Usually, the presence of marmots in a neighborhood would decrease home valuesโbut since 2010, Marmot Properties has been redeveloping dilapidated properties in Midtown with a signature style and some help from local artists.
Eric, Bryan and Gary Raydonโbrothers with extensive individual real estate and urban development backgrounds in major cities, founded Marmot Properties in 2008, during the throes of the recession.
All three brothers had either been laid off or faced a serious lack of prospects in their respective real estate markets. Bryanโs previous work developing resorts in Northstar, however, meant he was familiar with Reno, and he alerted his brothers to the potential he saw in one then barely burgeoning neighborhood: Midtown.
โTo my brothers and I, it was totally illogical,โ said Bryan. โYou would have Old Southwestโwhich is really niceโand then you had this strip of pretty shaggy retail โฆ it just wasnโt the right location for a downtrodden neighborhood.โ
In 2012, Marmot Properties acquired a packet of land in Midtown encompassing the streets Stewart, Moran and Sinclairโsouth of the Discovery Museum. Dubbed โThe Assemblage,โ Marmot Properties began renovating those initial 17 buildings, including their own office, in a decidedly different style.
โIโve always been a big adherent and preacher of the โbroken window theory,โโ said Bryan. โItโs really just making small improvements here and there to lift the neighborhood, or lift the perception of the neighborhood.โ
Bright colors, xeriscaped lawns and overtly modern fixtures have now become staples of a Marmot overhaul, but perhaps the most noticeable elements of the Marmot style are the large murals adorning many of their new properties.
Faced with the vandalism, crime, and general disrepair of the neighborhood at the time, the brothers started employing radical stylistic choices in their renovations as a message to the community: Somebody cares.
โOur first initiative was to say, โOK, weโre done with the graffiti,โโ said Bryan. โSo we started painting the murals on the doors and on the fences to dissuade that, but then we started getting some positive feedback from people thinking, โHey, you know, this looks really nice.โโ
Local artist Pan Pantoja recently completed the newest addition to the Marmotโs mural collection in Midtownโan apartment building on Moran Street one block away from the Marmot Properties office.
โI really like the color, and I think murals just make places look nicer,โ said Pantoja. โI think that apartment had a bunch of writing on it before. Itโs kind of neat, you know, you roll down the street, and you roll by a giant dude with a tree for a head holding a windowโthatโs a pretty weird thing to drive by.โ
Pantoja has painted murals for the city before and believes thereโs merit to the idea that most graffiti writers respect murals enough not to deface them. He also believes, however, that commissioning public art also comes with responsibility on the part of the landowners.
โWhether or not theyโre making a buck off it, and they are, itโs smart,โ said Pantoja. โTheyโre doing it in a way that also benefits others too. Some of these landowners are only looking out for themselves โฆ I think theyโll preserve their buildings.”
With over a dozen new projects slated for completion in the coming months, Bryan is sure that more murals will find their way to the streets of Midtown.
โItโs probably more expensive than doing a teeny little sculpture, but I think itโd be cooler and make a bigger statement,โ said Bryan. โWeโre kind of loud and proud and weโre going to keep that going.โ
