A remodel from the garden up
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Alicia Robinson
People passing the corner of Newport Boulevard and Victoria Street
might do a double-take when they see the sign noting the “remodeling”
of Armstrong Garden Center.
Right now, there’s not much of a building there.
“It’s a total remodel from the ground up,” Armstrong public
relations director Chris Greenwood said.
The original building was bulldozed in October. It was one of a
dozen or so stores Armstrong took over about six years ago from the
bankrupt Nursery Land Co., Greenwood said. Before that, it was
another garden business and, even earlier, a motel, he said.
“It was in real poor condition,” Greenwood said of the old
structure. “Not only that, it was ugly, really ugly. It just needed
to be brought up to speed.”
It also didn’t serve shoppers well, said Armstrong employee Rick
Pion, who worked occasionally at the Costa Mesa store and will return
as its assistant manager when it reopens.
“It had been there for a lot of years,” Pion said. “There were
occasions when we joked, ‘Don’t lean against anything.’”
Workers are now getting started on the new building, which is
slated to open in March. Greenwood said the concrete slab for the
building was poured last week, and once that’s done, weather isn’t
likely to delay construction.
The new facility will include a 6,000-square-foot, barn-like
building and 40,000 feet of outside space. The additional room will
allow Armstrong to offer more perennials, bedding plants and roses
outdoors and to expand its selection of gardening supplies and gifts
inside, Greenwood said.
The “elegant country motif” will provide a nicer ambience in the
store, which will be similar to Armstrong’s Newport Beach location,
Greenwood said. He expects customers to respond enthusiastically.
“It’s been consistent whenever we remodel a store,” he said.
“People are just really excited about the new look.”
Pion and other employees from the Costa Mesa garden center are now
working some of the company’s other locations but will return in the
spring, when the new building is ready.
“One of the things about Armstrong that’s great is they made sure
everybody had a home until the new store opened,” Pion said.
One customer eagerly awaiting the store’s reopening is Costa Mesa
Mayor Gary Monahan, who lives a few blocks from the store. He would
have bought a Christmas tree there if it hadn’t been closed, he said.
“Its always good to update and modernize,” Monahan said. “I think
it’s going to be a large benefit to the community.”
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