CLEVELAND – If it looks
like a big real estate development and sounds like a big real estate
development, it probably will be a big real estate development.
That's what a spate of real estate transactions in recent months suggest for an urban enclave close to downtown that's neither an island or named after ducks. (Some claim it's named for criminals who used to duck and hide here from the law). It's an ear-shaped area east of Columbus Road and west of the Walworth Run valley.
That's what a spate of real estate transactions in recent months suggest for an urban enclave close to downtown that's neither an island or named after ducks. (Some claim it's named for criminals who used to duck and hide here from the law). It's an ear-shaped area east of Columbus Road and west of the Walworth Run valley.
Duck Island is actually
part of Tremont although many people think it's in Ohio City. The
official dividing line for the service areas of the two community
development corporations (Ohio City Inc. and Tremont West Development Corp.) is Columbus Road.
Duck Island reappeared on
my radar Nov. 1 when the city's Design Review Committee was asked to approve a
request by Ward 3 Councilman Joe Cimperman to vacate part of West
20th Street north of Lorain Avenue.
Council members don't just
submit requests to vacate city streets when they feel like it. They
do so at the request of others. And vacating a city street means the
city is relinquishing its right of way, probably forever. It can be a
pretty big deal, and it often takes a big project to justify it.
At the north end of West
20th is a vacant, single-level industrial building that
was for sale for years. One year ago, it was acquired by Andrew
Brickman. He is a partner with Justin Campbell in Abode LLC which
builds eco-friendly, luxury town homes in Cleveland's University Circle and Little
Italy, plus the inner-ring suburbs Cleveland Heights, Fairview Park and Lakewood.
All around Brickman's industrial
parcel are numerous other residential and vacant properties having
different corporate owners. Yet all the names trace back to Brickman
or Abode in public records. Taken together, the properties west of
West 19th/Grove Court Condos and atop the hill east
of Columbus Road form a site about as large as the St. Ignatius High
School campus (or at least the main campus north of Lorain Avenue).
The purpose of this
agglomeration is not a secret. It is revealed in the name of one of
the companies formed to acquire land at the north end of Duck Island
– “Abode Ohio City Townhomes,” according to records from the
Cuyahoga County Auditor's office.
The timing of this project
is less well known; Brickman isn't talking publicly about this
project yet. However, considering that the city is already vacating a
street for it, this strongly suggests that demolitions and site
preparation could be sought soon. How many demolitions? Four commercial
structures are probable; but there are also 14 historic houses
sprinkled in this area and most appear to be in fair to good
condition. Their fates are unknown.
What is known are the
intentions of the developer eyeballing the area of Duck Island south
of Lorain Avenue. About 20 properties, most of them vacant land, were
acquired by Matt Berges or his company Berges Home Performance. Ten of them are for development of green-friendly infill housing.
Plans for
various housing styles and property locations are shown on his firm's Web site.
Berges' motivations don't seem to be limited to the financial returns
that normally drive developers. Why? First, he is the green housing
manager at Environmental Health Watch. And second, he's invested in the
neighborhood in the ultimate way – he and his family moved there.
County
records show he recently acquired the large brick home and
surrounding 10 parcels of the late Rosemary Vinci. If that name
doesn't ring a bell, her name came up during early investigations of
the county's corruption scandal. Vinci died in 2008 under suspicious circumstances.
Her father, James Vinci, a reputed organized crime figure who famously owned
Diamond Jim's in the Flats, was reportedly killed in a mob hit in 1985 to
prevent him from testifying in a trial of accused mobsters.
But Rosemary
Vinci was better known in the neighborhood for owning strip clubs and
ruling the Duck Island Block Club with an iron high heel. One of her
missions was to urge Duck Island residents to acquire a neighboring
property and demolish the house on it (if it wasn't already torn
down) to reduce the urban density of the urban neighborhood located
just one mile from Public Square. She surrounded her own West 18th Street house by a moat of vacated lands and walls that exuded the kind of exclusive estate one expects in a gated suburban community.
A decade ago,
Vinci also led opposition to a mixed-income, high-density residential
development next to the Red Line Rapid station along Columbus Road
south of Lorain. She claimed the transit- and pedestrian-oriented development would increase traffic but others
accused her of fear-mongering against its low-income component.
Today, Berges is president of the Duck Island Block Club. He's a forward-thinking man who's highly regarded around the country and in Cleveland as a sustainable housing contractor.
With the booming demand by young professionals and empty-nesters for more housing in the urban core, it's important to have sustainability-minded developers like Brickman and Berges who are in a position to respond. It's a welcome change from the city's past when fear and corruption shaped our development policies.
With the booming demand by young professionals and empty-nesters for more housing in the urban core, it's important to have sustainability-minded developers like Brickman and Berges who are in a position to respond. It's a welcome change from the city's past when fear and corruption shaped our development policies.
Duck Island's location
between Ohio City and the heart of Tremont makes it an ideal urban
development area. Its proximity to the Rapid station and the
Lorain-Carnegie Hope Memorial Bridge with its new bikeway/walkway
into downtown enhances its drawing power. Hopefully Duck Island's new-urbanist promise shall be
hindered no more.
END