STATESIDE | SAVANNAH
Southern Hospitality Plant Riverside District redefines Savannah’s riverfront. BY JAN SCHRODER
Engaging Spaces: Plant Riverside (left), and a chrome dinosaur in Generator Hall (right) PHOTOS: © COURTESY OF PLANT RIVERSIDE DISTRICT
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illions of visitors a year navigate the uneven, hand-laid cobblestones along River Street in Savannah, visiting the dozens of shops, restaurants, hotels and attractions housed in the former cotton warehouses lining the Savannah River. Last year the riverfront of Georgia’s oldest city transformed with the opening of the $375 million Plant Riverside District, which extended the riverfront by 1,100 feet and developed a once-seedy part of the city into a popular mixed-used development housed in a former 1912 power plant. Hospitality brand The Kessler Collection, founded by the Kessler family, whose roots in Savannah date back to the 1730s when the city was founded, developed the district.
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“We love Savannah, and we saw in this site the opportunity to create something Savannah didn’t have and what it needed,” said Mark Kessler, president, COO and son of founder Richard Kessler. “The location on the river was ideal and had so much potential.” After purchasing the property in 2012, the company solicited input from and brainstormed with members of the community for ideas about what to develop. “Our vision was to create a family-friendly entertainment district and redefine what the riverfront is. It was like nothing we had done before, and we wanted it to be a legacy for our company.” Phase One of the development opened in summer 2020. When the second phase opens this summer, Plant Riverside District will have 419 hotel rooms, a collection of shops, more than a dozen restaurants, a parking garage, meeting space, a live music venue and two rooftop bars. A bronze statue of Martin Luther King, Jr. will be the centerpiece of the new Martin Luther King Memorial Park,