195 Bidder Carpionato Failed to Redevelop Providence Fruit Market

Kate Nagle, GoLocal Contributor

195 Bidder Carpionato Failed to Redevelop Providence Fruit Market

The former Providence Fruit and Produce Warehouse on Harris Avenue, which was demolished in 2008 -- and undeveloped since.
The Carpionato Group, who recently submitted a proposal to the 195 Commission to develop the former highway land, has to date not developed a previous acquisition of prime Providence real estate -- the former historic Fruit and Produce Warehouse.  

Following its purchase of the warehouse from the state -- and controversial demolition of the historic property in 2008 -- Carpionato, the Johnston-based commercial real estate firm, had presented plans to turn the former fruit market into a mixed used office, retail and hotel development, which have not materialized.  The city granted Carpionato preliminary approval for a surface parking lot at the location in 2013. 

"It was then my belief and seems now to be confirmed, that Carpionato always intended to create a parking lot on that site and nothing more," said real estate agent Erik Bright, who is the Director of PCIS (Providence Creative Industrial Space) and was active in opposing the demolition of the historic Harris Avenue building.  

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The Rhode Island Department of Transportation, which had acquired the Fruit and Produce building in 1998 for $14 million, sold the property to Carpionato in 2005 for $4.3 million with the understanding the property would be rehabilitated. 

However, in 2010, the Federal Highway Administration demanded from Rhode island repayment of over $4 million of the $14 million in federal money spent on the purchase, citing the failure in attaining "fair and equitable compensation" for the sale of the property.  According to news reports, the state agreed to pay Carpionato $600,000 last summer to buy back a portion of the land for transportation and Amtrak related purposes. 

Acquisition -- and Demolition -- of Historic Property

A rendering of Carpionato's original plans to develop the former Fruit and Warehouse property behind the Providence Place Mall.
At the time of Carpionato's purchase of the Providence Fruit and Produce Warehouse, which was built in 1929 by Jenks & Ballou, the property had recently been added to the National Register of Historic Places.

"From 1929 to its closing in 1998, the Providence Fruit and Produce Warehouse Company Building served as the state's most important distribution center for Rhode Island-grown and imported fresh fruits and vegetables," wrote Frederick Williamson, the state's historic preservation officer in the 2005 application.  "Current plans (2004) call for a rehabilitation of the building and conversion to mixed residential and commercial use."

Bright, however, said that he believed that was never the intent of the developer. 

"Carpionato purchased the Providence Fruit and Produce Warehouse Building from the Department of Transportation under the guise of a proposal to renovate the historic building into a "Quincy market style" retail venue using historic tax credits. The building was listed on the National Register and the Providence Industrial Commercial Buildings District. (ICBD). As such, it gained the protection of the Historic District Commission (HDC)," said Bright. 

Bright continued, "Subsequently and conveniently, the Department of Inspections and Standards issued a demolition permit on the basis of public safety due to what they perceived as a "fire hazard" to this structure which allowed the owner to circumvent the HDC for permission to demolish the building. Besides the fact that the structure was built entirely of concrete and therefore fire retardant by the laws of nature, neither did the city enforce or the owner offer to board up the building in order to mitigate the issues of "public safety". Instead, Carpionato immediately proceeded down the far more costly process of demolishing the building. This was done under another guise of a "hotel" that was going to be built in its place."

Looking Ahead

Roadwork around the I-195 development.
"The tragedy of the situation is not only did Providence lose the last of its historic landscape of cold storage buildings that used to define the center lifeline of the City, it also lost out to a far better redevelopment plan by Struever Bros. Eccles and Rouse. Bill Struever, one of the principals of Struever Bros. used to work at the Fruit & Produce Warehouse while he attended Brown University. He understood the historic significance of the site and what it meant for the City," said Bright. 

"If there is any silver lining in this story, it is my hope that the City of Providence can come up with a strategy to prevent the circumnavigation of the HDC when it comes to the demolition of historic buildings. Owners of historic properties should be required to secure their buildings in the face of public safety," said Bright.  "As a practical matter, that is a far cheaper alternative than demolishing a building."

As for status of proposals the 195 lands, which includes the Carpionato mixed-used bid, the I-195 Redevelopment Commission released the following statement on May 20.

"The I-­195 Redevelopment Commission has received several proposals for development of The LINK. The proposals range from a sliver of land to a combination of parcels and include concepts for residential, including hospitality, and for commercial, recreational and retail. The proposals reflect an equal level of interest in the parcels on the East and the West side of the Providence River.

We are pleased by the response, which indicates recognition for the great potential of the land and the opportunity it presents for economic development and job creation in Rhode Island.

The Commission began preliminary discussion of the proposals at its meeting on May 19, 2014. The Commission will review the merits of each proposal and begin to prioritize the timing for moving proposals forward."


I-195 Redevelopment: Key Players

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