Another New Waukee District

Anybody heard if Texas will ever bring back their peanuts or if they’re using the pandemic as an excuse to cut the cost?

Smokin Hereford in Storm Lake still has free peanuts if you ever get up that way. They've got good food IMO.
 
The plat has been announced but no stores name. Was able to get an unreleased overview.

Looks like;

Target
Ross
Sierra
Chick Fil A
Wendy's
Old Navy
Chipotle
Texas Roadhouse

Anybody know if it's going to be a super target?
 
Agree, the Johnston one off 86th has always been great for us. The one in Grimes by Wal-Mart is terrible, though.
The difference is that 86th is staffed with hard working brown folks. Grimes is staffed with trailer park meth heads. I live by the Grimes store, we drive to 86th if we want Ponch.
 
Glad Target is coming, we live fairly close to this area so will be a time saver. Not so sure about some of the other stuff. There is a Wendy's about a half mile away east on Hickman, I assume that will close?
 
I don't think it's that bad honestly. The Waukee Pancheros, however, I'm done giving any more chances.
My daughter always wanted a black bean quesadilla from Pancheros. Never had a problem anywhere else, but the owner of the Waukee location refused to do it, because the liquid the beans sit in would make it a soggy mess. Maybe figure out a different way to store our drain them? Nobody else has this problem.
 
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I was living in Dubuque when the Texas Roadhouse opened and people were losing their minds. I went once.
I get why people love/hate TR. It's like Hickory Park's model. Affordable, large quantity (Iowans love that), loud, wide variety.
Honestly, my favorite thing on the menu might be green beans.
 
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Putting a Target into Waukee is only going to increase the cougar sightings. There is already a Starbucks there, add in an Old Navy….they will be hopped up on pumpkin spice lattes and cheap clothing.
 
I know i'm in the minority on this one but these town-sized districts are eyesores and kill towns.

I'm sure these places print money but did any of you see this and go "oh thank god, Texas roadhouse is coming"

If you need a spot to put the big-box stores in, that's one thing, but keep the restaurants and boutiques in a more compact setting and you'll be using urban land much better. Parking isn't as big of an issue as people make it out to be. Even if you have to park "far away in VJ or uptown Ankeny, it's probably about the same as walking across a huge parking lot, and you still have more walkability between stores.
I know some cities have done this successfully, but have any actual suburbs (as in large suburbs - Ankeny, Waukee, West DSM type suburbs) done this successfully? If so, where? (I'd like to see it)

I love the idea of getting off a train and walking 2 blocks to a local restaurant (I've done this in Galesburg, IL), but seems more like random chance of geography than something you can "plan?"
 

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