Chandler marketplace becomes Asian hub
Arizona Republic
Mar. 31, 2006
Luci Scott
Chandler's "Little Asia" just got a little more Asian.
More retail space has been built on the northeastern corner of Dobson and Warner
roads, and the spaces will soon be occupied, part of a continuing transformation
of the intersection.
"About 90 percent of the leases are owned by people of Asian descent;
Vietnamese, Chinese, Korean," said John Reva, a retail specialist with
Scottsdale brokerage RBI.The project, developed by Scottsdale-based Global
Retail Development Group, will house a Chinese buffet, Vietnamese food to go, a
tea shop, a women's accessories store, an insurance office, a store selling
blinds, a hair salon, a gelato store, the loan company Check & Go, and a hair
store selling wigs and hair extensions.
Reva said 4,392 square feet is still available.
The new businesses were lured to that spot mainly because of the anchor, Lee Lee
Oriental Supermarket, he said.
"About 2,000 to 3,000 people a day are visiting that place," Reva said.
"Obviously, it gives (the new tenants) a great chance to expose themselves to
people of their cultural background."
Lee Lee is one of the largest grossing Asian grocers outside of California, he
said.
The supermarket, owned by Cambodian immigrant Meng Truong, has been credited as
the magnet that drew the other businesses to this Chandler corner.
Near the food market is an acupuncture and Chinese herb business owned by a
Korean couple who left Virginia to force their children to learn English.
"In Virginia, there are so many Koreans," said Dr. Kyesub Lee. "My kids had no
chance to learn English. We wanted to be someplace with less Koreans."
Other businesses in the shopping center are a dentist, Dr. Loa Dao, and a space
that will soon house classes in martial arts, Chinese classical dance, Chinese
painting and Chinese phonic education.
The Rosewood Furniture Outlet, owned by Hong Kong transplant Tina Jian, sells
not only vases, items of jade and tables inlaid with mother-of-pearl, but also
statues of Buddhas, elephants and dragons. The place rents Chinese videos and
DVDs with English subtitles for 50 cents.
"When we started, this shopping center was very slow, but now I think it's the
Number 1 busiest," said the furniture store's manager, Morgan Zhang.
The Asian businesses are not limited to the northeastern corner. Directly across
Warner is the Vietnamese-owned Lee's Sandwiches, and on the southwestern corner
is a Chinese restaurant popular for its dim sum, C-Fu Gourmet.
The businesses lure more than just Asians, and perhaps the corner is better
called a little United Nations.
Recent shoppers at Lee Lee, who were stocking up on spices to cook Indian,
Chinese and Thai food, were northeast Scottsdale residents Kevin Pugsley, who is
British, and his wife, Inga, who is German.
One of the few Anglo business owners left is pet groomer Janet Corlis of Dogs
Day Out. She has watched the transformation of the corner.
"The furniture store was a vet, the nail supply place was a dry cleaner and the
dentist was pizza," she said.
|