north along Arthur Ashe Boulevard.
Adjacent to that site, TRP earlier this year sold 1.2 acres it had planned for 150 apartments to HCA Virginia, which is planning an emergency center there.
BizSense reporter Mike Platania contributed to this report.
Does anyone know if VCU Health pays real estate taxes? I know the health system employees are not state workers so wondering if that means they pay real estate taxes unlike the university.
VCU property is technically state owned. Anything owned by the Foundation pays taxes but property owned by the University itself…a political subdivision of the Commonwealth of VA does not pay. More and more land off the tax rolls.
VCU Health Systems and the University are separate so I was not sure if the property, which the article says was bought by VCU Health and not the Foundation, would be treated the same as if it were owned by the Foundation.
Does VCU Health pay real estate taxes? Or is it the same as the University, which means this would be off the tax rolls?
They do not typically pay real estate taxes, though they have made at least one deal (the public safety building fiasco) where they agreed to pay taxes.
The developer was going to be responsible for the taxes, but worked the lease agreement out that they would be reimbursed and collected through the lease, and if the deal fell through the leasee would pay those taxes.
VCU is a political subdivision of the Commonwealth Virginia. only property owned by its foundation, which is a separate 501(c) 3 pays taxes.
Are you sure that the ‘separate [nonprofit] VCU Foundation’ pays city real estate taxes?
Yes. Several years ago when the Foundation bought some property along Belvidere a representative of the Foundation posted on Bizsense that they do pay taxes for their properties.
Not the VCU Foundation the VCU Real Estate Foundation and yes they have never been granted a blanked exemption from City RE taxes.