There's a groundbreaking ceremony on Thursday, July 29th at 10a according to the weekly email blast from Councilman Engel's office.
I truly mean no offense, but calling Fern Creek a "chain wasteland" is a tad harsh these days: Bootleg BBQ (so they have one other location...), Aspen Creek (not technically a "chain" yet), Sake Blue, Dakshin, True Thai, Crabby Jake's, Sugar and Spice, Jarfi's at Glenmary (still there?), and Creekers. On the maybe list: Homemade Pie and Ice Cream Kitchen, Puerto Vallarta, Bearno's, and Hunan Wok. If I encorporate the Okolona and Jeffersontown areas, I could get an even bigger list (Bruce's, Chubby Ray's, Sharom's, etc.).
Sure, we have a overly healthy glut of chains, and not all the "independents" are sit downs or fine dining (Las Gorditas, mmmm), but we're doing well for a place that absolutely was a "chain wasteland" 5 years ago.
Urban sprawl is urban sprawl, whether it's retail, food, or McMansions. Long and short of it is that as people continue to move out toward Mt. Washington, there's a need for more food/retail options in the area. People don't want to drive all over -- especially for a quick bite to eat before they put the kids to bed. Chick-fil-a is an indicator of growth as it has previously required a certain number of cars passing in front of the location daily for franchisee agreements.
However, as someone pointed out in another thread, it's hard for small owner operations to get the bankers to sign off on loans right now without comps. And I don't know too many independents who can afford to build locations from the ground up. Corporate retail areas usually have a few ancillary, leasable storefronts which lower the barriers to entry. Someone has to fill the "need." Look how Lyndon revitalized thanks to a revamped Westport Village (this is my own opinion about what built the Watterson/Westport Road interchange). Someone has to lay the groundwork. I see these as "enablers."
If those of us who live in the area continue to disparage it, it'll continue to be this way (investors won't look this direction). If you look at a number of the existing non-food businesses, there is a great deal of "independent" retail and services just in the 2 mile area north and south of Fern Creek High School. Maybe more money and people coming into the area will get some of the smaller operations in Louisville looking into the southern portion of the county. I'd love it. Give me a good, tasteful brewpub, a HomeRun Burgers, and a couple other mass appeal independents in the area, and hopefully we'll see a change. But we have to lead the charge.
And sorry, even though I'm not personally a chain-guy due in large part to this forum for helping me see the light, Chick-fil-a is a personal addiction. With them moving in so close, this is a bad thing for me.
Sorry for the pontificating, I'll step down off my soapbox now. I mean no offense, I just like living here.