Friday, February 9, 2024

Cleveland seeks developers for Slavic Village school site

A boarded-up Fullerton Elementary School, shortly before it was demolished.
This now-cleared, 2.6-acre site is being offered for redevelopment by the
city of Cleveland and the Cleveland Metropolitan School District
(Google). CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE THEM.

A site in Cleveland’s Slavic Village that has hosted school facilities for the last 127 years could host a new use in the coming years depending on the response to a request for qualifications (RFQ) from prospective developers. That RFQ was issued this week by the city of Cleveland’s Department of Community Development, in partnership with the Cleveland Metropolitan School District (CMSD).

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Thursday, February 8, 2024

Browns owners buying 176 acres in Brook Park

This is the 210-acre Forward Innovation Center-West in the Cleveland suburb
of Brook Park, next to Cleveland Hopkins International Airport. Several sources
say the owners of the Cleveland Browns are acquiring most of this property, lead-
ing to speculation that this site could be the location of a new football stadium
and supportive development, absent an intensified effort by the city of Cleve-
land to retain them (Weston). CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE THEM.

The owners of the Cleveland Browns football team have reportedly reached a purchase agreement to acquire a large piece of land in the Cleveland suburb of Brook Park, leading to speculation that the Browns could leave the city of Cleveland for the second time in the team’s 78-year history.

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Tuesday, February 6, 2024

Cleveland’s MLK Plaza redevelopment plans revealed

The 52-year-old Martin Luther King Jr. Plaza in Cleveland’s Hough neigh-
borhood is due to be demolished for 118 apartments, 24 townhomes and
ground-floor retail/commercial spaces at Wade Park Avenue and Craw-
ford  Road (Google). CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARE THEM.

During a rezoning hearing for the redevelopment of Martin Luther King Jr. Plaza, 9300 Wade Park Ave. in Cleveland’s Hough neighborhood, the developer revealed her plans for the site. Those plans show the plaza would be demolished for a sizable, mixed-use development that could provide 142 residential units, both multi-family and single family, plus at least 15 leasable spaces for commercial tenants.

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Monday, February 5, 2024

Downtown Cleveland skyscraper sold to NY firm with big retail portfolio

In a sale due to close next month, a New York-based real estate investment
firm is near to taking possession of downtown Cleveland’s third-tallest sky-
scraper, 200 Public Square. Separately, a parking company is buying the
tower’s garage, not visible behind the building (Adam Greene).
CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE THEM.

According to two sources, Downtown Cleveland’s third-tallest skyscraper has been sold to a New York-based company that has more than its share of cheap or faded retail properties including many in Ohio. But the parking garage for the skyscraper, 200 Public Square, was reportedly sold separately to a buyer in Chicago that owns downtown parking properties nationwide, one of the sources said.

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Flats luxury finally coming home

A dozen luxury townhomes in Cleveland’s Flats are planned at the bottom
of the hillside along Carter Road just east of Columbus Road. This view is
looking west from the existing Lake Link Trail, toward Columbus Road and
the Regional Transit Authority viaduct. The Cuyahoga River is at right, just
out of view (Horton Harper). CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE THEM.

It’s the type of housing development that could not be achieved in Cleveland’s Flats until now. And the proof of that statement rests with the multiple prior attempts at developing this site. While there’s still a ways to go, a big step forward was made on Friday when City Planning Commission’s Design Review Committee approved the construction of luxury housing and a retaining wall along Carter Road.

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Friday, February 2, 2024

Sherwin-Williams parked its HQ parking options

Looking east along what used to be Frankfort Avenue, the new Sherwin-
Williams headquarters tower is at right or south and its new parking garage
is at left. Future phases of the headquarters campus will be built in the
 foreground (KJP). CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE THEM.

When brainstorming the next phase of Sherwin-Williams’ global headquarters in Downtown Cleveland, a big question is what to do with all of those big metal boxes that people bring to work with them each morning. On average, each one weighs 2 tons and to park one requires at least 300 square feet of storage space, including driveways and ramps. Like health care, the cost of community transportation falls onto American corporations unlike their European and Asian counterparts.

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Thursday, February 1, 2024

Cleveland’s Watterson-Lake redevelopment evolves

An updated but low-resolution rendering that was submitted to the Ohio
Housing Financing Agency shows the evolution of the Watterson-Lake
redevelopment project. It includes some design refinements like bigger
corner balconies, civic gardens and more detail for the proposed town-
homes at left. In this northwest-looking view, West 74th Street is in the
foreground and Detroit Avenue is on the other side of the proposed
large building (Stantec). CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE THEM.

More details are emerging for the proposed Watterson-Lake redevelopment in Cleveland’s Detroit-Shoreway neighborhood including the project’s growing size, parking situation, how it will be funded and who will manage the property. According to a project funding application posted earlier this month by the Ohio Housing Finance Agency (OHFA), the answer to the last question is the Cuyahoga Metropolitan Housing Authority (CMHA).

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