Jonesboro Developments
#1
Posted 30 July 2005 - 10:18 PM
By now, everyone should be familiar with the new 800K sq ft mall coming to Jonesboro known as The Mall at Turtle Creek. This mall will be anchored by Dillards, Target, and JC Penney. There will also be stores like Bed Bath & Beyond, Circuit City, Chico, Barnes & Noble, and much more.
Now, here's where all the excitement comes in. Two new restaurants have announced they will be setting up shop outside the mall. They are (drum roll please):
Chili's (long time coming)
... and... CHUCK E CHEESE'S!!! (wow, I almost wet myself as I typed it)
My 4-year-old is gonna love this place... as will my 2-year-old. I guess now would be a good time to mention that my wife and I are expecting our third on September 1 (via c-section).
I'll bring more J-town developments to this topic soon!
#2
Posted 30 July 2005 - 10:22 PM
Chili's just closed the deal with the developer, which is Belz Burrow out of Jonesboro.
Both restaurants-- along with the mall-- are slated to open in March!!!
NO NEED FOR US TO DRIVE TO MEMPHIS ANYMORE!
#3
Posted 30 July 2005 - 10:29 PM
TJ Max, Pier 1, Office Depot, Old Navy, Outback Steakhouse, Colton's, O'Charley's, Ruby Tuesday, Cracker Barrell, & El Chico. Things are really looking up in NEA.
Heck! Even the Indians had a winning football season last year!
#4
Posted 30 July 2005 - 10:41 PM
Buffalo's Steakhouse- just opened
Holiday Inn Express- under construction
8-screen Theater- under construction
New shopping center- planning phase
US 412 widening to 5 lanes from MO line to Paragould and from the western edge of Paragould to AR 141.- under construction
Paragould HS football field/ sports complex- just completed
New city water park- just completed
4th city fire station- just completed
New Community Center- just completed
The Community Center ROCKS! It has indoor and outdoor swimming pools, raquetball courts, soccer, and baseball fields, basketball courts, etc. The place is very massive and very nice.
#5
Posted 30 July 2005 - 11:30 PM
I read in the Jonesboro Sun yesterday about the Chucky E Cheese and the Chilis. Those are great additions to any up and coming citys IMO. Chilis is a great restuarant IMO (and seems rather picky on where they locate) and Chucky Cheese is every kids dream destination growing up. LOL
All the other resturants you listed as having come in the last few years are sure signs of good growth and confidence of businesses of where Jonesboro is going. I was suprised to see El Chico, I did not know they were still expanding, they are not nearly as dominant as they were in the 80s now that they have authentic Mexican competition as the have leaned towards Tex-Mex more.
Paragould getting a 8-Screen theatre seems like a great development. Things like that tend to draw in local folks into to town, which means they will probably eat and maybe shop somewhere on that same trip to town for the movies.
#6
Posted 30 July 2005 - 11:51 PM
arkansas_buff, on Jul 30 2005, 11:18 PM, said:
By now, everyone should be familiar with the new 800K sq ft mall coming to Jonesboro known as The Mall at Turtle Creek. This mall will be anchored by Dillards, Target, and JC Penney. There will also be stores like Bed Bath & Beyond, Circuit City, Chico, Barnes & Noble, and much more.
Now, here's where all the excitement comes in. Two new restaurants have announced they will be setting up shop outside the mall. They are (drum roll please):
Chili's (long time coming)
... and... CHUCK E CHEESE'S!!! (wow, I almost wet myself as I typed it)
My 4-year-old is gonna love this place... as will my 2-year-old. I guess now would be a good time to mention that my wife and I are expecting our third on September 1 (via c-section).
I'll bring more J-town developments to this topic soon!
Congrats on the baby.
From what I've read and personally heard, the cities of Jonesboro and Paragould are doing very well, and these developments show that to be true. However, could you tell us how common that success is throughout Northeast Arkansas. I know Blytheville is doing very poorly. Basically, is the Jonesboro area an anomaly in the Delta, or is the Northeast region, as a whole, doing well.
Edited by Arkansawyer, 30 July 2005 - 11:52 PM.
#7
Posted 31 July 2005 - 06:20 AM
Arkansawyer, on Jul 31 2005, 12:51 AM, said:
From what I've read and personally heard, the cities of Jonesboro and Paragould are doing very well, and these developments show that to be true. However, could you tell us how common that success is throughout Northeast Arkansas. I know Blytheville is doing very poorly. Basically, is the Jonesboro area an anomaly in the Delta, or is the Northeast region, as a whole, doing well.
#8
Posted 01 August 2005 - 09:43 PM
1. Industry focused governments- Both Paragould and Jonesboro have local governments that are pushing hard and actually seeking out new industries for the two cities. ARI (American Railcar Industries) is a prime example in Paragould, and Jonesboro just opened a huge Nestle plant. Jonesboro has one of the finest industrial parks of any city in AR.
2. Extremely low crime- If I'm not mistaken, Paragould's crime rate was the lowest in the state. I'm vague on the source of the stat, but our mayor goes to church with me. He's really proud of it.
3. Low taxes and low energy costs
4. Good school systems- In Paragould: Greene County Tech and Paragould School District both 4A Schools. In Jonesboro: Valley View and Jonesboro School Districts are both exceptional.
Really, if you've never been here, you may have a wrong idea about the beauty of the area as well. We're not in the flat lands of the delta. Paragould, and Jonesboro sit on Crowley's Ridge, which is a bunch of gentle rolling hills with lots of trees. We're not too far from the action with Memphis being only 65 miles from Jonesboro. I love it here.
#9
Posted 01 August 2005 - 09:51 PM
Mith242, on Jul 31 2005, 07:20 AM, said:
Thanks for the congrats everyone
Maybe the whole Ivory Billed Woodpecker thing will catch on for the folks in Eastern AR (south of here). If you ask me, I think it's silly, but hey?!
#10
Posted 01 August 2005 - 11:37 PM
The bird is legendary. It's the Pheonix of North America. It embodies the passion, curiosity, and bravery of the American frontier.
Imagine a large, stunning bird that's the size of an eagle. It has a red head and a 20 inch wingspan. It has a huge, beish beak. It's able to rip bark completely of the sides of trees by grappling the trunk, maneuvering its huge beak, and utilizing its strong neck muscles. Despite its size, it's able to disappear almost effortlessly in and out of the huge cypress forests of the White River National Refuge, where it's common to find trees over five feet in diameter.
An early naturalist, who was documenting North American birds, came upon a few when traveling through the southern forests of this new country. He shot one so that he could record and diagram it. The large bird was still alive, injured, and defiantly bellowed its booming "kent" calls through the bag all the way to the explorer's bed and breakfast. He tried to feed the woodpecker, but the bird remained defiant. It could either be described as pride, or stubbornness. When he left the bird for a short period of time in the room, it tore a hole through the wooden walls and plaster in its attempt to escape. The bird was caught in the act just in time, but died due to starvation.
The bird once ranged all over the south. Arkansas was part of its northern extent. In the 1930s, the last known remaining population was documented in the Singer Tract in northern Lousiana. The reason to its decline is that the majority of its old growth forest habitat had been logged. Because the woodpecker is so large, it needs large trees to survive. The Singer Tract was one of the few remaining places with old growth forest. A lot of commotion was made to resist loggers, but in the end, loggers won out. In the 1940s, when only a handful of trees still stood in the largely clearcut landscape, an ornithologist came down from Cornell to document whatever he could of the remaining Ivory Billed population. In the tract, he found a lone Ivory Billed Woodpecker female, her home in one of the few remaining trees. He documented her unreturned calls, and the death of one of the most stunning species to grace this planet in its billions of years of history.
After the extinction of this creature, it was no longer a symbol of America's pride and pioneering spirit, but our brash, prodigal ways. It helped spurn the environmentalist movement, and forever symbolized the death of the truly wild American South. Over the next 60 years, there were purported sightings reported predominantly in the Delta states. Most of them were quickly disproven as the woodpeckers more common relative, the pileated. It looks almost exactly the same, except it is less than half the size. In science, everything needs to be supported beyond a reasonable doubt to be accepted, so when UALR professor David Luneau caught the bird on video by freak chance, it was a moment of jubilation.
After 60 years, the bird was discovered in the Cache River in Arkansas. What better place to discover a natural legend than in the "Natural State"? The hunters who helped protect the land for the migrating mallards deserve a lot of credit, along with the other naturalists. This time around, America's sense of environmental protection has matured, and millions in private donations have been given towards the acquisition of lands to restore even more wilderness. The image of the Ivory Billed has changed a third time. It's a story that's uniquely American, a rebirth and a new chance at hope. But not only that, it's a story that uniquely Arkansan, a testament to the successful efforts of hunters and naturalists alike to preserve what natural features are left in this beautiful state.
Hunters and naturalists 50 years ago couldn't have imagined this when they were fighting logging interests to preserve what little was left of the wetlands of the South. They couldn't have imagined that they were going to protect the last remaining sanctuary of an American legend. They were merely balancing their own personal interests with the welfare of the environment. And they were rewarded.
That was really long..................
#11
Posted 02 August 2005 - 04:45 AM
arkansas_buff, on Aug 1 2005, 10:43 PM, said:
1. Industry focused governments- Both Paragould and Jonesboro have local governments that are pushing hard and actually seeking out new industries for the two cities. ARI (American Railcar Industries) is a prime example in Paragould, and Jonesboro just opened a huge Nestle plant. Jonesboro has one of the finest industrial parks of any city in AR.
2. Extremely low crime- If I'm not mistaken, Paragould's crime rate was the lowest in the state. I'm vague on the source of the stat, but our mayor goes to church with me. He's really proud of it.
3. Low taxes and low energy costs
4. Good school systems- In Paragould: Greene County Tech and Paragould School District both 4A Schools. In Jonesboro: Valley View and Jonesboro School Districts are both exceptional.
Really, if you've never been here, you may have a wrong idea about the beauty of the area as well. We're not in the flat lands of the delta. Paragould, and Jonesboro sit on Crowley's Ridge, which is a bunch of gentle rolling hills with lots of trees. We're not too far from the action with Memphis being only 65 miles from Jonesboro. I love it here.
#12
Posted 02 August 2005 - 04:50 AM
johnnydr87, on Aug 2 2005, 12:37 AM, said:
The bird is legendary. It's the Pheonix of North America. It embodies the passion, curiosity, and bravery of the American frontier.
Imagine a large, stunning bird that's the size of an eagle. It has a red head and a 20 inch wingspan. It has a huge, beish beak. It's able to rip bark completely of the sides of trees by grappling the trunk, maneuvering its huge beak, and utilizing its strong neck muscles. Despite its size, it's able to disappear almost effortlessly in and out of the huge cypress forests of the White River National Refuge, where it's common to find trees over five feet in diameter.
An early naturalist, who was documenting North American birds, came upon a few when traveling through the southern forests of this new country. He shot one so that he could record and diagram it. The large bird was still alive, injured, and defiantly bellowed its booming "kent" calls through the bag all the way to the explorer's bed and breakfast. He tried to feed the woodpecker, but the bird remained defiant. It could either be described as pride, or stubbornness. When he left the bird for a short period of time in the room, it tore a hole through the wooden walls and plaster in its attempt to escape. The bird was caught in the act just in time, but died due to starvation.
The bird once ranged all over the south. Arkansas was part of its northern extent. In the 1930s, the last known remaining population was documented in the Singer Tract in northern Lousiana. The reason to its decline is that the majority of its old growth forest habitat had been logged. Because the woodpecker is so large, it needs large trees to survive. The Singer Tract was one of the few remaining places with old growth forest. A lot of commotion was made to resist loggers, but in the end, loggers won out. In the 1940s, when only a handful of trees still stood in the largely clearcut landscape, an ornithologist came down from Cornell to document whatever he could of the remaining Ivory Billed population. In the tract, he found a lone Ivory Billed Woodpecker female, her home in one of the few remaining trees. He documented her unreturned calls, and the death of one of the most stunning species to grace this planet in its billions of years of history.
After the extinction of this creature, it was no longer a symbol of America's pride and pioneering spirit, but our brash, prodigal ways. It helped spurn the environmentalist movement, and forever symbolized the death of the truly wild American South. Over the next 60 years, there were purported sightings reported predominantly in the Delta states. Most of them were quickly disproven as the woodpeckers more common relative, the pileated. It looks almost exactly the same, except it is less than half the size. In science, everything needs to be supported beyond a reasonable doubt to be accepted, so when UALR professor David Luneau caught the bird on video by freak chance, it was a moment of jubilation.
After 60 years, the bird was discovered in the Cache River in Arkansas. What better place to discover a natural legend than in the "Natural State"? The hunters who helped protect the land for the migrating mallards deserve a lot of credit, along with the other naturalists. This time around, America's sense of environmental protection has matured, and millions in private donations have been given towards the acquisition of lands to restore even more wilderness. The image of the Ivory Billed has changed a third time. It's a story that's uniquely American, a rebirth and a new chance at hope. But not only that, it's a story that uniquely Arkansan, a testament to the successful efforts of hunters and naturalists alike to preserve what natural features are left in this beautiful state.
Hunters and naturalists 50 years ago couldn't have imagined this when they were fighting logging interests to preserve what little was left of the wetlands of the South. They couldn't have imagined that they were going to protect the last remaining sanctuary of an American legend. They were merely balancing their own personal interests with the welfare of the environment. And they were rewarded.
That was really long..................
#13
Posted 19 August 2005 - 10:07 PM
#14
Posted 20 August 2005 - 05:14 AM
arkansas_buff, on Aug 19 2005, 11:07 PM, said:
#15
Posted 07 October 2005 - 09:41 PM
1)New York and Company along Highland Drive & Stadium Blvd.
2)Victoria's Secret along Highland Drive
3)Chico's in Turtle Creek Mall
4)Gordon's Jewlers in Turtle Creek Mall
I'm really not familiar with Jonesboro, but isn't this where the Turtle Creek Mall is going in.
Good for Jonesboro!!! You guys really need a good mall out there
#16
Posted 07 October 2005 - 10:03 PM
#17
Posted 07 October 2005 - 10:13 PM
#18
Posted 07 October 2005 - 10:18 PM
#19
Posted 07 October 2005 - 10:21 PM
Rural King, on Oct 7 2005, 11:18 PM, said:
It's not the turtle Creek mall I'm talking about. I already know that they are putting in a Dillards and target. But I thought I heard about an 800,000 square foot mall being developed by belz.
#20
Posted 07 October 2005 - 10:25 PM
50 STORES ANNOUNCED FOR THE MALL INCLUDE:
Aeropostale,
American Eagle,
Ann Taylor Loft,
Auntie Ann’s,
Bath & Body Works,
Bath Junkie,
Buckle,
Chao Prya,
Charlotte Russe,
Chico ’s,
Chili’s,
Christopher & Bank,
Chuck E. Cheese’s,
Cinnabon,
Claire’s,
Coldwater Creek,
Dress Barn,
Finish Line,
Francesca’s,
GNC,
Gap/Gap Kids/Gap Baby,
Gloria Jean’s,
Gordon,
Great American Cookies,
Hallmark,
Hibbet Sports,
Hollister,
Hot Topic,
Jos. A. Bank,
Journeys,
Kay Jewelers,
Lids,
Limited Too,
MasterCuts,
Maurice’s,
Merle Norman,
Mrs. Field’s Cookies,
Nail & Spa Salon,
New York & Company,
Pacific Sun,
Regis Salons,
Sbarro,
Shoe Dept,
Shorty Small’s,
Spencers,
Sportsman’s Trail,
Steak Escape/Baskin-Robbin’s,
Subway,
Sunglass Hut,
Trade Secrets,
Vanity,
Victoria’s Secret and
Zales.
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