NVR Logo
A magnificent emporium from Copia's ashes
Friday, January 02, 2009
Save and Share Share
The entire corridor from Napa River Terrace Street, going along McKinstry to First Street, and then running west and east between Soscol and Silverado Trail, ceased to be an area designed for the vast majority of Napa County residents the day construction began on the redevelopment of the Napa River Oxbow shoreline and properties.

With the opening of the Napa River Terrace Inn, Oxbow Public Market, and most recently the Westin Verasa hotel and apartments, this eastern subdivision is becoming the Boardwalk and Park Place of Napa. It should be named “The Copia Oxbow Riverwalk & Drive of Napa Valley.” None of the aforementioned facilities, including the defunct Copia complex, could have been constructed north of Napa because of the land-use constraints of the Agricultural Preserve codes and regulations. These restrictions drove these enterprises to the Oxbow District.
Clearly, all the existing commercial properties described here, and what could be envisioned to be coming in the near future, will mark this highly valuable property as equal to Rodeo Drive of Beverly Hills, South of Market in San Francisco, downtown Walnut Creek’s redevelopment district and the Santana Row complex of downtown San Jose.

The Napa River Oxbow area already represents large tourist room tax, employment salary tax, sales and property tax revenues to the city. As such, you will not see the property under-utilized economically for such noble social benefits — but unprofitable ventures — as teen clubs, skating rinks, farmers markets, jails, homeless shelters and similar projects that could never produce the revenues that such valuable property does and will represent in the near future under development by commercial, for-profit ventures.
Any realistic market assessment plan for this Boardwalk and Park Place property must not only analyze the product that developer and merchant interests plan to offer, but it must also consider the consumer who is most likely to visit the area. Copia leaders offered the concept of their products of wine, food and art, and then searched for a consumer market that they thought was just sitting around waiting for them. Their assessment was wrong!

Realistically, the visitor to a tourism area such as Napa has five goals in mind: wine, food, shopping, entertainment and lodging. Developers and merchants should plan to cater to those who stay at the expensive existing lodging facilities both adjacent to and located just short distances away from the Copia complex, as well as future luxury facilities planned for and developed in the Napa River Oxbow area. Thus, any concepts for the property must consider the marketable consumer already being attracted to the area because of the lodging facilities, the excursion train and the public marketplace, and package those with fresh marketing concepts that could attract additional consumers to the area.
They should plan stores, shops and entertainment products attractive not only to the business visitor and tourist but also to the more affluent residents, part-time residents and absentee property/business owners associated with Napa County. These same facilities will also occasionally attract the other residents of Napa County looking for unique jewelry, clothes or gifts for a lover or mate, a night out of celebration and other special events in their lives.

Specifically, the defunct Copia complex, rising in the middle of the Napa River Oxbow Redevelopment Area, could be transformed into a magnificent emporium offering business travelers, tourists and more affluent locals the upscale facilities they routinely desire, while also offering the remaining locals shopping, dining and entertainment facilities they would no longer have to travel out of town to find in order to satisfy their special occasion needs. As envisioned, Copia would contain art studios, jewelry studios, brand-name men’s and women’s clothing shops, coffee shops, wine tasting rooms, specialty delis, small upscale restaurants and other, similar merchant offerings.

They should plan facilities to attract the guests from the Meritage Resort, Napa River Inn, the Riverfront complex, Silverado Resort, Auberge Du Soleil, Meadowood Resort, Calistoga Ranch, Solage and other similar upscale facilities catering to those desiring the wine country lifestyle. These are the consumers who also travel to Auction Napa Valley, the Mustard Festival, Robert Mondavi Winery concerts, harvest parties, golf courses and the many membership club events held at more than 200 wineries within Napa County. They fly in, take a limo in or drive themselves in for the amenities that Napa now offers and will expand in the future.

(Olney lives in Napa.)
10 comment(s)

Ruff Limblog wrote on Jan 2, 2009 6:25 AM:

" Until an 'angel' investor buys the Copia and repurposes it, which might take awhile because of Bush's economic flameout... Napa Valley College should take over operating the property.

They could provide students under their different programs with 'actual job experience' which could support the activities mentioned above.

~Ruff "

Old Time Napkin wrote on Jan 2, 2009 7:03 AM:

" Here's a novel idea for Copia. Sell it to the Indians and they can use it for a huge casino. It will bring in lots of tourists, big name entertainment acts, create numerous jobs and it's only walking distance to all the new hotels.
It has plenty of parking for the tour buses, already has the set up to serve food and and has the stages for the entertainment. It was probably Indian land in the beginning , so lets give it back to them. I'll bet it will turn a profit, pay off the debt and put locals to work! "

common sense wrote on Jan 2, 2009 7:32 AM:

" More music venues...it benefits both tourists, who want to hear the music of the natives, and the local folks, who want more places for them and their kids to perform. "

jwk wrote on Jan 2, 2009 8:34 AM:

" Wishful thinking, Many of us Local Old Timers would like our town back instead. "

MarshaMarsha wrote on Jan 2, 2009 8:39 AM:

" I've had to make a few trips to Sonoma this past year, through the Spring, Summer, Autumn, and Winter, and I noticed that every time I arrived at the Sonoma Square there were a lot of people. These folks were doing what tourists are expected to do: Walking, shopping, eating, and wine tasting. Some were even having picnics in the Square. Sonoma is smaller than Napa, and not as easy to find. I kept asking myself: Why don't I see this in Napa?

My answer? Sonoma is a much better representation of what a tourist expects to see in "Old Wine Country".

Where do all the main roads going to Sonoma take you? Right to an idylic, romantic, ancient Town Square. As you arrive in Sonoma the town is PRESENTED to you. You don't have to really search for much, it's all right there. The Oxbow district in Napa is new, cold, and presents a feeling to any tourist that something is tugging at their wallet. And you have to look for it. Most of the main roads in Napa were designed to direct traffic, a first-time tourist finds that they are soon heading out to Carneros or Upvalley. The Oxbow District might as well be on another planet. "

misfit wrote on Jan 2, 2009 10:30 AM:

" I am so sick of hearing the term, "Local Old Timers" it isn't anything funny. You don't own this town just because you have lived here for all your life. You already get a free pass with your very reduced property tax bill. You never cared enough to deal with the blight that is pervasive through this town but, you complain about new development, regardless of the purpose for it. Have you ever heard the expression, "Change or die"? Figure it out. You don't get to allow this one horse town to stay that way just so you can live in the past and cry over the good ole' days. Grow up! "

misfit wrote on Jan 2, 2009 10:34 AM:

" I have always felt that the attraction should be along the Hwy.29 corrider, just south of the Imola exit. The tourists wouldn't have to look for anything similar to St.Helena and Yountville. Instead, they have to navigate a maze of roadway just to find downtown. "

winewoman wrote on Jan 2, 2009 11:31 AM:

" Mr. Olney, Great letter. You obviously put alot of thought and consideration into the issue. Wine and tourism is Napa's industry - infusing $11 BILLION into the local economy each year. That can't be ignored - and, as a result, the town will never go back to the way it used to be. I agree with Marsha in that Sonoma Square manages to attract both tourists and locals consistently. I often go to Sonoma Square in favor of the rolled-up-sidewalks of downtown Napa. Youre letter provides a "vision" for the future of the area - I wish that we would hear from our planners/leaders as to what their "vision" is for Napa. With some of the recent decisions made by planners recently, one begins to wonder if there is a long term plan - since it seems many decisions are made willy nilly. "

Raven wrote on Jan 2, 2009 5:42 PM:

" casino idea sounds pretty good to me.... "

epicuria wrote on Jan 4, 2009 11:00 PM:

" The more I think about downtown Napa the more it appears that there is nothing that can be done. The ingredients just aren't there, as they are in Sonoma, Healdsburg, Yountville, St. Helena. Napa is too big without the proper land and building configuration to offer the tourist what s/he wants. The current economic tsunami, aside (if that's possible), Napa will just limp along. The Joe six pack residents will continue to grouse and the more affluent households will gather in their homes and places like Silverado. The Oxbow stores will close for lack of pedestrian traffic and the rest of downtown will continue to be unappealing. "

Comment Guidelines
The goal of the story comments section at NapaValleyRegister.com is to have an open, thought-provoking, civil community forum for all issues.
What gets your comment posted?
• Staying on topic
• Keeping your comment to 300 words or less
• Avoiding name-calling
• Addressing your comments to the message rather than the messenger
What gets your comment deleted?
• Personal attacks
• Derogatory remarks
• Name-calling of any sort
• Going off-topic
• Hate speech
• Racially-insensitive comments
• Implying guilt of a subject in a crime story before there is a court verdict
• Posting e-mail addresses
• Posting comments of a commercial nature
• POSTING WITH ALL CAPITAL LETTERS
• Linking multiple comments together with "to be continued..." to get around the 300 word limit.
The fine print
- Comments are either approved or denied. We do not edit comments.
- You are welcome to modify and resubmit a denied comment.
- Comments may take several hours to be posted.
- Comments posted are those of the writer, and do not necessarily reflect the opinion of NapaValleyRegister.com, its employees or its parent company.
- Do you have information on a story? Please go to our virtual newsroom to send us a news tip.
- If you feel a posted comment has violated our guidelines, please contact online@napanews.com or add a comment indicating you have an issue and our moderators will review the comment in question.
Search:
Web Search Powered
By Yahoo! Search
Napa Valley Register on Facebook
Copyright © 2009 Napa Valley Publishing, a member of Lee Enterprises, Inc.
Terms of Use | Privacy Policy