Auto parts retailer in ex-Anthone store
A long-idle retail storefront at the corner of Michigan Avenue and Genesee Street downtown has come back to life as a Napa Auto Parts store, joining a growing list of fresh investment in that neighborhood.
"It's a prime location with lots of potential customers," said Dave Jemiolo, manager of the company-owned
The new
Jemiolo said the turn-of-the-century building's unique characteristics, including interior support pillars, required a one-of-a-kind store layout.
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Another non-standard touch is the exterior wall mural that rises above the store on the adjoining building.
"It shows
"We've stuck it out down here from the good times to the bad," said Brian Radzwill, vice president of the family-owned electric supply company.
Over the decades Quermback morphed its operation from a full-service electric store with consumer showrooms to a company whose primary customer base is now the professional building trades. As neighboring businesses closed and foot traffic fell, it adjusted its hours to eliminate evening and Saturday sales.
Quermback now relies heavily on a small fleet of trucks to speed electric fixtures and supplies around the the city, the suburbs and beyond.
"We were doing fine without other businesses around us, but it was a nice surprise to hear what Napa was up to," Radzwill said. "It was great to see the boards come down off the building."
Napa may be the first new retailer in the neighborhood in decades, but it isn't the only new life. In recent months the Maritime and Pinnacle charter schools have both moved into renovated light industrial space near the corner of Michigan Avenue and Genesee Street.
A new medical facility project just saw groundbreaking on the northwest corner of the intersection which will bring nearly $5 million in capital investment, plus patient traffic.
The neighborhood also sits between the Buffalo Niagara Medical Campus to the north, and the emerging Michigan Avenue cultural tourism corridor to the south.
"This is another clear, in-your-face indication that our city is healing and improving," said Mayor Anthony M. Masiello. "That was a tough corner not that long ago and practically overnight there's a diverse mix of retail, medical, educational and cultural investment."
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