UPDATED AUG. 21, 2020
If you missed seeing construction cranes over downtown Cleveland, you may not have to wait long for their return. With the city's approval of final designs tomorrow for the City Club Apartments, the first of several cranes likely in 2021 could sprout in the spring.
A member of the development team for City Club Apartments said the project is on track to break ground in November for the firm's first project in Cleveland. The comments were made this week at City Planning Commission and at the city's Downtown/Flats Design Review Committee. Both panels unanimously approved final designs for the project.
"The developer is doing everything they can to start construction in November," said Denver Brooker, a principal at Vocon Partners LLC, the project's architect. "A lot has changed in the world since February (when Planning Commission last reviewed City Club Apartments) but this project has stayed the course."
But sources said that City Club Apartments was able to nail down financing for its proposed 23-story Cleveland tower at 720 Euclid Ave. Part of that financing involved refinancing City Club's Cincinnati property through the issuance of $68.5 million in debt by Asia Capital Real Estate.
City Club said in a press release this week it has $750 million worth of projects under development/construction in Cincinnati, Detroit, Chicago, Pittsburgh, Minneapolis, Kansas City, Louisville and Cleveland with expansion planned for the East Coast.
The 250,000-square-foot Cleveland tower has a projected construction cost in the $85 million to $100 million range. That's based on the construction costs of two other Euclid Avenue apartment towers built in the last two years -- the 28-story Beacon and the 34-story Lumen. The latter is Ohio's tallest residential building at 396 feet. City Club's tower is proposed to reach to 241 feet in structural height but a rooftop decorative element could bring that to about 250 feet.
Although this tower will be shorter than the two latest apartment towers, it promises a dynamic street presence featuring a glassy, two-level retail/lobby base and extensive landscaping, including "four season" vegetation that would incorporate fake plants above the building's lobby. The owner will maintain the real and fake vegetation. Proposed retail includes a cafe, restaurant and a doggy day care business. On the rooftop amenity deck would be an indoor/outdoor terrace and swimming pool.
In between, City Club and its design team at Cleveland-based Vocon proposed about 313 market-rate apartments, roughly half of which will be 400-square-foot studio apartments. The smaller units will be marketed to younger residents who have been priced out of the downtown market. There will also be one-, two- and three-bedroom units measuring up to 1,400 square feet, according to schematic plans approved by Planning Commission Feb. 21. That housing mix hasn't changed in this final plan.
"The design is exhuberant and iconic," said design-review committee member Jack Bialosky. "But it is a fashion statement in some ways. I look forward to a conversation about it (the design) in 20 years."
The City Club Apartments, named after the development and management company, has no connection to the Cleveland City Club meeting and event venue located next door at 850 Euclid. The site for the apartment building was chosen because it is currently one of the last surface parking lots left on Euclid downtown.
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