Wednesday, August 23, 2023

The fate of East Cleveland

Sixty years ago, my mother and two older brothers lived in the Superior
Glen Apartments at left, at the corner of Superior and Glenmont Avenues
in East Cleveland. Across Superior, at right, a small portion of Forest Hill
Park is visible. The city has fallen far in the six decades since and isn’t
done falling. Multiple apartment buildings at left were demolished. The
apartments at right were vacated in the late 2010s. The fate of Forest
Hill Park and East Cleveland is not hopeful (Google).
CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE THEM.

In the 1950s, after my mother Edith March Prendergast divorced her first husband, she moved herself and her two boys to Greater Cleveland to be near family. After a brief stay at the Alcazar Hotel, she settled at the south end of Glenmont Avenue in Cleveland Heights. Then she moved to the north end of Glenmont which is in East Cleveland. There, she, Dale and Dean stayed until the early 1960s when she married my father James and moved into his home in Lyndhurst.

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Friday, August 18, 2023

For sale: The Justice Center

Cuyahoga County is offering for sale its 2-million-square-foot, 7-acre
Justice Center complex in downtown Cleveland to the highest bidder
and the county would continue to use and lease much of the complex
for at least several more years until new, renovated and/or expanded
facilities costing upwards of $1.2 billion can replace them (Cuyahoga
County). CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE THEM.

All five above-ground buildings in downtown’s Justice Center complex, plus a below-ground parking garage, are being offered for sale by Cuyahoga County as a result of other efforts that could partially or completely vacate the entire 2-million-square-foot facility. The sale includes a three-year leaseback with four additional one-year renewal options so the county and city of Cleveland will have time to carry out those vacating efforts. No sale price was listed for the property but if you have to ask, you probably can’t afford it anyway.

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Thursday, August 17, 2023

City Club Apartments tops out

At today’s topping-off ceremony, construction workers signed the final beam
to be placed atop the new City Club Apartments tower on Euclid Avenue
near East 9th Street in downtown (Cleveland Construction Inc.).
CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE THEM

Cleveland Construction, Inc., the contractor behind the City Club Apartments project in downtown Cleveland, celebrated a significant construction milestone as the project reached its full height. The “Topping Out” event was held today and highlighted by a team lunch provided by Fahrenheit’s food truck and a ceremonial steel beam signing by all the craft professionals building the project.

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McNair tapped as new development director

Tom McNair has served leadership positions at Ohio City Inc. since 2010.
At the end of September, his workplace will move across the Cuyahoga
River to downtown, seen behind the West Side Market in the back-
ground (NAIOP). CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE THEM.

For the past 14 years, Tom McNair rode the Rapid from Shaker Square to Ohio City where he led its community development corporation in different roles. At the end of September, his train will have a new destination — Cleveland City Hall. Mayor Justin Bibb announced yesterday that McNair will be the city’s new director of economic development.

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Tuesday, August 15, 2023

Would Cliffs + USS = a new tower?

Cleveland-Cliffs is continuing to build its empire with US Steel the next item
on its shopping list. Will that result in a new headquarters tower going on the
list as well? There is a multi-year-long path where that could be the desti-
ation (Cleveland-Cliffs). CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE THEM.

Three years ago, when Cleveland-Cliffs made some big moves, NEOtrans asked the question. Three years later, we’re asking it again. If Cliffs is able to acquire rival United States Steel (USS), as recently proposed, what impact might this have on the combined company’s headquarters situation?

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Friday, August 11, 2023

Cleveland Thermal target of acquisition

The 129-year-old coal-fired Cleveland Thermal steam heating plant on Canal
Road, at right, in downtown was shut down nearly seven years ago and is next
to the big Bedrock riverfront development site. It’s worth watching to see what
happens next to this and a couple of other sites around town (Google).
CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE THEM.

As Dan Gilbert’s real estate firm gets ready to roll out the details of phase one of its riverfront development, a neighboring fixture on the banks of the Cuyahoga River since 1894 may not be around much longer. The long-closed Cleveland Thermal steam heating plant, 2274 Canal Rd., along with possibly other properties of Cleveland Thermal Generation LLC are in the process of being acquired, according to a real estate source.

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Thursday, August 10, 2023

Old Brooklyn Lofts gets early OK

Old Brooklyn Lofts is a proposed redevelopment in the heart of the project’s
namesake neighborhood of Cleveland  to convert a vacant mixed-use building
with high ceilings into apartments, most with bedroom lofts. A 12-space park-
ing lot will be constructed behind the building on the right (Google).
CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE THEM.

A Parma real estate investor and his development team won conceptual approval yesterday from a local design review panel to convert the vacant, century-old Independent Order of Odd Fellows Temple at 3409 Broadview Rd. in the heart of Cleveland’s Old Brooklyn neighborhood into loft-style apartments. The team will then refine their plans into more detail schematic designs for review by the Planning Commission’s citywide design-review committee prior to construction.

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