In this deal, Eurocommerce used an old school in the city of
Zwolle and some building terrain in Almere as collateral for a huge €7.5
million loan from the municipality of Almere. With this loan, Eurocommerce
bought terrain near the Central Station of Almere and developed two giant
skyscrapers on it.
This skyscraper project was finished when the credit crisis
and the earlier started Commercial Real Estate crisis were almost at their
peaks, making it nearly impossible to sell or rent so much office space. When
Eurocommerce eventually defaulted in July 2012, Almere got stuck with a bill of
€3.3 million in Eurocommerce debt that would not be paid back.
In the aforementioned
article, I wrote the following snippets:
I didn’t and still
don’t understand why the Almere municipality approved of these two landmark
buildings. Was it because the mayor and her aldermen wanted ‘a visible monument
for their achievements’?! Did their combined vanity need CRE of ‘epic proportions’?!
Who knows, but knowing the mayor of Almere, Annemarie Jorritsma, I wouldn’t be
surprised.
Unfortunately, I’m
certain that the mayor of Almere and the aldermen responsible for this presumed
blunder, will walk without any consequences. As they mostly do… The poor
citizens of Almere are the ones that must foot the bill for this exuberance.
The same municipality did its destructive work in Almere
Buiten, a suburb of Almere and the place where I live. About four years ago, the municipality started
a building frenzy in the midst of the credit and CRE crisis, in order to ‘refurbish’
( or perhaps ruin) the center of this suburb: a classic shopping mall, combined
with a mid-sized furniture and Do-It-Yourself plaza. The numerous new and
megalomanic buildings had to be financed through the introduction of paid
parking, with a considerable tariff of €2 per hour in Almere-Buiten.
What a lot of people and especially the shopowners already feared
in advance, happened indeed: the slightly outdated, but cosy and usually crowded shopping mall and the furniture & DIY-plaza were turned into desolate and windy
centers with too many high-rise buildings and too little heart. The introduced parking
fees and the credit crisis did the rest of the destructive work.
Both the shopping mall and furniture plaza were almost overnight abandoned by the lovers of fun-shopping, in favour of the center of Almere and
other cities. This left many shopowners in desperation. The people didn’t want to
pay €5 in parking fees for a few hours of shopping in Almere Buiten, when Almere
Center and other cities offered more shops and better entertainment, against equal
parking fees.
At this moment, the refurbishing process is still not finished, but there is already considerable vacancy at the shopping space and many other shops are at the
end of their financial stamina.
The following snippets come from an article in the
local newspaper ‘Almere Vandaag’ of 28 December 2012:
Paid parking in Almere
Buiten leads to heated discussions within the Almere community. In 2012, the
shopowners of Buiten saw their annual sales decline by no less than 25%.
“We are in a state of shock”,
according to Rob van der Tweet of shopowners community BuitenMere, while looking
back at 2012. “Various shopowners are really drowning now”, adds franchiser-owner Maarten Vroom
of the Hema store in Buiten.
“A considerable number of shopowners already had to close
their doors for good and many others are currently at the brink of closing
their shop”.
Today, Henk Thomas, an inhabitant of Almere Buiten, sent an
op-ed letter to the local newspaper ‘Almere Vandaag’. As this letter says it
all, I print it integrally:
Paid Parking in Almere
Buiten
The discussion upon
paid parking in Almere Buiten is in full swing, currently. The municipality of
Almere suggested to mount barriers in Almere Buiten, but in the nearby cities of Bussum and Hilversum, this has already proven a
blatant waste of money.
When Doemere [the
furniture and DIY-plaza – EL] was deployed about 15 years ago, the
municipality confirmed that there would not be paid parking in the future. But
hey, what is a promise worth these days?!
When you walk through
Doemere, you see the pauperization and deterioration in the properties. Advancing
the display windows - suggested by representatives of the municipality - doesn’t help in my opinion. There will only be even more
burglaries than today.
When will the community wake up?! When you do some
shopping at Albert Heijn or other shops for a few hours, you pay €5 for this: community policy! If nothing changes, Doemere pauperizes and will be gone in two years.
I have nothing to add, but a few pictures, to this disturbing
outcry, as a testimony of municipal greed and blatant stupidity in Almere. This greed and stupidity ruined both the appearance and livelihood of my beloved city-area, and the future and wellbeing of many independent shopowners, who see their business vaporize. A business, which took them so much energy to build up.
Vacancy and desolation in a small shopping mall Picture copyright of Ernst's Economy for You Click to enlarge |
Vacancy and desolation in a small shopping mall Picture copyright of Ernst's Economy for You Click to enlarge |
Vacancy and desolation in a small shopping mall Picture copyright of Ernst's Economy for You Click to enlarge |
Vacancy and desolation in a small shopping mall Picture copyright of Ernst's Economy for You Click to enlarge |
Vacancy and desolation in a small shopping mall Picture copyright of Ernst's Economy for You Click to enlarge |
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