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05.27.2009 11:55 am

Aldermanic committee OK’s Kiel plan

St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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A key Aldermanic committee this morning approved plans and financing agreements to redevelop the long-empty Kiel Opera House.

The committee’s Housing, Urban Development and Zoning Committee voted 13-1 to pass the $74 million project on to the wider Board, a week after it held the matter for further study.

In a crowded 90-minute hearing, Board members quizzed SCP Worldwide partner Ken Munoz about the project, which has met opposition from owners of the Fox Theater, who say the city would be subsidizing a new competitor in the region’s theater market.

But ultimately the committee OK’d the proposal, with a few small adjustments. It could be voted on by the full Board by mid-June. SCP has said it wants to start construction in August.

SCP agreed to several changes to protect the city in case the company – which also owns the St. Louis Blues and Scottrade Center – can not pay off $29 million in bonds that will help fund the project. It also agreed to extend limits on Broadway-style shows out to five years, from the original three, a measure designed to reduce concerns about competition with the Fox. The city will also have a 60-day exclusive negotiating period if SCP wants to sell its rights to the building.

SCP will be allowed to hold 36 traveling theatrical shows in the Kiel’s first year of operation, up to 64 in its fifth year. The Fox, by comparison, holds 100 to 110 such shows a year. Munoz said he was hopeful that they could attract enough new shows to fill both theaters, but acknowledged that was somewhat “up in the air.”

SCP also plans to run shows that it produces at the Kiel, as well as concerts and family-style shows – some of which now run at Scottrade Center, Munoz said. The first show, he hopes, would be a four-week run of How the Grinch Stole Christmas, which is produced by a subsidiary of SCP.

Munoz also addressed concerns about the high level of public subsidy – roughly $60 million of the $74 million project will come from tax credits or bonds backed by tax revenue the city now collects.
“We understand that,” he said. “But this is what it takes to get this done.”

SCP hopes for just a “modest profit” operating the building, Munoz said, and noted that it is investing $14 million and is on the hook for the $29 million bond issue, which is to be paid with amusement tax revenue now collected on Blues tickets. If there’s a shortfall, SCP will make up the difference.
“We’re on the hook for that. We’re guaranteeing that,” he said. “The risk is ours.”

Aldermen also raised concerns about the Black Repertory Theater; Munoz and partner Chris McKee said they are in talks with the Black Rep about using a smaller secondary theater at the Kiel when the Rep wants to.

Alderman Shane Cohn encouraged the Kiel and the Fox and other local theater groups to work together to boost the region’s performing arts industry. Alderman Samuel Moore raised concerns about the use of minority contractors and construction workers on the project. Alderwoman Marlene Davis apologized for the level of confusion around the project in recent days and criticized city officials who negotiated the deal for not involving the Board of Aldermen earlier.

Alderman Antonio French raised concerns about the roughly $1.5 million in amusement tax revenue the city will forgo for the bonds. Barbara Geisman, the city’s deputy mayor for development, said much of that money would be recouped in tax revenue associated with construction in the first couple of years, and that the theater itself was expected to generate at least $500,000 a year in new tax revenue once it’s up and running.

See Thursday’s Post-Dispatch for more coverage.

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23 comments

Comments are closed.

Thank you Dave Checketts for believing in our city and finally we are one step closer to having Kiel as it was meant to be, a multi-purpose facility. Cardinal owners…..are you paying attention????

— DaddyO
12:31 pm May 27th, 2009

Way to Go Mr. Checketts. And I have to give a big hand to the aldermen as well. Seems like this is a deal that will work for everyone. I for one am tired of the whining from the Fox Theater but I have no doubt they will be fine and my family will now have two historic theaters to choose from, and we will go to shows at both. Hooray for St. Louis today.

— Skip Ronald
12:44 pm May 27th, 2009

Glad to see it is moving in the right direction. A building of that beauty and history needs to be put back in service.
Mr. French what is good for the goose is good for the gander. Why should the Blues be the only sports franchise in this town to pay the amuzement tax to the city, the Cardinals and Rams both collect the money but it goes to other uses for the stadiums they play and not the general revenue of the city.

— kd
12:54 pm May 27th, 2009

Amen Daddyo! The Fox can show movies again as well as host stage productions. Both locations are perfect for concerts. I’d like to see some of the acts that perform at the Bottle Neck Blues Bar and at Wildwood Springs Resort at the Kiel Opera House. The are also many high schools and colleges that can use Kiel for graduation ceremonies.

— Celia
1:00 pm May 27th, 2009

By the way…..

Has anybody seen this development called the “Ballpark Village”? I know it is supposed to be around that new stadium the Cardinals had to have with some of our taxpayers money. You know….I just must not be able to find it.

At least it appears one thing downtown that we have been promised will FINALLY come true, almost 20 years after it was promised to begin with.

The Fox will be fine, I expect that we will see more musical acts at the Kiel Opera house than anything else. It would be more cost efficient to use that building than to block off 3/4 of Scottrade Center for an intimate show with bad acoustics. Imagine seeing some big name acts in an intimate setting with some of the best acoustics in the country. More and more musical groups are preferring to play in that kind of setting than these large “arena” shows.

— DaddyO
1:20 pm May 27th, 2009

Keep in mind there are SIX venues in the Opera House, not just one. There will be conventions, lectures, speakers, graduations, concerts, art festivals, etc., etc., in this complex, none of which could be held in the Fox.

Now, on a related subject; while there are numerous potential projects we could also be working on, could we find someone to (finally!) rehab and open the Arcade building? Please? The Arcade and the Kiel rehabbed and open would go a long way towards reversing negative impressions of downtown. So is anyone out there who can take this on?

— reality check
1:28 pm May 27th, 2009

There is this big house in soulard I want to rehab, I don’t have the money to do it, I didn’t know if the city could give me a tax break for 20 years or so?????

— youareoutofyourminds
1:41 pm May 27th, 2009

Who was the no vote?

— Mitch
1:44 pm May 27th, 2009

The no vote was from Alderwoman Davis, whose ward includes the Fox and who voiced concern after the meeting primarily about the speed with which this is being moved through the Board.

— Tim Logan
2:11 pm May 27th, 2009

Hopefully Ald. Davis won’t mind if other aldermen vote against her McKee deal…

— Mitch
2:17 pm May 27th, 2009

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