Reminiscent of Neil Gaiman's Good Omens, which posited that any cassette tape left in a car for two weeks would spontaneously turn into a copy of The Best of Queen.There's a phenomenon within evolutionary biology called "carcinization" which observes that, given enough time, a wide variety of crustaceans eventually evolve into a crab-like form.
We have something similar in Maine...Where every multi-phase development project ends up evolving into a cheap "pop up" beer garden.
THAT is supposed to get us excited about what is to come??? It looks like an industrial storage site.View attachment 41740
Pulled this from the Rock Row website, since PPH didn't include a photo. This is a cool idea, but the orientation seems a bit odd. Why not put the seating areas on the quarry side of Quarryside? Maybe it's different in person, I'd like to check it out.
That's not just what's coming, that's what's there now. I stopped in there tonight, although I wasn't drinking, etc. (although it was a bike event so some of our other posters might have been there). What I did do was hunt down 2 of the 3 pylons they had put up with VR QR codes about what's coming. (I think I saw the third, but it's far away, beyond the fencing for Quarryside in an area where it looks like the Turnpike is staging concrete bridge girders or something.)THAT is supposed to get us excited about what is to come??? It looks like an industrial storage site.
THE BOUTIQUE HOTEL
Scan to access rendering from Rock Row's boutique hotel. The hotel will feature world-class chef concepts, a wellness spa, and the lobby will be the living room of Rock Row and the community.
THE PLAZA & HEARTBEAT OF ROCK ROW
Rock Row's epicenter is where the boulevard meets the plaza. The plaza will be activated with year-round events including family-friendly and signature holiday events as well as an ice rink. This will be the heartbeat of Rock Row.
The consumerism doesn't bother me; it's just that we already have PB at the Mall (and we had W-S until sometime during the pandemic). I'm more interested in "new and exciting", I suppose.Personally I think that it would be great to see Pottery Barn and Williams Sonoma come to Rock Row. Yes I am a typical American consumer contributing to the destruction of Earth....although I probably plant more trees than most.
Should someone tell Mainebiz that the Cinemark theater isn't actually there yet?They did just get a cash infusion to help move this along: https://www.mainebiz.biz/article/rock-row-investor-puts-86m-more-into-the-project#:~:text=Rock Row, the 110-acre,to a Dallas investment firm.
The consumerism doesn't bother me; it's just that we already have PB at the Mall (and we had W-S until sometime during the pandemic). I'm more interested in "new and exciting", I suppose.
I will say, if you looked at the VR models, that brick building that is supposed to house WIlliams-Sonoma looks neat.
If you find their food service brochure, they're already connected with a couple of names out of DC: Sfoglina and Norman Love Confections. If the menu here is anything like the one at Sfoglina in DC (I haven't been there, just looked it up) it'll be to die for. (With absolutely no shade being thrown at Casa Novello, which I also love.)My big concern with Rock Row is that they have enough "national" name retailers to grow this project to its full potential. Local is great....but a lot of local businesses don't always have longevity and fade into the sunset eventually. A Food Hall is perfect for local businesses but filling up retail spaces inevitably fails unless your name is LL Bean.
I remember back in 2009, a hotel outside Las Vegas had just topped off its steel skeleton of about twenty stories. It stayed that way, and maybe it still is.
They did just get a cash infusion to help move this along: https://www.mainebiz.biz/article/rock-row-investor-puts-86m-more-into-the-project#:~:text=Rock Row, the 110-acre,to a Dallas investment firm.
Do we even know who's developing this building? Is it Waterstone, or did they just subdivide the lot and someone else is on the hook?