A night club and music venue. Apartments. Eateries. What’s coming to your neighborhood
The latest proposed developments, other construction projects and new businesses around Idaho’s Treasure Valley:
Meridian
Brian Tsai of Balboa Ventures seeks a conditional use permit to build The Oasis, a music venue and night club on 3.3 acres at 3185 E. Ustick Road.
Tsai told the Statesman that the beach-themed lounge and event center would feature an interactive dance floor and a tropical theme that extends through the menu.
The Meridian Planning and Zoning Commission heard the proposal on May 20 and is recommending approval. The Meridian City Council is scheduled to hear the proposal on July 13.
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Jesse Hurt applied to build a five-story office building at Eagle View Landing.
According to a city filing, the building will have about 28,000 square feet per floor, 150,000 square feet overall and a rooftop patio on the second floor.
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CBH Homes applied to add two buildings to the Baraya Apartments complex at 188 Umbria Hills Way.
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Bradley Smith applied to add 6,049 square feet to the LaSalle Building at Ten Mile Crossing. The addition will include a waiting area, conference room, open offices, closed offices and a break room.
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Saltzer Health opened a surgery center at its Ten Mile Medical Campus.
The Saltzer Surgery Center is open for same-day surgical procedures at 875 S. Vanguard Way, Suite 120.
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RESCH Inc., doing business as Inspire Salon & Day Spa, leased 3,392 square feet of retail space at 2932 N. Eagle Road, Colliers International reports.
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Boise
The Boise City Council unanimously approved an ordinance to rezone a site located at 121 S. Springtree Lane where Meridian Holding QOZB seeks to build 39 apartments.
The site is near the intersection of Franklin Road and Allumbaugh Street in the Borah neighborhood. The ordinance shifted the 1.75-acre site from R-2 (medium density residential, allowing for 14.5 units per acre) to R-3D (multi-family residential with design review, allowing for 43.5 units per acre).
City filings show the planned apartment will be split into three separate buildings with 21 two-bedroom units and 18 one-bedroom units.
The business is registered to Boise resident Marianne Payne.
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The Timbers at Harris Ranch seeks a permit to build a three-story apartment building with 20 units at 3850 E. Warm Springs Ave.
The entire project is proposed to have 274 units.
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Koco Bell restaurant seeks an occupation permit at 13601 W. McMillan Road, Suite 104.
The Korean restaurant has operated from a small stand at Five Mile and Ustick. Owner Jaikoo “Steve” Kang hopes to open in the new location by the end of June.
The suite was previously occupied by Poke Vibes.
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Jump Start Coffee and Cafe seeks an occupation permit at 350 N. Milwaukee St., Suite 2010, in the second-floor food court at the Boise Towne Squaew mall.
Aladdin restaurant previously occupied the space.
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Old Doug’s Plaza seeks a conditional use permit to allow food preparation and sales by food trucks at 1105 S. Federal Way, the northwest corner of Federal Way and Kootenai Street, where a commercial building now stands.
The company also wants to building a two-story dining and observation platform, along with a plant conservatory with vendors and open offices on the second floor.
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Check ’n Go leased 1,000 square feet of retail space at 10654 W. Overland Road, Colliers International reports.
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H&R Block Enterprises LLC leased 1,688 square feet of retail space at 8029 W. Fairview Ave., Colliers International reports.
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Nampa
Endless Archery, which includes a pro shop, service shop and an indoor archery range, has opened at 805 Park Centre Way, north of Interstate 84 and east of Midland Boulevard.
The range has 54 lanes and is 20 to 60 yards long. Hours are 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Saturday.
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An applicant is seeking a conditional use permit for a hospice and assisted living building with 10 beds at 601 Blaine Ave. in the Cottonwoods Subdivision.
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Caldwell
Wireless Vision LLC leased 1,200 square feet of retail space at 5205 E. Cleveland Blvd. Suite 102, Colliers International reports.
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This story was originally published May 27, 2021 at 4:00 AM.
CORRECTION: Koco Bell’s name was misspelled and the current location was misstated in the original version of this story.