Taco Bell's goal: Mesh on Dickson Street

Daniel Campbell with Compass Construction out of Prairie Grove works Friday February 3, 2017 in the back of the new Taco Bell Cantina/Pickleman's sandwich shop area that use to be the old Common Grounds space in Fayetteville.
Daniel Campbell with Compass Construction out of Prairie Grove works Friday February 3, 2017 in the back of the new Taco Bell Cantina/Pickleman's sandwich shop area that use to be the old Common Grounds space in Fayetteville.

FAYETTEVILLE -- Unforeseen problems can arise when moving into a 100-year-old building, the franchise owners of Taco Bell Cantina and Pickleman's Gourmet Cafe have learned.

The building at 412 and 410 W. Dickson St. soon will become home to a major fast-food chain's budding concept and a regional soup, salad, sandwich and pizza shop. Residents commonly know it as the space that housed coffee shop and restaurant Common Grounds, which spent nearly two decades at the location.

Preparing for the franchises has required putting in floors, replacing the foundation, fixing the roof, a sewer line, electrical work and uprooting the back patio for a new one, among other endeavors.

So far, the city has issued several permits to the Taco Bell Cantina at 412 W. Dickson St. amounting to about $380,000 worth of work. A permit for work at Pickleman's at the 410 address includes about $140,000 worth of improvements.

Sam Fiori, president and CEO of K-MAC Enterprises, which operates Yum Brands of Arkansas and eight other states, estimated that the cost of construction on the Taco Bell Cantina side will be about $500,000.

Barring any further delays, the Taco Bell Cantina should open sometime in March. Pickleman's also should open in the spring.

"I just want to get the doggone thing open so we can move on," Fiori said.

A scaffolding erected last week in front of the Pickleman's side has since been removed. Crews temporarily moved some stone on the facade to repair loose mortar, franchise owner Allen Willis said.

"It was just repair work," he said. "We're going to try to leave everything that's got the original look to it intact as much as possible."

The facade on the Taco Bell Cantina side will get a new garage door, although it may not be open very often. Taco Bell has strict standards that go beyond Health Department requirements, Fiori said.

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"If you have more than 10 flies in the store they're ready to shut you down," he said. "But those same Taco Bell people wanted us to leave the garage door in the plan, so we did."

When it opens, Fayetteville will boast one of the few Taco Bell Cantinas in the world. Four are in Las Vegas, Chicago, San Francisco and Austin, with about six others in the works, Fiori said.

The concept differs greatly from a typical Taco Bell. Frozen-drink taps, including margaritas, pina coladas and others with alcohol, an open-kitchen design and a tapas-style menu on top of the usual Taco Bell menu are a few of the features customers can expect.

Both restaurants will experiment with options, such keeping late hours to catch the bar crowd and placing heaters, fans and awnings outside so the rear patios can stay open most of the year. The Taco Bell Cantina might reserve a spot for musicians, Fiori said.

Seth Price, a University of Arkansas student who moved to Fayetteville from Detroit to go to school, said he felt the Taco Bell Cantina will fit in well with the rest of downtown, even though a corporate entity will replace a popular local establishment.

"I have a couple of friends who liked this place because it's so historic and everything, but I don't really mind it," he said.

Will he check it out?

"Soberly? Probably not. But after some drinks? Possibly," he said.

Peggy and Jackie Hancock, who live near downtown, said they remembered going to the university in the early 1980s when everything on Dickson Street was local. They worried that the rise of national chains such as Taco Bell, Chipotle, Waffle House and Q'doba will dilute downtown's unique sense of place.

"You want to think that when you come down here it's original -- like Dickson is original," Peggy Hancock said. "It would be like going into New Orleans' French Quarter and having all these Taco Bells and things opening up, and that's not what you expect there, either."

The city can't stop a business from coming in just because people don't like it, said Development Services Director Jeremy Pate. If the establishment matches up with zoning requirements and complies with city code, it's free to move in, he said. The nature of the business doesn't factor in to the city's range of considerations.

"That's not ours to judge. We just make sure they comply," Pate said. "That's up to the users of the facility or the customers. If the citizens of Fayetteville don't want to support it, then they probably won't stay around very long."

The Hancocks do not doubt the likelihood of the franchise's success. Affordable food with alcoholic beverages near a college campus usually results in a favorable outcome, they said.

Metro on 02/07/2017

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