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Uploaded: Monday, January 21, 2013, 8:41 AM Updated: Tuesday, January 22, 2013, 8:43 AM
Plans for new restaurant on Mudd's San Ramon property fall through
Successor Agency will officially end contract, begin sale of land
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by Jessica Lipsky
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 | Plans for a new restaurant on the former site of Mudd's restaurant have officially fallen through, after an Oakland-based restaurateur failed to comply with a development agreement.
After the dissolution of state redevelopment agencies (RDA) in February 2012, San Ramon's Successor Agency entered into an agreement with Pican founder Michael LeBlanc to demolish Mudd's and develop a similarly sustainable restaurant on the its footprint. In a disposition and development agreement (DDA), LeBlanc would raise $4.5 million to build his new restaurant and event center and fund its operation while the city would contribute nearly a half million dollars to tear down the original building.
However, LeBlanc was unable to meet the deadline to submit plans on how he would fund the project and asked for a 90-day extension on Feb. 28, 2012. The city's Successor Agency Oversight Board considered the extension nine months later and gave LeBlanc 30 days to submit "satisfactory evidence of financing" or the DDA would be dissolved.
"We did not receive anything from Mr. LeBlanc," Economic Development Director Marc Fontes said of the Jan. 15 deadline. "Because of this somewhat cumbersome process as it relates to redevelopment agency dissolution, we have to go to the Successor Agency first, then effect approval from the Oversight Board to terminate the agreement."
At its Jan. 22 meeting, the Successor Agency will request approval to dissolve LeBlanc's DDA as well as permission to sell the 2.2 acre property adjacent to the city's Crow Canyon Gardens Park. The Successor Agency would advertise the property with a price tag of at least $2 million, Fontes said.
Following oversight approval, the Mudd's property will become open to a variety of offers, including that of Growing Room President James Larson. The after school day care company submitted a proposal to turn the property into a nature and day care center in May 2012.
Mudd's opened in 1981 as a 9-acre combination conservation center, garden and restaurant at 10 Boardwalk Place. San Ramon's RDA bought Mudd's at a county foreclosure sale in 2008 and has since worked to dissolve the asset through its Successor Agency.Are you receiving Express, our free daily e-mail edition? See a sample and sign-up for Express.
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