ADVERTISEMENT

Pagliai’s Pizza building put on the market

cigaretteman

HR King
May 29, 2001
77,442
58,937
113
Warm smells of pizza dough being baked along with textured brick from the years of service has been greeting customers of Pagliai’s for generations.


After over 60 years of business, the building housing local Iowa City staple Pagliai’s Pizza is up for sale with an asking price of $5 million. Under the same family’s ownership since 1878, the building has held a special significance for the Iowa City community for generations.


While the building is being sold, business is expected to remain normal. Pagliai’s lease will last seven more years, owner Antonio Fontanini said.



The building was first built in 1877 by Joseph Slezak who is the great, great grandfather of current building owner Gary Skarda. Gary Skarda is the fifth generation to own the building.


Deciding to sell was not an easy decision for Skarda, who decided it was time as he can’t manage the property as effectively as he gets older. Skarda had an amputation done to his right leg because of nerve damage greatly restricting his ability to work.


“I was unable to do things at the property that I was able to do before. I can’t even drive right now because I need special tools in the car to be able to drive because it was my right leg,” Skarda said. “So, that was the main reason certainly why I can’t do the things I once was able to do.”


Located at 302 E. Bloomington St., the three-story building contains Pagliai’s Pizza, a laundromat, and 16 apartments.


The realtor for the building, Rex Brandstatter, said the space has offered a variety of different services since its construction. Brandstatter said it was first created to be a dance hall by Slezak, who was a dancer.


Later, the building was used as a hotel, a grocery store, and a saloon. The laundromat used to be a delivery stable for horses when people would come to Iowa City on buggies, which was intended to encourage people to stay at the building when it was a hotel, according to Brandstatter.


RELATED: Iowa City Community School District students break ground on affordable housing project


Brandstatter said there has been interest in the property, and it has not been an easy decision for the owner to list the property.


“[Skarda] grew up in the building. He lived in the building with his parents who owned it and managed it,” Brandstatter said.


University of Iowa alumni Carol deProsse wrote in an email to The Daily Iowan that she moved to Iowa City in 1972 and has gone to Pagliai’s Pizza at least once a year for 51 years.


“For a while, we went every Wednesday night and shared a mushroom, onion, and green pepper pizza,” deProsse wrote. “We never could remember how to spell or pronounce Pagliai so we resorted to calling it ‘Pig’s Pizza’ because we ate so much of it.”


Ryan O’Leary, another UI alumni, said the owner before Fontanini, Armond Pagliai, was generous enough to make him and his best friend a pizza before the store opened at 4 p.m. after a long day of work.


“Christopher and I ate that beautiful pizza and had a couple of cold beers in a vacant laundromat around the corner on Market Street,” O’Leary wrote. “Armond’s generous gesture that afternoon put a huge smile on our faces.”


Fontanini said they plan on riding out the sale and will go from there based off the new ownership. He said they would relocate Pagliai’s if it came to that.


“We’d love to stay there forever, for sure. It’s been a long time, so I’d like to keep it going,” Fontanini said.


When Pagliai’s Pizza opened in 1957, the price of a large pizza was only $1.25. The business surrounding Pagliai’s Pizza has changed dramatically since then.


Fontanini said one of the biggest differences he’s seen in the pizza business is the lack of late-night business since the pandemic.


“Pagliai’s used to be open until one o’clock in the morning, and then it changed to 12 o’clock and now 10. It just seems like the late-night traffic isn’t there ever since COVID-19,” he said.


Luckily for Pagliai’s, Fontanini said they were able to transition relatively seamlessly to carry out, which is still a big part of their business model. He said support from the community has been exceedingly helpful especially during the pandemic.


“For us, Iowa City — the whole community of Johnson County has really good support and supported us during when the dining room was closed,” Fontanini said.

 
Season 5 No GIF by The Office
 
How in the hell is that building not landmarked as a historic structure?
 
The Iowa City Council this week unanimously approved a proposal to make the Pagliai’s Pizza building a historic landmark.



The council must vote twice more on the designation for the building at 302-316 E. Bloomington St. before it’s official.


Besides Pagliai’s, the property also contains apartments and a laundromat.




Though the building’s owner is opposed to the designation, council members spoke favorably about being able to preserve a property important to the community.


Council member Andrew Dunn said at the Tuesday council meeting that he considered the “cultural, historic and architectural beauty” of the building, along with the recommendation of city staff and support from the community for the designation.


“Ultimately, we're in a rare situation where we have all of these community stakeholders that are on the same side that are asking us to act in the public good,” he said.


Council member Josh Moe also voiced his support, saying the process of making something a historic landmark is a slow, deliberate process that happens for “rare and only for truly exceptional buildings.”


Several council members were concerned that the designation would infringe on the rights of the property owner Gary Skarda.


Skarda, who last year put the building up for sale, said at the April 2 council meeting he believes a historic landmark designation will make the building more difficult to sell


Council member Megan Alter said while she was largely in favor of property owner rights, the building still will be sellable and should bring a good price.


More than 10 residents spoke in favor of the landmark designation, noting the building’s historic and cultural significance. The council also received more than 100 letters of support for the proposal.


Some residents spoke against the proposal, saying they felt it was wrong for the city to go against the wishes of Skarda, and that it would be better for the property to instead be used for the development of new housing.






This was the second time the designation has come before the council. At the April 2 meeting, the proposal required unanimous approval but was deferred by Mayor Bruce Teague, who said he was he was “having issues with this one.”


Jordan Sellergren, chair of the city’s Historic Preservation Commission, said this is the fourth time the city has considered landmark status for the building. Previous attempts were made in the 1980s, 1990s, and in 2015, she said.


She said the first two attempts reached the council before failing to proceed, while the 2015 attempt stopped after “a letter was drafted to the owner, and it did not leave the mailbox.”
 
  • Love
Reactions: torbee
ADVERTISEMENT

Latest posts

ADVERTISEMENT