By John Brannon, Club Director, Carolina Union VBC
Carolina Union Volleyball
Club has been around since 2002. We
began operating out of high schools as a purely regional level club that
finished the season at the beginning of April.
By 2009, all of this had changed.
We joined forces with another club and began operating out of a
multi-sport facility. We took our first
teams to USAV Nationals that year, and began to send teams to AAU Nationals the
following year. Things were moving in a
positive direction!
But
early on last club season we began to notice a change in the direction of our
relationship with this facility. We had
to cut our number of travel teams from 15 to 12 because of a lack of court
space, we would have three or four teams practicing on two side courts (one
basketball court) while other courts sat empty for hours on end. Local programming was the focus for the
facility owners rather than elite level volleyball. All of that meant that we weren't serving as
many young athletes as we wanted, and the athletes we were serving were often
frustrated because of what they saw going on around them. So in April, the decision was made that our
club would have to find a new home, or move back to high schools and churches
for the foreseeable future.
We immediately
began to look into options and started off by having conversations with
potential investors. Then we began
working with an industrial broker to find empty and convertible warehouse
spaces. We also created a start-up and
operating budget, and began putting a business plan together. In the process, everyone received a real life
education in starting up a business.
[As an
aside, in a previous
post, Delaware Juniors Club Director Steve Lenderman mentioned the
challenge of putting together a business plan, and he was absolutely
correct. I would encourage anyone
interested in this to do some research and be willing to pay the $200-$300 for
good business plan software. It was a
phenomenal assist for me and the best investment that I’ve made for this
fledgling business so far!]
As we
worked through the months of May and June, we saw a few places we liked, but
nothing that jumped out at us as a viable option. Charlotte is built like a wagon wheel, and in
the past we had been operating out of both the south east corner and the
southern end of the city. The southeast
part of Charlotte had the advantage of numerous existing warehouse spaces, but
the disadvantage of being very difficult to get to after 4:00 in the
afternoon. In addition, these spaces
were significantly more expensive than those in the Southwest part of
Charlotte. The southern part of the city
was the ideal spot, but there was no existing warehouse space and as we did
more research and spoke with investors, building a facility looked more and
more like a 3-5 year plan (it is still in our big plans!).
At this
point, we went back to the drawing board.
We knew that we could always operate out of schools if we had to, but
that also represented a significant setback; it would limit our growth
potential because most schools are booked up with basketball during the winter
months. It would also limit our ability
to unify the whole club under one training system, hamper our athletes who
wanted additional private training, as well as our young coaches who wanted to
make coaching more of a full time job, reduce our ability to run extra clinics
and training sessions for our players and the community. Most importantly, (as one of our athletes
pointed out to me in this process) 4) it would put a huge dent in the “family”
atmosphere we try to create amongst our teams and families. The last of those points has always been a
staple of our club and one of the things we value most.
In late
July, my broker called me up and said, “I know this isn't your ideal location,
but I want you to come take a look at this space.” It was toward the Southwest side, but it was
off of a major highway right near restaurants and shopping centers so I figured
it couldn't hurt to go look. I happened
to drive there from the southern part of the city during rush hour (about 5:30
pm) and had no trouble getting there at all, because most of the traffic was
headed the other way. This checked off
concern number one, ease of access for the majority of our athletes. The warehouse park was three turns and less
than a minute off of the major highway, which was great, and right behind a
Costco, a Hilton, a Chili’s, and a number of restaurants (something for parents
to do!).
I also
noticed that in the front of the warehouse park there was a police outpost,
which checked off concern number two, safety!
Our space was in the back of the well-lit park (check), which meant that
there was plenty of parking (check) and limited traffic (check). When I entered the building, the columns were
40x40 (check), the ceiling was 26 feet high at the peak and 24 feet clear from
column to column (check), and it had an existing and well kept bathroom (check,
having to install bathrooms can range anywhere from $100k to $300k). In addition, despite being 95 degrees outside,
the temperature inside was relatively mild (check, as the $150k bill that comes
with putting in HVAC is out of our reach at this point). This 16,000 sq. ft.
space would allow us to put three full courts with ten feet of serving space
(BIG check), a half court that we could utilize for full team training (check),
and an area for fitness training (check).
As I
was standing in the warehouse, I remembered a favorite question of a friend: “Are you going to let the perfect be the enemy of the very good?”. . .
To be continued next week... stay tuned!
To be continued next week... stay tuned!
What do you consider "Good Parking" for a 3 court facility?
ReplyDeleteCecilia - thanks for the question. Here is an answer to help you, provided by Rick Butler, a long time JVA Club Director from Sports Performance Volleyball in Chicago, IL
ReplyDelete"40-45 parking spots for every competition court is a solid number. We have 500 spots plus street parking for 12 courts and there are times that we get very crowded. So 120-140 spots if the facility plans on hosting events."
Hope this helps!