Small Promenade Shops Fenced in By Landlord By Josh Grossberg Even on a warm summer day when the Third Street Promenade is so busy
its adjoining parking structures are filled to the brim with cars, a few It's easy to see why: Plywood boards were erected a few days ago around a small cluster of tiny shops along a corridor on the Promenade between Arizona Avenue and Wilshire Boulevard that make them virtually invisible to pedestrians walking by. Why? Unlike the new Banana Republic being erected a few doors down, there
is no construction underway. Indeed, the businesses, which include a cigar
shop, a shoe store, a book store and a bikini shop, have been in The owners of these small independent stores can see only one reason why the boards went up, bringing business to a halt: They are being punished by the property owner for fighting what they say is an unfair eviction. "The only purpose of the boards is to prevent us from doing business," Trouble began, several of the business owners agree, about a year ago So Hazan, as well as the owners of the Santa Monica Promenade Cigar Shop and My Way Shoes spent thousands of dollars on inventory that they planned to sell when the weather turned warm. But in April, the owners surprised the tenants by telling them they had to be out by Aug. 15. "We bought more merchandise and spent $20,000 to decorate," said Abraham Menejian, whose son runs the cigar and shoe stores. "And now they are punishing us. Who's going to spend that kind of money if they have to leave? I'm not a kid." Calls to the CIM Group Thursday were not returned. The store's leases are month to month and they have nothing in writing
to And that's when the boards went up. In addition, a back door of the Hazan said he would have moved to a new location if the owners had only told him at the beginning of the year. "He told me in April," he said. "It was too late. In the
winter I built With a Barnes & Noble bookstore, a Pottery Barn and a Restoration "It's turning into another mall," he said. "We are the
last of the indis A consultant for the Bayside District, which oversees the Promenade, "It's a matter of working with the property owners and tenants,"
said Rob "Some buildings have capital requirements that a small tenant cannot That's fine, Hazan said. But what about all the money he's losing now? "This isn't the wild west," Hazan said. "It's not fair to do this." Anyway, he said, it's too late for him to do anything but to stay put "If you are crossing a river and are two thirds across and are too
tired to |
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