University Place Announces Summer Events Schedule and Project Updates

• University Place is Expanding Its Lifestyle and Recreation Offerings with New Restaurants and Apartments and Updated Play Areas
• A Full Schedule of Community Events is Planned for the Summer Season

OREM, Utah (June 5, 2017) – University Place, a 112-acre mixed-use development project formerly known as University Mall, today announced that as part of its ongoing revitalization and expansion efforts, new additions have recently been made in this unique walkable community.

University Place combines desirable indoor and outdoor shopping and dining with the best in luxury living space, work space and open space. The most recent areas of growth include:
New dining options: Tucanos Brazilian Grill, Midici’s Neapolitan Pizza Company, and Swig have joined a growing roster of more than two dozen dining options. Rimmels Original German Doner and Oh Mai are coming soon.
More luxury living spaces: The Aston offers a variety of upscale, urban apartments, ranging from studio to three-bedrooms. Currently, there are approximately 376 units completed, and another 103 units are expected to be move-in ready by the fall.
Updated Kid’s Place: A treehouse, merry-go-round, splash pads, embankment slide, indoor playhouse and an interactive music section featuring a xylophone and drums are just some of the new features being added to the indoor/outdoor play areas.
Events at The Orchard: Throughout the summer, the public is invited to come and attend a variety of activities at The Orchard, University Place’s outdoor gathering space, such as:
• Trivia nights
• Movie nights
• Concerts
• Yoga
• Car shows
• Dance nights
• Farmer’s market
• Holiday celebrations
• And much more
There will also be a Family Fun Night hosted once a month, with the first being a Unicorn Party held on Monday, June 12 at 7:00 p.m. For details on dates and times of all these events, please visit https://live-university-place-production.pantheonsite.io/events/.

About University Place

Originally developed in the early 1970s in Orem, Utah, University Place (formerly University Mall) is a 120-acre mixed-use redevelopment project that initially only included retail. Having completed the initial phases of a $500 million revitalization program, University Place is now home to upscale apartments, Class-A office space, an indoor and outdoor kid’s play area, and green space called The Orchard, that features a choreographed show fountain and is programmed year-round with events for the community. University Place was first developed and is still owned and operated by Woodbury Corporation, a 4th generation family-run business, and one of the oldest and most respected full-service real estate development and management companies in the Intermountain West. For more information about University Place and updates on the project, visit https://live-university-place-production.pantheonsite.io/. For more information about Woodbury Corporation, visit http://www.woodburycorp.com/.

Press Contact
Amanda Butterfield
Woodbury Corporation PR
A_butterfield@woodburycorp.com
801-440-9837

 

University Place To Host Block Party for the Special Olympics Utah 2017 Summer Games

  • The Special Olympics Utah Summer Games Block Party will Take Place at The Orchard on Friday, June 2 from 5:30 – 8:00 p.m.
  • Festivities Include the Arrival of the Flame of Hope, the Lighting of the Cauldron, Games, Music and More

Orem, UT (May 30, 2017) – University Place, a 112-acre mixed-use development project

formerly known as University Mall, today announced that on Friday, June 2 it will be hosting the official community block party to kick off Special Olympics Utah’s 2017 Summer Games.

The block party is a free event open to the public, beginning at 5:30 p.m. A brief opening ceremony will start at 6:00 p.m., which includes the arrival of the Flame of Hope carried by the athletes as well as representatives from Orem City and other law enforcement agencies. This will be followed by the lighting of the cauldron, Knights of Columbus Color Guard, and presentation of awards honoring excellence across several different areas. Immediately after the ceremony there will be games, music and the “Victory Dance” until the party ends at 8:00 p.m.

Special Olympics Utah uses the power of sports to help individuals with intellectual disabilities to focus on what they “can do” and in doing so be active and engaged in their community. This year’s Summer Games will be held in three venues in the Utah County area from June 2-3, with nearly 1,300 athletes and Unified Sports partners expected to compete.

“One of the cornerstones of Special Olympics Utah is creating inclusive communities, and University Place is the perfect location to do that,” said Wendy Kelly, director of community outreach and partnerships for Special Olympics Utah. “The Orchard is a beautiful venue, and we’re really excited to use it to kick off our 2017 Summers Games.”

Located in the heart of University Place, The Orchard is a large outdoor and versatile gathering space. Designed to bring a renewed sense of community to the area and provide people a place to come together, The Orchard is scheduled year round with activities, concerts, markets and more.

“We hope many will come and join us at the Summer Games block party as we celebrate these incredible athletes and the people who support them,” said Randy Woodbury, president of Woodbury Corporation. “This is just the first of many community events we have planned at The Orchard throughout the summer, and we encourage people to come visit us often throughout the season.”

To see a full list of Special Olympics Utah’s Summer Games events, visit www.sout.org.

About University Place

Originally developed in the early 1970s in Orem, Utah, University Place (formerly University Mall) is a 120-acre mixed-use redevelopment project that initially only included retail. Having completed the initial phases of a $500 million revitalization program, University Place is now home to upscale apartments, Class-A office space, an indoor and outdoor kid’s play area, and green space called The Orchard, that features a choreographed show fountain and is programmed year-round with events for the community. University Place was first developed and is still owned and operated by Woodbury Corporation, a 4th generation family-run business, and one of the oldest and most respected full-service real estate development and management companies in the Intermountain West. For more information about University Place and updates on the project, visit https://live-university-place-production.pantheonsite.io/. For more information about Woodbury Corporation, visit http://www.woodburycorp.com/.

Press Contact

Amanda Butterfield
Woodbury Corporation PR
A_butterfield@woodburycorp.com
801-440-9837

Daily Herald: McWane honors Infrastructure Week , Clearlink moving into University Place office, Varo Money expands to Utah

McWane honors Infrastructure Week in Provo

Joining other infrastructure providers throughout the United States, McWane Ductile in Provo is celebrating the important role infrastructure plays in the nation’s water supply.

“One of the most pressing issues facing our country is the need to upgrade the nation’s water infrastructure. Much of our drinking water infrastructure, the more than 1 million miles of pipes beneath our streets, is nearing the end of its useful life and approaching the age at which it needs to be replaced,” said Michael Jones, assistant vice president for corporate communications with McWane, in a press release.

The United States recognizes May 15-19 as Infrastructure Week. According to infrastructureweek.org, Infrastructure Week is a national week of events, media coverage, education and advocacy efforts to elevate infrastructure as a critical issue impacting all Americans.

McWane Ductile in Provo is celebrating the important role it plays in the nation’s water infrastructure — manufacturing safe, strong and sustainable ductile iron pipe to deliver clean drinking water throughout the United States and around the world…..

 

Read the full story at the Daily Herald

 

Utah Valley Magazine: 2017 Best of Utah Valley

It isn’t puzzling why we all heart Utah Valley! We pieced together your thousands of love notes and votes to reveal 309 winners that give the big picture of the county we call home.

 

Best Retail Shopping Center Winner, University Place

University Place Welcomes Clearlink to Its Growing Office Park

  • 300 Employees Will Move Into More Than 40,000 Square Feet of Office Space
  • Clearlink Chose University Place for the Opportunities It Provides to Help Employees Achieve a Work-Life Balance

SALT LAKE CITY (May 11, 2017) – University Place, a 112-acre mixed-use development project formerly known as University Mall, today announced that Clearlink, a leader in digital marketing and sales conversion services, will be moving into more than 40,000 square feet at its growing office park.

Recognized as one of Utah’s fastest-growing companies, Clearlink employs over 1,500 of the nation’s top marketers, technologists and sales professionals at its three facilities in Salt Lake City, Orem, and Scottsdale, Arizona.  As Clearlink continues to grow and expand its presence, it was looking for office space conducive to its open, collaborative work environment. The company’s award-winning culture places a high priority on caring for the well-being of its employees, and wants its new office to be near amenities that would help employees achieve work-life balance and enhance community engagement.

“University Place’s thoughtful ‘work, play, live’ approach is a perfect fit for Clearlink’s culture,” said Cammie Cable, vice president of human resources at Clearlink. “Identifying the right market is a pivotal decision in the planning process for any expanding organization. Located between two major universities, University Place offers Clearlink access to a highly-talented applicant pool within a vibrant, growing community.”

Clearlink will move 300 sales representatives into the new office space, with plans to add a team of marketing professionals in the near future.

“Clearlink shares the type of thinking that fueled our vision for the redevelopment of University Place,” said Randy Woodbury, president of Woodbury Corporation. “Our office building not only offers first-class work space, but employees are also within walking distance of a variety of food and beverage choices, shopping, and entertainment, as well as our outdoor space The Orchard.”

Clearlink will be moving into 545 University Place, which is located on the corner of University Parkway and State Street and is the first completed building of a planned five-building office park that will total up to 700,000 square feet when finished.

About University Place

Originally developed in the early 1970s in Orem, Utah, University Place (formerly University Mall) is a 120-acre mixed-use redevelopment project that initially only included retail. Having completed the initial phases of a $500 million revitalization program, University Place is now home to upscale apartments, Class-A office space, an indoor and outdoor kid’s play area, and green space called The Orchard, that features a choreographed show fountain and is programmed year-round with events for the community.  University Place was first developed and is still owned and operated by Woodbury Corporation, a 4th generation family-run business, and one of the oldest and most respected full-service real estate development and management companies in the Intermountain West. For more information about University Place and updates on the project, visit https://live-university-place-production.pantheonsite.io/. For more information about Woodbury Corporation, visit http://www.woodburycorp.com/.

About Clearlink

Clearlink, a SYKES company, partners with the world’s leading brands to extend their reach, drive valuable transactions, and deepen consumer insight. Clearlink has delivered millions of customers to its brand partners, including AT&T, CenturyLink, Progressive, Safeco and DISH, among others, through customized marketing, sales and technology services. Headquartered in Salt Lake City, Utah and established in 2003, Clearlink employs more than 1,500 sales, marketing, and technology professionals in Utah and Arizona.  To learn more or to apply for open positions visit clearlink.com

Press Contact
Amanda Butterfield
Woodbury Corporation PR
A_butterfield@woodburycorp.com
801-440-9837

Herald Journal: Best of Utah Valley

Every spring for more than a decade The Daily Herald celebrates the very best of Utah Valley – everything from the best pediatrician to the best place for a great car wash.

The Best Of is an annual reader-generated competition where beloved businesses, medical professionals, restaurants, stores, entertainment venues, outdoor hangouts and even specific products all vie for the honor of being named as The Best in Utah Valley.

Daily Herald readers nominate their valley favorites by submitting ballots either online or by sending in their ballots
printed in the newspaper. Votes are then meticulously tallied and winners announced.

Family Friendly Shopping Center Winner, University Place

Kid’s Play Place Winner, University Place

Shopping Centers Today (STC): Strong population growth drives Salt Lake City’s retail economy

By: Ben Johnson

Salt Lake City has a rich history in retailing that dates back nearly 150 years to the opening of the first department store in the U.S. Against the backdrop of that tradition, this year is set to be the city’s best for retail growth since 2007. Fueling this growth are some bright demographic trends. 2016 was one of the city’s strongest retail years on record, spurred by a low jobless rate of only 2.5 percent, together with a job growth increase of 3.5 percent. The Salt Lake City population grew by nearly 40,000 last year, and observers are expecting an additional 41,000 for this year. “You have a one-two punch of strong population growth with strong economic growth,” said Darin Mellott, regional director of research and analysis at CBRE. “So you have more people, and they’ve got money to spend, which is a good recipe for retailers.”

The average family size in Salt Lake City is greater than that in any other U.S. major metro. “Those strong family ties along with the quality of life mean that word spreads quickly between retailers,” said J.R. Moore, a first vice president and retail specialist at CBRE. “As soon as they start hearing the strong sales volumes that they are seeing in Utah, along with the strong workforce, Utah becomes a very luring location for these retailers.”

Recent data show that the area’s retail vacancy rate fell by 40 basis points to 5.4 percent last year and that rents jumped from $18.38 per square foot in 2015 to $20.86 per square foot in 2016, according to Cushman & Wakefield. The explosive population growth has generated a residential construction boom. “A lot of people are calling Salt Lake City how Denver looked 10 years ago,” said Nick Clark, senior director of retail at Cushman & Wakefield and a 20-year veteran of the local market. “The amount of housing growth cannot be overstated here.”

Most of that residential construction is concentrated in the southwest portion of Salt Lake County and the northern portion of Utah County and involves both single-family and apartment-complex development. Thus the bulk of the recent retail construction is occurring in those same areas. To serve this growing population, supermarket chains have been particularly active in the Salt Lake market.

“They continue to be the gold standard for local retail,” said Clark. Salt Lake City–based Smith’s Food & Drug is set to open units in Saratoga Springs and Springville this year, while Whole Foods is on track to open in a new center in Park City, and a Lee’s Marketplace is to open in North Salt Lake. “In the next three to five years, barring a slowdown or a hiccup in the economy, I think you’ll continue to see more retail construction here just following the massive amount of housing,” said Clark. “You’re going to start seeing a lot more out-of-state developers looking in this market as well.”

In the growing southwestern quadrant are the 2 million-square-foot District and the 1.5 million-square-foot Jordan Landing centers, both of which dominate the market just now. But more retail is needed. “Due to the residential growth, those two projects are now not enough to sustain that growth, and so we are seeing some other major projects that are under development or under planning right now,” said Moore. Among these is a mixed-use center called Mountain View Village, which CenterCal Properties is building on an 85-acre site in Riverton, 10 miles south of downtown Salt Lake City, and which is set to open in 2018.

The report of another compelling demographic comes from the University of Utah, which is projecting that upwards of 49,000 state residents yearly will be turning 20 years old over the next 12 years. This trend may bode well for additional urban development, observers say. Though Clark acknowledges that Salt Lake City is still very much a suburban retail market, the growing numbers of younger professionals are driving much of the recent focus on downtown. Over the past two years, 1,500 multifamily units have been developed downtown, and an additional 3,800 units are under construction. There is growth of restaurants, bars and other entertainment in general. “Ten years ago you’d come downtown and there was nobody here on Friday or Saturday nights, everybody was going home,” said Clark. “Now downtown is vibrant, and it’s a lot more fun, quite frankly.”

Salt Lake City is also unique in that there are three major malls located within a mile’s radius of downtown. These are: City Creek Center, Salt Lake City’s premier shopping destination, which features a facade from the original ZCMI (for Zion’s Cooperative Mercantile Institution) department store; The Gateway, an open-air destination center recently purchased by Vestar and Oaktree Capital Management and which is poised for a $30 million redevelopment; and Trolley Square, which was purchased out of bankruptcy in 2013 and will soon see some major redevelopment nearby.

Farther afield from downtown, no fewer than five major suburban malls are currently under redevelopment: the 1 million-square-foot University Place, in Orem, owned by Woodbury Corp., which has just completed the first phase of a $500 million redevelopment, adding upscale apartments, offices and recreational amenities; the Fashion Place mall, in Salt Lake County, which is to include one of only two Macy’s department stores set to open in the U.S. this year; Newgate Mall, in Ogden (which Time Equities purchased last year from GGP for nearly $70 million); Provo Towne Centre (purchased by Brixton Capital last year); and the 1.3 million-square-foot South Towne Center, in Sandy.

The Salt Lake City retail market is not entirely immune from the challenges facing other parts of the country, including rising construction costs and the closure of many mid-box and big-box stores. Kmart, Sears, Shopko and The Sports Authority all closed stores in the locality last year, accounting for some 150,000 square feet of vacant space. More closures have been announced for this year, but most market watchers are in fact excited at the prospects for the repurposing of these spaces.

“Of the four Sports Authority boxes, three of those already have two to four letters of intent to split the box in a couple different ways,” said Clark. “The second they hit the market, offers were already in hand to the developers even leading up to their closures. I think, from a retail standpoint, 2017 will probably prove to be a better year than both 2015 and 2016.”

Reproduced by permission of SCT, a publication of the International Council of Shopping Centers

Herald Journal: Al’s Sporting Goods opening location in Orem this fall

Al’s Sporting Goods in Logan is expanding its retail footprint by adding a second location in the Provo-Orem area. The store is expected to open by early fall.

Al’s is a locally owned company known for selling all of kinds of sporting and outdoor gear. The company’s first location outside Cache Valley will be a 40,000-square-foot location with 70 employees at University Place, 575 E. University Parkway, Orem — a mixed-use development with retail, office space and housing. The announcement was made by Woodbury Corporation, the owner of University Place, in a news release earlier this week.

Al’s Owner Kris Larsen said he is excited about the idea of adding a second retail location.

“For a few years now, we’ve been pretty aggressively looking at locations all along the Wasatch Front for a good opportunity for our second location,” Larsen said. “If you’re going to define the heart of the watermelon of Utah, we look at Utah County and some of that area. It’s really prime real estate for sporting goods.”

Larsen cited the Orem-Provo area’s geography, demographics and the fact that it’s near both high school and college students. Utah Valley University is in Orem and Brigham Young University is in Provo….

Read the full story at the Herald Journal

Cache Valley Daily: Al’s Sporting Goods opening second store

Al’s Sporting Goods, a Logan original that began in 1921, is expanding its operations and plans to open a second store in Utah County. University Place has announced that Al’s Sporting Goods will be moving into 40,000 square feet of prime retail space.

University Place, formerly known as University Mall, is a 120-acre mixed use redevelopment project that includes retail, office space and higher-end apartments in Orem.

“We have always been interested in expanding into Utah County, because being a college town close to lots of different outdoor recreation, it is very similar to Logan,” said Kris Larsen, president and CEO of Al’s Sporting Goods in a press release. “Once we learned more about University Place and its focus on building a new kind of walkable community, we knew we had found our new home.”

Al’s Sporting Goods has been operating in its current location for only a few years…….

 

Read the full story at the Cache Valley Daily