List Search

508-510 S Main St
Memphis, TN 38103 South Main

$1,146 - $4,125 USD/MO

Apartments For Lease  •  1,250+ SF

Property Details

  • Property Type Apartments
  • Year Built 1920
  • Total Building Size 14,000 SF
  • Building Class C
  • Zoning SMSD
50 Transit Score
50 Walk Score

2 Spaces Available

Name Space Use Size Rent Details
1st Floor Ste 508 Office/Retail 4,500 SF $11.00 USD/SF/YR
For Lease:
508 South Main Street:
1st floor 2,250 sf RETAIL/OFFICE 100% hard wood floors, Foyer, large open room, 2 Restrooms,
Basement 2,250 sf OFFICE 8 Class A new individual Offices, Restroom,

510 South Main Street:
1st floor 1,250 sf RETAIL/OFFICE 100% hard wood floors, large open room, Restroom  






tuckerbeck.com
tbeck@crye-leike.com
9013781300
commercial real estate memphis

  • Date available: Now
  • Lease term: 3 Years
  • Service type: Modified Gross
  • Built out as: Law Firm
  • Space Type: Relet
1st Floor Ste 510 Office/Retail 1,250 SF $11.00 USD/SF/YR
510 South Main Street is 1,250 sf is an hard wood floored, exposed Brick RETAIL Room

  • Date available: Now
  • Lease term: 3 Years
  • Service type: Modified Gross
  • Space Type: Relet

Description

RETAIL/OFFICE
Nicholas L. Koleas was the "mayor of South Main Street." He was born in the area, played among the crowds of people who packed Central Station and was a business owner on the street.  "The heart of the city was right here," Mr. Koleas said in a 1988 interview with The Commercial Appeal from what used to be his business at 416 S. Main. "We didn't live as well as we live now but it was a more interesting life." Mr. Koleas was born on Pontotoc Street, in the South Main area. His father, Lewis Koleas, a Greek immigrant, owned a restaurant and hotel at 508 S. Main Street. Other relatives were also business owners in the area. The district was dotted with hotels and other businesses that catered to the train passengers and crews that came to both Central Station and Union Station. Decades later, Koleas remembered women with buckets of fried chicken they took onto waiting trains to sell to passengers. He also remembered restaurants that sold bootleg whiskey during Prohibition and "ladies of ill repute" who beckoned from upstairs windows on Mulberry Street. After serving in the military during World War II and trying his hand at businesses in other parts of town, Mr. Koleas returned to South Main in 1958. He found success in 1970 with Nick's China, which supplied china to area restaurants until Mr. Koleas retired in 1988. The building at 416 S. Main was the Memphis Center for Contemporary Art for several years and Mr. Koleas was a volunteer at the center. He was also an avid booster of the struggle to bring new life to South Main. "It's not going to come back. It is back," he said in 1988. "It's just not as big as it will be."

Highlights

South Main Street RETAIL

Amenities

  • Vintage Building
  • Hardwood Floors

Public Transportation

Commuter RailDriveWalkDistance
Central Station (Riverfront Loop - Memphis Area Transit Authority Trolley (MataTrolley)) 1 min 3 min 0.2 mi
Transit/SubwayDriveWalkDistance
Central Station (Riverfront Loop - Memphis Area Transit Authority Trolley (MataTrolley)) 1 min 3 min 0.2 mi
AirportDriveWalkDistance
Memphis International 21 min - 10.5 mi
Tucker Beck 901-378-1300 tuckerbeck.com
Tucker Beck 901-378-1300 tuckerbeck.com