Jackson Square brings new space to downtown
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JANESVILLE Jackson Square building in downtown Janesville is more than office space for several organizations and their employees.
The project is considered a catalyst for downtown revitalization. It included extensive renovation and the downtown’s first new commercial construction in five years.
Jackson Square is now home to Forward Janesville, the Janesville Design & Development Center and the Community Foundation of Southern Wisconsin.
“This is quite simply a great economic redevelopment project,” said Christine Moore, administrator of the JDDC, a resource center for the economic and aesthetic revitalization of downtown Janesville.
“The project took old buildings that were in disrepair, renovated them and married them with a new building.”
The Forward Foundation, which is affiliated with Forward Janesville, redeveloped 6,000 square feet of space in buildings at 14 and 18 S. Jackson, while Midwest General Developers put up an adjoining 8,000-square-foot building at the northwest corner of Jackson and Dodge streets.
Forward Janesville
The city’s private economic development organization moved into the renovated space at 14 S. Jackson earlier this year.
The move wasn’t far, as Forward Janesville had called the kitty-corner building at 51 S. Jackson St. home for years.
“Our board decided to go this direction and take this risk to do a demo project that shows what can be done downtown when you renovate tired old buildings and, in this case, combine them with a brand new building,” said John Beckord, Forward Janesville’s president.
Beckord said his organization is operating more efficiently in what he called a “front door” to the downtown.
“We’re much more visible, much more accessible and much more functional for the kind of work we do,” he said.
Janesville Design & Development Center
The center—created in 2004 through a partnership of Forward Janesville, the city of Janesville and the Downtown Development Alliance—first opened its doors in temporary quarters at Angus-Young Associates on South River Street.
“It was a gorgeous space for us, but we were too much on the edge of the downtown,” Moore said. “We needed to be more centrally located, and because we’re supported by Forward Janesville it made sense to be near them.”
Community Foundation of Southern Wisconsin
The foundation started in 1992 as a tax-exempt public charity. It receives and invests tax-deductible gifts and distributes a portion of the earnings through grant awards to enhance the quality of life in southern Wisconsin.
Last month, the foundation moved into about 3,000 square feet in the second level of the new building at 26 S. Jackson St.
Sue Conley, the organization’s executive director, wants to make the remaining 1,000 square feet on the second floor available as shared office space for other non-profits.
Midwest General is trying to find tenants for the first floor.
“We wanted to add staff, but we had nowhere to put them,” Conley said of the foundation’s former office on North Main Street. “Our board felt strongly about being downtown and also wanted to be part of a redevelopment project that could be a catalyst for the downtown.”
Sep 28, 2008 at 7:52 p.m.
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I love the way it looks, kind of has an "old world" feel to it...
Sep 28, 2008 at 7:11 p.m.
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biggirl, this development shows confidence in the downtown and eliminated a blighted, run-down, and mostly empty corner. FJI is a private group and not responsible for all the storefronts downtown, but by choosing to build here they are showing others what can be done. Just as the Gazette editorial today cheers several new and expanded businesses that bring a few hundred jobs, even though the total is far from the thousands that the complete closure of GM will take away from the community, it is clear that we still need these positive steps. When you add up JPAC, the Armory, the new parking ramp, the upcoming renovation of the Helgesen building, and the new TIF districts near downtown, it is clear that positive things are happening. We only have the power to get someplace one step at a time. Let's cheer these good steps instead of counting the miles to the destination.
Sep 28, 2008 at 12:45 p.m.
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I'm not against this, but give me a break, how is this going to be a catalyst for growth? Something like JPAC, I could see, even though that was a stretch, but this is just a few storefronts with the rest of downtown still looking rather dilapidated.
Sep 28, 2008 at 9 a.m.
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Hockey- One of the things FJI has always had to deal with is that the most critical things they do aren't (or can't) be the most visible. There is a lot more going on than just a building. If your business is a member, I encourage you to volunteer and get involved. And if your business isn't, go down there and talk to them about why you should be.
Sep 28, 2008 at 7:17 a.m.
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It does look great. I think Ron Sutherlin did the restoration.
Sep 28, 2008 at 7:16 a.m.
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All we keep hearing from Forward Janesville is about this wonderful new building. Is that what membership dues went for this year? What else are they doing? The only other thing I kept hearing about was the downtown district that was being promoted and went down in flames. If that many property owners were against it, somebody didn't do their homework.
Sep 28, 2008 at 2:35 a.m.
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The buildings look great. The retention of the oldest remaining facade, the elimination of the fake colonial facade (the old Red Wing store, which chopped off the front of the building), and the incorporation of modern structures in a human-scaled streetscape arrangement all combine to make a terrific example of how to do this type of redevelopment right. Truly an asset to the downtown.
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