Promoting opportunities for interaction abound in the design and construction of his latest and largest real estate development: Church + State.
The $60 million real estate investment is a partnership among Grammar Properties, Hemingway Development of Cleveland, Cedar Street Development of Chicago and Turner Construction. It is located near the intersection of Church Avenue and West 29th Street. West 29th was State Street before 1906 when Cleveland's north-south streets were given numerical names. Grammar Properties is a partnership of its own, between Veysey and his architect wife Marika Shioiri-Clark.
Leasing starts Feb. 22 for the 158 apartments in the two-building development. The leasing coincides with the Brite Winter Music & Arts Festival to be held Feb. 22-23 on the Flats West Bank where Church + State will be promoted.
Views from atop Church + State of downtown, Lake Erie and surrounding area can be had from both State (11-story building) and Church (six-story building) from the fourth floors up (KJP). |
Church + State Way's public accessibility is exemplified in that Ohio City Inc.'s Clean and Safe program, funded by the neighborhood's special improvement district, will oversee this public space, Veysey explained.
The atrium, where interaction is encouraged by design, has lots of interactive features sought by young people. It has everything from a 10-spout water park/fountain, sitting steps for performers, a 17-foot red corkscrew spiral slide and a six-story-tall rock climbing wall on Church to be managed on weekends and holidays by Cleveland Rocks that's redeveloping the old Masonic Hall nearby on Franklin Boulevard.
Between Church (right) and State (left) is the tower crane which was jumped up to its highest level this week, rising from the Church and State Way atrium (KJP). |
He said the arts component is one of the things his partners are most excited about is amplifying the work that is being done by neighbors in Hingetown. That includes the Transformer Station, FRONT Triennial, Spaces, Bop Stop and the Intermuseum Conservation Association.
Graham Veysey shows off the 200-bike storage room in Church, just off the atrium. The bike room and adjoining shower is for tenants, be they residents or workers at at Church + State (KJP). |
Veysey takes pride in Hingetown's role in local history, too. It was the center of Ohio City when it was a separate municipality from Cleveland. And it remained a neighborhood gathering spot until the new, larger West Side Market opened in 1912, replacing its smaller, 72-year-old predecessor across the street.
Examples of Hingetown's early importance are found near Church + State, including the city's oldest consecrated building, St. John Episcopal Church, opening in 1838. Veysey's first efforts at revitalizing Hingetown started in the 1854-built fire station on West 29th where he and his wife first set up living quarters. Their revitalization efforts have attracted national attention.
The apartments in Church + State aren't much to look at right now. But they do make for an abstract expression of art with four to six months of construction to go (KJP). |
The lobby in State will feature a fireplace, conference room and fitness center, all publicly accessible. The public parking, totaling about 40 spaces, will be in the middle levels of State. The rest of the 214 total parking spaces are underneath the entire site. The rooftop event space called The Lantern will be above Church where weddings, receptions, birthday parties and other gatherings can be held.
Plus, there will be 20,000 square feet of ground-floor retail and the largest bike garage on the West Side, capable of accommodating up to 200 bicycles for residents and retail workers, enhancing Church + State's community attraction.
M. Panzica Development to focus on multi-family, mixed-use and single-tenant development projects in Northeast Ohio while he's wrapping up his work with Hemingway.
Panzica and Grammar are pursuing a follow-on development called Bridgeworks on the former Cuyahoga County Engineer's property at the northeast corner of West 25th and the Detroit-Superior Bridge.
Bridgeworks will feature one or two residential buildings with a maximum height of 10 stories. Planning for Bridgeworks is moving forward simultaneously with construction coming down the home stretch for Church + State.
On the bare concrete wall, behind the construction worker, will be a six-story rock-climbing wall that will be available to the public on weekends and holidays (KJP). |
The 11-story State is the tallest building to rise in Ohio City since the 19-story Lakeview Tower, 2700 Washington Ave., was built in 1973. It is on the other side of the West Shoreway from Church + State. The 15-story Riverview Tower, 1795 West 25th, was built in 1964.
Panzica also points out that Church + State has received the first U.S. Housing & Urban Development loan for new construction in Cleveland going back as far as he could find. It's a $43 million, 40-year loan at a below-market interest rate. The project also received a $2 million, 15-year loan from Cuyahoga County.
He noted that Church + State's exterior will feature materials not typically used in Cleveland developments, such as Spanish slate and extruding planes made from white aluminum planks.
"We spent years designing this," Veysey added. "Part of our measure of success with this project will be our ability to over-deliver on the final product."
The taller State building and Church just beyond loom over the intersection of their namesakes Church Avenue and West 29th (formerly State) Street (KJP). |
"We want to make this an amenity not just for the residents but for the neighborhood where it's a place to gather," Veysey said. "It's a place to find community. That community goes way beyond the 158 apartments and its residents."
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