The corner of East Seventh Street and North Sixth Avenue has long been overshadowed by the hip-and-happening North Fourth Avenue and East Congress Street.

The outdoor space at Corbettโ€™s includes a beer garden, a stage for live music, and pickleball courts, N. Sixth Ave., Aug. 16.

But that could dramatically change when Tucsonโ€™s first restaurant anchored by pickleball courts opens later this month.

Corbettโ€™s at 340 N. Sixth Ave., a sprawling multipurpose entertainment complex that takes up a city block, with five pickleball courts, a full-service restaurant, an outdoor live music stage and a beer garden, will open on Tuesday, Aug. 29.

โ€œWeโ€™re changing the traffic pattern of how this area gets used,โ€ said Regan Jasper, a partner in the project with developers Scott Stiteler and Rudy Dabdoub. โ€œI think Fourth Avenue has its history and steady players, and Sixth Avenue has had some growth. Now people are going to say, โ€˜Whatโ€™s going on on Fifth Avenue?โ€™โ€

Corbettโ€™s takes up nearly an acre of the four-acre Corbett Building lot bordered by Fifth and Sixth avenues and Seventh Street, just off the path of the months-old Maclovio Barraza Parkway that bypasses downtown.

The area is home to the neighboring Tap & Bottle and Exo Roast Co. on North Sixth Avenue and, if you venture a couple of blocks down to East Sixth Street, Anello artisan pizzeria. But most of the nightlife migrates to North Fourth or Congress, home to at least a dozen bars and live music venues, as well as a plethora of restaurants.

Corbettโ€™s could alter that dynamic.

โ€œI think the timing for Tucson to have something this size, indoor outdoor, it seems to be just right,โ€ said Stiteler, who bought the Corbett Building in 1999 but held off on developing it while he and his Tucson-based Loveblock Partners โ€” founding partner Stiteler, Dabdoub, Omar Valle, Christina Rosete, Chris Hodgson and Nick Fox โ€” focused on their โ€œCongress and Fifthโ€ projects downtown including the Hub, Playground, Connect Coworking, One North Fifth apartments and the AC Marriott Hotel.

Joe Pagac depicts the main vision for Corbettโ€™s under the Southern Arizona skies as people play pickleball next to โ€œAโ€ Mountain in his mural that lives inside the restaurant, N. Sixth Ave., Aug. 16.

Stiteler and Dabdoub broke ground on Corbettโ€™s 2ยฝ years ago with the goal of building a 4,000-square-foot restaurant and 12,000-square-foot covered patio on one end of the property and create event space at the old J. Knox Corbett Lumber Yard building on the other end. The 90-year-old building, which had endured fire and flood damage in recent years, had been abandoned for 10 years.

โ€œWe didnโ€™t know what to do with the middle, but once we were under construction with the restaurant, at that point pickleball was becoming very popular,โ€ Dabdoub said. โ€œIt was an evolution. We started out with a restaurant โ€ฆ then we traced our steps and came up with Corbettโ€™s.โ€

The scope of the project expanded to include three outdoor pickleball courts and two inside the Corbett Building, an outdoor music stage that will host local singer-songwriters and acoustic artists and a beer garden with 16 taps including local brews from Barrio, Moto Sonora, Pueblo Vida, Crooked Tooth, Dragoon, Borderlands, Dillinger and 1912 Brewing Co.

Corbettโ€™s also will have Ray Rayโ€™s Sonoran Spirit Tea and a variety of cocktails, many of them crafted with Whiskey Del Bac spirits.

Corbettโ€™s three outdoor pickleball courts beam brightly in front of the historic pink Corbett building that now features two additional pickleball courts inside, N. Sixth Ave., Aug. 16.

While pickleball is an obvious draw, Stiteler and his partners say the heartbeat of Corbettโ€™s is the full-service restaurant, helmed by Executive Chef Omar C. Huerta (Wildflower, North Italia, Rio Cafe).

Huerta had input in finalizing the menu, which was curated by Jasper and his former Fox Restaurant Concepts colleague Christopher Cristiano, the longtime Fox corporate chef. Jasper and Cristiano were partners in Fox and left the company after it was sold to Cheesecake Factory in 2019.

Tucson native and Corbettโ€™s Executive Chef Omar Huerta explains the ingredients and pallets of each dish to leadership in training, N. Sixth Ave., Aug. 16.

The restaurant will serve lunch and dinner and weekend brunch, with a menu of sandwiches, salads, entrees and burgers including the bacon and poblano barbecue โ€œGronkโ€ burger, a nod to former University of Arizona and New England Patriots star Rob Gronkowski. Thereโ€™s also the โ€œCorbettโ€™s,โ€ with roasted mushrooms and blue cheese.

Dinner entrees include prime rib and seared salmon, and meal-worthy salads include the โ€œAngry Italianโ€ with spicy salami, and the โ€œSidewinderโ€ with crispy chicken, bacon and roasted corn dressed in a jalapeรฑo ranch.

โ€œWeโ€™re trying to satisfy all of the (tastes) of Tucson. Tacos, burgers, sandwiches, salads, entrees,โ€ Jasper said.

In the spacious dining room, Tucson muralist Joe Pagac covered one wall with a Norman Rockwell-esque mural depicting people eating and playing pickleball. He created a second mural, of Bridget Bardot, on corrugated metal salvaged from Twelve Tribes Reggae Shop. That bright blue mural greets guests when they pull into the 192-space parking lot.

Corrugated metal walls from Twelve Tribes is repurposed throughout Corbettโ€™s, including the outdoor bar where Tucson muralist Ignacio Garcia painted a larger-than-life image of Twelve Tribesโ€™ late owner Dennis โ€œPapa Rangerโ€ Francis.

A mural of a Reggae artist signifies the history of Reggae music at the original Corbett building and looks out onto the stage area where live performances take place.

Francisโ€™s shop was located for years at 345 N. Fifth Ave.

โ€œThat kind of stitches it all together, connects it all,โ€ Stiteler said.

Francisโ€™s son, Jahmar Anthony, said his father would be blown away to see his legacy live on in a place that was integral to his family and his 30 years promoting reggae and the reggae culture in Tucson. Francis died last August at the age of 66.

โ€œHe never would have thought it would be a restaurant and music venue,โ€ said Anthony, a reggae and hip-hop artist who goes by the stage name DJ Jahmar who grew up in his fatherโ€™s shop. โ€œThis right here means so much. There are going to be hundreds of thousands of people coming out there every year.โ€

The nod to Francisโ€™s place on that property was part of Stiteler and Dabdoubโ€™s plan to retain much of the spaceโ€™s history and character.

Inside the Corbett Building, which was built in 1930 to house the familyโ€™s lumber and hardware business, the partners left bare the stucco and brick interior walls of the building. With the exception of replacing some damaged wood, the original bow trusses also remain unchanged.

The rustic feel of the space contrasts with the twin regulation-size pickleball courts that take up most of the main floor.

โ€œAny time you can marry old and new, itโ€™s special. Itโ€™s hard to do well,โ€ said Stiteler, who estimated the projectโ€™s cost at more than $10 million. โ€œThis will forever change the intersection.โ€

Stiteler, who has been developing projects in Tucson since 1994, said Corbettโ€™s is one of his favorite projects.

โ€œI have not felt as good about a project in my career as this one,โ€ he said. โ€œI am surrounded by positives. The people we have. The concept. The location. The time of year that weโ€™re opening. This building tells a story when you walk into it and it tells the story every time.โ€


Become a #ThisIsTucson member! Your contribution helps our team bring you stories that keep you connected to the community. Become a member today.

Contact reporter Cathalena E. Burch at cburch@tucson.com. On Twitter @Starburch