Luxury condo project’s car elevators save enough space so historic Carolina Theatre can stay intact.
By DOUG SMITH – CHARLOTTE OBSERVER
Elevators in Charlotte’s next condo high-rise will deliver owners and their cars right to the door. 
It’s an innovative way to ensure privacy — you stay in the car as you rise to your unit — but it also saves space that would be chewed up by parking ramps.
The developers of 20-story Encore, billed as “showplace living at the Carolina Theatre,” plan to install car elevators along with passenger elevators to help preserve the 80-year-old theater at North Tryon and East Sixth streets.
Charlottean Jim Donnelly’s Pursuit Group LLC has taken over as lead developer and revised the $65 million project since the city approved partner Camden Management Partners’ contract in April 2006 to buy the property.
Pursuit Group plans 20 “boutique” units selling for $1.7 million to $5 million instead of Camden’s earlier proposed 35-story, 125-unit tower, where the most expensive condos would have been priced in the low $300,000s.
As lenders tighten credit in a slowing housing market, Donnelly believes small, unique projects have a better chance of getting financing and selling out.
The Trust, his eight-unit conversion of the former Home Federal Savings and Loan Building at 139 S. Tryon St. sold out at prices ranging from $1.5 to $3 million. Residents are to move in starting in February.
In that upper-end niche, Donnelly said, buyers are more financially secure and less focused on short-term capital markets and interest rates.
On Encore, he said his team is evaluating financing terms offered by three large banks.
He’s not concerned that lenders typically require at least 50 percent of the units be sold in advance of construction.
Donnelly said he doesn’t believe he will have difficulty selling 10 condos based on his experience at The Trust, where buyers had to be turned away.
Encore is more than just dwelling units.
The project would include three floors of offices (5,000 square feet each), a restaurant level, a theater lounge floor, an amenities floor for residents and a 1,400-seat auditorium for movies, live entertainment, charitable benefits and corporate events.
For Charlotte history lovers, who have been trying to secure a future for the Carolina since it went dark in 1978, there’s no question this is a Next Big Thing.
Carolina Theatre Preservation Society President Charlie Clayton is pleased with the redesign.
“They’ve had me involved from the very beginning,” he said. “I like the architecture. I like the way they incorporate the original facade and emphasize the marquee out front.”
The developers expect to spend $5 million on the theater, and the society plans to raise millions more to return it to its original grandeur, Clayton said.
The city has agreed to help the developers and theater operator Ark Management with arts programming through annual grants based on the project’s property taxes.
Mitigating the impact of parking was perhaps the most significant change Donnelly’s team made to keep the theater in tact and improve the project’s feasibility, Clayton said.
Past proposals included spiral ramps that would have required shaving off some of the theater to build condos atop several parking levels, he said.
“This would have been done a long time ago if it hadn’t been for the parking problem,” Clayton said.
Clay Landers of Atlanta-based Camden said, “Parking was the biggest constraint to the site” when he initiated the project three years ago. “This is a very creative solution,” he said.
Car elevators are more common in cities where land is expensive and scarce. Donnelly, who co-founded an Internet travel site named IgoUgo.com, said he became acquainted with the technology during his travels.
Encore owners would enter the garage and condos on the Sixth Street side. Theater patrons would have a separate entrance on the Tryon Street side to the Carolina lobby and no access to the residential portion.
Donnelly said the project was designed so condo owners can be as private as they like, never mingling unless they choose to do so.
A restaurant would be cantilevered over Tryon Street at the seventh level.
A rooftop terrace with a lap pool for swimming and a smaller pool for cooling off would be open only to residents.
Residential condos with balconies overlooking Tryon would be on floors eight through 20 with one or two units, 3,000 to 7,000 square feet, per floor.
Pre-construction buyers would have some flexibility to design their spaces and window configurations. High-end finishes, fixtures and appliances would be standard. Owners could combine units horizontally or vertically.
Each condo would have either two or four parking spaces within a few feet of the owner’s door. Residents who don’t need as many spaces could convert them to other uses.
Separate passenger elevators open directly into residences.
Donnelly said the developers expected to sell the office space but would consider leasing. No commercial prices have been set.
He would like to break ground in March and complete the project by late fall 2009.
The next step is an extension of the developers’ theater purchase agreement with the city.
City economic development director Tom Flynn, who’s familiar with the plan, said his staff will recommend an extension to the City Council next month.
Developers Change With the Market
Encore shows how condo developers adjust to conditions in a changing housing market.Clay Landers of Camden Management Partners said that in the three years since he initiated a plan for a 35-story tower with 125 units on the Carolina Theatre site, construction prices and interest rates rose, meaning he would have to raise prices higher than his maximum $300,000s to make that project work.
“That got out of the scope of what my company does,” he said. “We don’t understand that higher price point.”
He went shopping for a partner and found Jim Donnelly of Pursuit Group, who has experience with high-end condos.
Donnelly, believing that the market now favors a smaller, more upscale product revised the project to include just 20 units priced from $1.7 million to $5 million.
In light of the housing downturn, real estate analysts are paying close attention to uptown, where 20 high-rise projects are open, under construction or being considered.
Boulevard Centro became the first developer to pull the plug on a tower, when it dropped plans in April for a 25-story condo-hotel next to Bobcats Arena. Eighty buyers had signed up for 117 units, but the developer said constraints of the small site and rising construction costs made it impossible to build.
Encore Overview
• Location: North Tryon and East Sixth streets, incorporating the historic Carolina Theatre.
• Size: 20 stories with restored theater, restaurant, offices and 20 residential condos.
• Prices: $1.7 to $5 million for 3,000- to 7,000-square-foot units.
• Theater: To be operated by Ark Management with plans for live entertainment, movies, charitable benefits, corporate meetings.
• Condo amenities: Car elevators, rooftop terrace with pools, balconies, residents’ amenities floor.
• Developers: Pursuit Group LLC with Camden Management Partners. Pursuit’s main team consists of Jim Donnelly, Scott Bianchi and Jim Kunevicius.
• Architect: Liquid Design.
• Contractor: Bovis Lend Lease.
• History: Project started three years ago when lawyer Ruffin Pearce Jr. of Womble Carlyle Sandridge & Rice, then a Carolina Theatre Preservation Society member, began working with Camden’s Clay Landers on a development-restoration idea.
I’d love to hear from people about this project. Do you think it is good for Uptown Charlotte? Anyone have any interest? Please comment or email me…

September 12, 2007 at 3:54 pm |
I think the building itself is a really cool idea and I am fascinated with the car elevator and how it works. The on thing that I am not crazy about is the price point. Uptown is quickly becoming livable to only the very affluent. Rents have sky rocketed and I would like to see a little more affordable living. In addition, we have all of these condo units going up, but I don’t see enough attention added to shopping, grocery stores and restaurants. Although, i enjoy the high end atmosphere, I just don’t want Uptown to price the middle class out and keep the majority of people in the suburbs.
September 13, 2007 at 11:35 am |
Craig, I would definitely agree with you about not enough infrastructure such as shopping and grocery, although I do think there are a lot of restaurants in the uptown area. Hopefully the powers that be can recognize this before all the land is purchased up and developed for residential.
The last few projects highlighted in the media about uptown Charlotte are certainly higher dollar than what other condo projects have been in the past, but I think there are still a lot of affordable projects, compared to other markets such as Washington D.C. or NYC. Compare the livable square footage of condos here for $500k compared to that of other cities and I think we’re still ahead of the game – although closing fast. And those other cities do have the other needs already in place – but taxes and cost of living are certainly higher as well.
April 29, 2008 at 2:18 am |
Charlotte is truly ready. Not to mention that Charlotte is doing better than any other housing market in the nation right now, ah but they never report the goood stuff. Speaking of good stuff how about a profsessional concierge service the Residence at south park is doing it. People are looking for that something extra. $7,600 on the high end at 70% occupancy in less than a year. Im ssure theres 20-30 fine persons that will appreciate the vision that you are bringing into manifestation, we just want to help make the Encore the most talked about and most anticipated fine art that Charlotte has and will see for a long time. CHIVALRY CONCIERGE. 5 star white glove service,a gentle giant. Greet guest,plan events,dry cleaning,set dinner reservations,hold and store large packages. auto detail, get hard to get tickets,limo service just to name a few. Fine men and woman whom have recieved Ritz carlton style of training well im getting happy just explaining it all. Uniform white crispy shirts black vest black creased pants and black shine shoes, You choose who best fits the look you have in mind and we deliver. Well I hope whom ever recieves this message doesn’t hesitate to share this with Mr.Donnelly hey he my even show kudos to you for such a great idea,oh and did I mention our privatcy act. Have a Blessed day and please feel free to call 704-890-0279 or e-mail desilu@chivalryco.com.
April 29, 2008 at 2:37 am |
Des you were right this looks awsome but get some rest you work to much a couple of miss spelled words but your service is great.
August 17, 2008 at 3:07 pm |
Cd2926…
Cd2926…
August 18, 2008 at 7:57 pm |
Trackback…
Trackback…
October 18, 2009 at 11:14 pm |
Is there a precedent for your car elevator concept with other real estate projects?
December 20, 2009 at 3:49 pm |
Really love that series, South Park knows mixing humor and ridicule to expose the taboo of society and is a recipe that works, then saw to it continue!