For more than a decade, downtown Tucson’s Corbett Building has sat vacant, falling victim to break-ins, vandalism and plagued by homelessness.
But a plan unveiled earlier this week to the Rio Nuevo board hopes to breathe new life into the space with a burger joint, a beer garden with outdoor games, five pickleball courts and, down the road in a second and third phase, a 10-story hotel and a 15-story apartment complex.
Developer Scott Stiteler shared his plans for the entire block at 340 N. Sixth Avenue and East Seventh Street, with the goal of completing the first phase this October or November.
The $8 million investment by Stiteler for Phase 1 will feature the 4,000-square-foot Love Burger wrapped with a patio on three sides, and the renovation of what he has dubbed Corbett Lane — the street to the south of the building — with better lighting, landscaping and planters in an effort to create a more inviting environment. The project will have 188 parking spots.
To help launch the first phase, Rio Nuevo agreed to a GPLET lease, a tax rebate of approximately $5 million and a $500,000 cash contribution.
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A planned Love Burger restaurant is part of developer Scott Stiteler’s $8 million investment.
The hotel, which could be ready by 2026, and the apartment building planned for future phases on the south side of the building are backed by an investment from Stiteler of over $180 million.
“There isn’t anyone with that kind of scale contributing to downtown right now,” said Rio Nuevo Chairman Fletcher McCusker.
The building was once home to the J. Knox Corbett Lumber and Hardware Co., which was founded in 1890, just north of the railroad tracks on Sixth Avenue, according to Arizona Daily Star archives. It operated there for more than 70 years before moving to a location on Speedway in 1963. Two years later, the company closed.
It has been undergoing renovations since last September, Stiteler told the board.
“I can’t wait for the community to come to this building, I can’t wait to bring it back to life,” he said.
Stiteler plans to incorporate the building’s old scoring pattern, custom-made wood windows and a paint color from about 80 years ago.
“This has been a loving rehabilitation …….