Japanese restaurant to open at Electric Depot in early 2019

This article was originally published by Baton Rouge Business Report


BŌRU, an authentic Japanese restaurant, is the latest tenant to announce it will join the Mid City mixed-use development Electric Depot in early 2019.

The restaurant concept—being developed by the Ichiban Group, including owners Patrick and Ronnie Wong—will offer a variety of Japanese-inspired bowls, including house-made ramen and poké dishes.

“I wanted to take things to the next level and be as authentic as possible,” says Patrick Wong in a prepared statement. “Electric Depot is a great up-and-coming space in Baton Rouge, and I love the Mid City community.”

Patrick Wong recently trained in Japan under esteemed chefs Makado Tada, of Tsuruichiya fame, and Takeshi Koitani, who owns the Jiraigen Syndicate. He’s also trained under Chef Keizo Shimamoto of Ramen Shack in New York, who is considered one of the top ramen chefs in the U.S.

While the Wongs will offer many of the same dishes available at their sushi and hibachi restaurant Ichiban, BŌRU will have more dishes in a more affordable, bowl form. BŌRU means “bowl” in Japanese.

The Japanese restaurant joins City Roots, a new coffee concept by Community Coffee board chairman Matt Saurage, in occupying a building next to Red Stick Social, a boutique entertainment venue that is eyeing a February grand opening.

About 5,000 square feet of retail space remains available for tenants at Electric Depot, the redeveloped former Entergy site at 1509 Government Street.

Red Stick Social taking shape, soon opening doors to public

This article was originally published by WBRZ


BATON ROUGE - Crews are in the last stages of construction work at a new community venue: finishing up the final touches, setting up bars, and bringing in furniture at Red Stick Social.

Tucked in between downtown and mid-city, the Electric Depot could be a catalyst for future development in the area.

"This is a good step towards revitalizing that part of Baton Rouge," Tommy Sissol told WBRZ. "It's a depressed area, and that building there has been vacant for quite a few years."

But not anymore. Nighttime crowds are about to walk into a social wonderland. It's occupied with six and four-lane bowling allies, and it includes a bowling bar made from old bowling lanes.

The new chef, Geroge Sittig, says it will bring in big competition.

"It's definitely going to find its place here and be a force to reckoned with," said Sittig.

In an interview back in November, Megan Rook with Red Stick Social says gaining traffic is important.

"Hopefully we are going to be a really big draw for the young business crowd, from downtown, as well as the families and residential," said Rook.

Red Stick Social expects to open its doors by the end of March.

Ichiban owners to open ramen, poke restaurant in Mid City's Electric Depot development

This article was originally published by The Advocate


The owners of Ichiban, a popular sushi restaurant, are opening a new ramen and poke eatery in the Electric Depot development in Mid City.

Boru, the Japanese word for “bowl," will open in early 2019. It will feature a variety of dishes centered around bowls, featuring ramen noodles made in-house.

Patrick Wong, one of the co-owners of Ichiban, recently spent three weeks in Japan, training with some of the top ramen chefs in the country in an effort to make dishes as authentic as possible.

While poke restaurants have been popping up around Baton Rouge over the past year or two, Wong said Boru’s offerings will be noteworthy, featuring the same flavors people have come to know from Ichiban.

The Electric Depot is currently under construction at 1509 Government St. at the old Entergy site. Red Stick Social, a community gathering space with a bowling alley, live music venue, restaurant and bar, will be the centerpiece of the development. It’s set to open on Feb. 1.

Boru will be in the same building as City Roots, a coffee shop with ties to Community Coffee Chairman Matt Saurage. Sixteen apartments, set to open by the end of the year, will be on top of the businesses. There will be a third building in the first phase of the development; it will include a yoga studio and healthy eating place. 

New, 'conceptual' coffee shop opening at Electric Depot early next year

This article was originally published by WBRZ


BATON ROUGE - A new shop from the owner Community Coffee is promising to offer a unique gathering place for Baton Rouge residents.

According to a news release, City Roots will set up shop at the Electric Depot on Government Street in early 2019. The new business is the brainchild of Matt Saurage, the head of Community Coffee.

The shop is said to offer hand-crafted coffee and new sparkling, iced, and ice-cream based alternatives. The menu will also feature nitro-coffees, draft lattes, teas, pastries and light foods throughout the day.

Additionally, shop will offer free coffee tastings open to the public each week.

More info on plans for the Electric Depot venue can be found here.

Unique Red Stick Social venue taking shape at Baton Rouge's 'coolest building'

This article was originally published by The Advocate


Red Stick Social, a community gathering space that will feature a bowling alley, live music venue, restaurant and bar, is set to open Feb. 1 at the old Entergy site on Government Street.

The managers of the facility gave the press and community leaders a tour of the nearly 30,000-square-foot facility Thursday. Dozens of onlookers walked through the brick building, while workers painted and installed bowling lanes.

“This is the coolest building in Baton Rouge,” said Akheil Shah, an architect and project manager for DNA Workshop. Dyke Nelson, who founded DNA Workshop, is one of the developers of the Electric Depot, which will be anchored by Red Stick Social.

New coffee shop to open at Electric Depot in 2019

This article was originally published by WAFB


BATON ROUGE, LA (WAFB) - City Roots, a new coffee shop and gathering place, will open in the Electric Depot in Mid City in early 2019.

“City Roots exists for the love of coffee and the people who make it. It’s an immersion in the culture and craftsmanship that makes coffee special,” said Matt Saurage, who inspired the idea.

The menu will offer handcrafted coffee classics and new sparkling, iced, and ice cream-based alternatives. There will also be nitro coffees, draft lattes, teas, pastries, and other light food. The 1,500 square foot space will also host training and programming for small groups and coffee enthusiasts. Coffee will be roasted on site and weekly tastings will be free and open to the public.

“The atmosphere reflects the history and beauty of the surrounding community, and Electric Depot is the perfect venue. It’s located in an historic area of Baton Rouge that has a dynamic and storied past,” said Saurage.

The Electric Depot is a new development located at the former Entergy site on Government Street in Mid City. The development will include a mix of retail space and 16 1-bedroom apartments.

“Electric Depot is a vibrant, energetic, family friendly destination, welcome to all ages and lifestyles. The mix of public programming, open spaces, and daily entertainment is going to be a great addition to Mid City,” Saurage also said.

For more information about the Electric Depot, email Dyke Nelson at dyke@dna-workshop.com. And for more about City Roots, email Dominick Blanda at cityrootscoffee@gmail.com.

Copyright 2018 WAFB. All rights reserved.

Construction set to begin on Electric Depot on Government Street

This article was originally published by WAFB


BATON ROUGE, LA (WAFB) - Construction for the $20 million redevelopment project of the former Entergy site on Government Street in MidCity will start this week, according to the Baton Rouge Business Report.

The project is called Electric Depot and work on the first phase is expected to be completed by December 2018. The first phase will feature four buildings and a three-story entertainment center. The entertainment center will include a bowling alley, restaurant, bar and private event space.

Other tenants are expected including a fitness center, brewpub, photography studio, and coffee shop.One of the buildings in phase one will feature 16 one-bedroom apartments, a portion of which will be income restricted, called "workforce housing. Developers say phase two of the project will feature more residential units, including affordable housing.

Plans for the Electric Depot began in 2013 when Entergy donated the site to the East Baton Rouge Redevelopment Authority. The project has been pitched as an example for redevelopment in the capital area because it's is a public-private partnership.

Click here see full story from the Baton Rouge Business Report

Copyright 2017 WAFB. All rights reserved.

ELECTRIC DEPOT DEVELOPMENT NODS TO THE SITE’S PAST WHILE REVITALIZING THIS MID CITY BLOCK FOR THE FUTURE

This article was originally published by 225 Magazine


It seems natural that the plans to revitalize the historic Entergy site on Government Street would come from none other than the design firm sitting in its shadow.

DNA Workshop founder and architect Dyke Nelson and developer David Weinstein gave the public a peek at their plans for the six-acre Electric Depot project in May. They were tapped to develop the project by the East Baton Rouge Redevelopment Authority—which owns the property—last year.

Nelson’s design firm had converted an old warehouse across the railroad tracks from the Entergy site into its hip office space back in 2012, and he says he had his eyes on the nearby derelict power plant buildings long before that.

“Ultimately, it was a part of our decision to move to this location—knowing there was an opportunity there and being familiar with the neighborhood, but also being excited for the infrastructure that already exists,” Nelson says.

The developers are subleasing two smaller buildings on the site to a microbrewery and a healthy living center with a yoga studio. The names of those tenants had not been released as of press time.

The two main buildings, visible from Government Street with their brick facades and tall warehouse windows, will provide the first phase’s biggest draws.

An entertainment center with the working title Red Stick Social will take the larger building, providing multiple levels with attractions such as a concert space, two floors of bowling alleys, a sports bar, restaurant and a rooftop deck and adjoining cocktail bar.

The second large building will have 16 apartments on its second floor, while the ground floor has about 12,000 square feet of retail space up for grabs.

Future phases will expand Electric Depot’s footprint to the edges of Spain and 17th streets with 100-plus more residential units and more retail and office space, according to Nelson. The grounds for the project will be pedestrian only, with parking around the exterior and a promenade called “Power Alley” that will face west toward the railroad tracks—where we might one day see a train station.

The full project includes several investors, many with ties to this Mid City neighborhood, including Garrett Temple, Anthony Kimble, Helena Cunningham, the Shiloh Baptist Foundation, Todd Stevens and Matt Saurage.

Nelson says it was important for neighborhood groups to guide the project and help the team “carefully insert ourselves in the neighborhood” and make a significant improvement while still being respectful.

“It’s been very organic,” he says. “We benefit a lot more from responding to opportunities quickly than necessarily trying to create something that maybe shouldn’t be here and shoehorn something in inappropriately. … By having neighborhood investors, it puts the benefit of the project back in the neighborhood. They are sharing both in the risks but also in the benefits, and hopefully that will provide opportunities for additional investments in the community.”

The first phase is expected to wrap up at the end of 2018.

Building A
The main attraction is an entertainment venue tentatively called Red Stick Social. The building will include a performance space, sports bar and restaurant on the ground floor, with a bowling alley, pizza parlor, cocktail lounge, party rooms and a rooftop deck on the above floors.

Building B
The ground floor hasn’t been leased as of press time, but it includes space for a possible restaurant and multiple shops with 16-foot ceilings and an “industrial feel,” Nelson says. The second floor will feature 16 one-bedroom apartments.

Building C
The tenant in this building will be a “healthy lifestyle” concept with a yoga studio, cycling studio, fitness-focused retail space and a small cafe preparing fresh salads.

Building D
A microbrewery will go into this building, along with a tap room, pizza kitchen and plenty of indoor and outdoor seating with roll-up garage-style door.

Future phases
This will include more apartments, office and retail space, as well as additional parking.

Future train station
The development team is a big supporter of efforts to put a train station next to the site eventually, and Nelson says their design plan aligns strategically with the city’s long-term goal of passenger rail from Baton Rouge to New Orleans. “If it were to happen, we’ve got a very clear connection with the [Power Alley] promenade so we can provide that infrastructure for it now and it can be accommodated very easily.”

This article was originally published in the July 2017 issue of 225 Magazine.

New, mixed-use development called Electric Depot coming to old Entergy site on Gov't St

This article was originally published by WAFB


Weinstein Nelson has announced plans for a new, mixed-use development, Electric Depot, which will be located at the old Entergy site on Government St. in Mid-City.

The six-acre site, located at 1509 Government St., will include retail, office, and residential space, with 50,000 square feet of retail and office space and 16 one bedroom apartments. There will also be 200 parking spots and additional features such as renovated sidewalks, a bus pull out for a bus stop, and a central lawn for public events.

The first tenant, a local boutique entertainment center, has been secured and will occupy Building A. It's set to open in fall of 2018. The unique social space will feature bowling, live music, a full service restaurant and bar, space for private events, meeting, and parties, and will incorporate technological conveniences widely used in today's society. 

High-speed wifi and multiple state-of-the-art audio/video systems will allow customers to reserve lanes, schedule private events, and purchase tickets to live performances. Customers will also have the ability to order food and drinks directly from their phone or laptop while on the property.

"Our goal is to provide the Baton Rouge community and guests visiting our city a socially engaging environment where everyone from all walks of life can enjoy themselves and socialize in a comfortable and collaborative setting. It will be an engaging experience unlike anything else in our area. We could not have asked for a better space for this innovative concept," said a tenant, Robert Lay.

"We're really excited about the opportunity to utilize this historic site to create something revolutionary for Baton Rouge. I'd like to thank the East Baton Rouge Redevelopment Authority for leasing the property to us for this catalyst project. Special thanks also to our development team, which includes Garrett Temple, Anthony Kimble, Helena Cunningham, Todd Stevens, and Matt Suarage along with Jennifer Jones and Dennis Blunt with Shiloh Baptist Foundation," said architect, Dyke Nelson.

There is currently 12,000 square feet of retail and office space available. For more information on leasing, contact Geordy Waters or Robert Pettit at Waters & Pettit Commercial Real Estate. 

Copyright 2017 WAFB. All rights reserved.

New development coming to former Electric Depot site on Government St.

This article was originally published by WBRZ


BATON ROUGE – The former Electric Depot site on Government Street will soon be transformed into a six-acre development that will include new restaurants, places to live and even a bowling alley.

Developer of the project,  Dyke Nelson, said that the tenants coming to the location are very "compatible" with one another.

He said that the idea came from a "need for a different type of experience in Baton Rouge" that will attempt to connect downtown to mid-city. 

Construction for the project is expected to start in about three months and to be completed by the end of 2018. 

Boutique entertainment venue, healthy living center and microbrewery planned for old Entergy site

This article was originally published by Baton Rouge Business Report


A new boutique entertainment center with a bowling alley, live music, restaurant, bar and private event space will open in the fall of 2018 in the Electric Depot, a mixed-used development planned for the old Entergy site at 1509 Government St.

Other buildings at the site will house a healthy living center with yoga, cycling and healthy foods, as well as a microbrewery and pizza parlor; another building will provide a mix of residential, office and retail space.

Development team Weinstein Nelson announced the new entertainment tenant—currently going by the working title of Red Stick Social, though that’s subject to change as the brand is developed and refined—earlier today.

“We’re really excited about the opportunity to utilize this historic site to create something revolutionary for Baton Rouge,” says architect Dyke Nelson, who is leading the development team.

The entertainment center will be developed in building A on the roughly six-acre site on which the Electric Depot sits. Robert Lay, who is working with a team to make the venue a reality in Baton Rouge, says the facility will offer WiFi and state-of-the-art audio/video systems.

A customer-centric digital presence will enable customers to reserve lanes, schedule private events, and purchase tickets to live performances. Customers will have the ability to order food and beverages onsite from their smartphones or WiFi-enabled devices.

“Our goal is to provide the Baton Rouge community and guests visiting our city a socially engaging environment where everyone from all walks of life can enjoy themselves and socialize in a comfortable and collaborative setting,” Lay says. “It will be an engaging experience unlike anything else in our area. We could not have asked for a better space for this innovative concept.”

Lay has been searching for the right location for the entertainment venue for three years, looking at former big box stores and other sites throughout the city. He says he met with Nelson about a year ago, explaining the concept to the architect.

The Electric Depot’s exposed steel and high windows and ceilings—features that present a host of opportunities—are hard to mimic with new construction, Lay says. “It’s a relatively large endeavor. It’s nothing that’s been done before in Baton Rouge,” he says. “The location is critical. The feel of the building is critical.”

Lay says he intends to give Baton Rouge a socially-engaging environment where people can socialize in a comfortable and collaborative setting.

“What we want to create is literally an environment that touches all walks of life,” he says, adding that the venue will will be designed to attract children’s birthday parties and business meetings over coffee alike. And at least three nights a week, the center will transition into an adult space with live music.

Red Stick Social is the first announced tenant in Electric Depot. The development comprises 50,000-square-feet of retail and office space, and 16 one-bedroom apartments that will rent for $950. Three of the units will be rent restricted, going for about $650 to $750 per month.

The development site will be fully landscaped with new sidewalks on Government Street, a bus stop and a central lawn for public events. It will also offer more than 200 parking spaces.

The first phase is set for completion by the end of 2018; a subsequent phase involving additional residential, retail and office still is being finalized. In April, Nelson secured approval from the Planning Commission to rezone the site to accommodate the microbrewery and pizza parlor. About 12,000 square feet of retail and office space is in Building B is currently available. The Weinstein Nelson development team includes Garrett Temple, Anthony Kimble, Helena Cunningham, Todd Stevens and Matt Saurage, along with Jennifer Jones and Dennis Blunt with Shiloh Baptist Foundation. It was selected last summer by the East Baton Rouge Redevelopment Authority to redevelop the site.

View more renderings of the project.

Bowling alley, pizza parlor, microbrewery among cool amenities set for redeveloped Entergy site

This article was originally published by The Advocate


Vacant orange-brick buildings pocked with broken windows on the former Entergy site on Government Street will get new life as an entertainment venue, bowling alley, pizza parlor with microbrewery, healthy living center and 16 apartments.

“There is a high level of excitement for this,” said John Noland, who hopes what has been dubbed the Electric Depot “turns on the lights for that section of Government Street.”

The East Baton Rouge Redevelopment Authority, which Noland chairs, was given the property in 2013 by Entergy. The RDA has been pushing private redevelopment of the site as a catalyst for more activity in a neighborhood that is a heavily traveled transition area between downtown and Mid City.

The redevelopment project is pegged at $20 million. Dyke Nelson of Weinstein Nelson Development unveiled plans for the 6.1-acre property at 1509 Government St. at the RDA board of commissioners meeting Wednesday. The initial development already is 80 percent leased, he said.

Weinstein Nelson has been involved in a number of redevelopment projects across Baton Rouge, including the mixed-use 440 on Third building and the 500 Laurel St. site that are downtown.

The plans unveiled Wednesday are the first phase of the Electric Depot development. Nelson said there are "loose plans" for more than 100 housing units and more retail space. But the reaction of the market to the first phase will determine how much retail and office space will be included in future stages, he said.

The centerpiece will be Red Stick Social, a multi-level entertainment facility that will feature a bowling alley, a stage for live music, a kitchen and bar, and rooftop garden. The venue will be open to the public, and will be available for private parties and corporate events. Red Stick Social will be operated by Robert Lay, Trey Williams and Stephen Hightower. Williams and Hightower are owners of the popular local restaurants City Pork and Southfin Southern Poke.

The second building will have 16 one-bedroom apartments on top of 12,000 square feet of speculative retail space. Three of the apartments will be affordable housing, while the 13 other units will rent for under $1,000 a month, Nelson said.

The third building will be occupied by a yoga and cycling studio, along with a place selling healthy food. Nelson said the tenants for the space will be announced “relatively soon."

“It’s two groups with a great deal of experience in that area,” he said.

Electric Depot development at old Entergy site slated for spring groundbreaking

This article was originally published by Baton Rouge Business Report


Developers hope to begin construction in the next two weeks on their mixed-use development Electric Depot, which will be the new name for the old Entergy site at 1509 Government St. in Mid City.

Architect Dyke Nelson, who is leading the Weinstein Nelson development team that was selected last summer by the East Baton Rouge Redevelopment Authority to redevelop the six-acre property, says his group is nearly ready to begin interior demolition work on the largest of the four red-brick buildings in the complex.

“We have to remove some nasty interior walls and do some other interior demolition before we can begin interior construction,” he says. “But this will officially count as our groundbreaking.”

Weinstein Nelson and its team of consultants, engineers and designers beat out eight other teams last May with its proposal to redevelop the site for the RDA, which has owned the property since receiving it in a 2013 donation from Entergy.

Daily Report has the full story. 

Electric Depot development at old Entergy site slated for spring groundbreaking

This article was originally published by Baton Rouge Business Report


Developers hope to begin construction in the next two weeks on their mixed-use development Electric Depot, which will be the new name for the old Entergy site at 1509 Government St. in Mid City.

Architect Dyke Nelson, who is leading the Weinstein Nelson development team that was selected last summer by the East Baton Rouge Redevelopment Authority to redevelop the six-acre property, says his group is nearly ready to begin interior demolition work on the largest of the four red-brick buildings in the complex.

“We have to remove some nasty interior walls and do some other interior demolition before we can begin interior construction,” he says. “But this will officially count as our groundbreaking.”

Weinstein Nelson and its team of consultants, engineers and designers beat out eight other teams last May with its proposal to redevelop the site for the RDA, which has owned the property since receiving it in a 2013 donation from Entergy.