Wednesday, April 30, 2025

Ronayne seeks $350M to renovate lakefront stadium

The Cleveland Browns football team plays their home games at Huntington Bank
Field on Downtown Cleveland’s lakefront in a stadium built 26 years ago. The city
of Cleveland and Cuyahoga County leaders want to renovate the stadium to keep
the team and all of its hospitality-related activities downtown (HSG).
CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE THEM.

Cuyahoga County Executive Chris Ronayne has submitted a request for $350 million in state bonds to fund the renovation of the existing, city-owned Huntington Bank Field on Downtown Cleveland’s lakefront. He says it is a fair, affordable request that’s on par with what Cincinnati is seeking to rebuild its own existing football stadium.

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Tuesday, April 29, 2025

Joy Court-Old Mill Street development gets first win

Looking northeast from the intersection of Barber Avenue and West 32nd Place, the Joy
Court Townhomes at left and the Old Mill Street Apartments at right would continue the
transformation of the BVQ District of Cleveland’s Clark-Fulton neighborhood (Vocon).
CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE THEM.

There’s been lots of new housing units planned lately for the Barber-Vega-Queen (BVQ) District at the north end of Cleveland’s Clark-Fulton neighborhood. But none is as large as the project that just won support from the city’s Near West Design Review Committee.

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Monday, April 28, 2025

Haslam chides state memos on Brook Park stadium

If state funding can be secured by July, this $2.4 billion enclosed stadium could open
in time to host the first football games of the Cleveland Browns’ 2029 season. But a
previously unanticipated, competing domed stadium of similar size could open one
year later elsewhere in the eastern United States (HKS).
CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE THEM.

Two memos dropped today from two branches of state government, both urging caution when considering the Haslam Sports Group’s (HSG) economic impact projections from its proposed enclosed stadium and supportive development in suburban Brook Park. But HSG shot back, calling the reports “questionable” and “inaccurate.”

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Harvard-MIT design for power plant redo wins

Bearing no resemblance to its existing conditions of a vacant, post-industrial site,
a team of academic urban designers from Harvard-MIT proposed this vibrant
new vision for the former Lake Shore Power Plant property several miles east of
Downtown Cleveland (Harvard-MIT). CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE THEM. 

A redevelopment plan by a team of Harvard University and Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) students for the site of a former coal-fired power plant on Cleveland’s lakefront won the top prize in the 23rd annual Urban Land Institute(ULI)/Gerald D. Hines Student Urban Design Competition.

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Friday, April 25, 2025

Federal Building renovations halted


The silvery, rectangular Anthony J. Celebrezze Federal Building in Downtown Cleve-
land is seen just to the left of center. One federal tenant, the Drug Enforcement Ad-
ministration, left it years ago for the for the silver chisel of One Cleveland Center at
right where it is expanding (NEOtrans). CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE THEM.

NEOtrans has learned that, not only does the Trump Administration intend to close the Anthony J. Celebrezze (AJC) Federal Building in Downtown Cleveland, the agency responsible for federal real estate has reportedly suspended building renovations in-progress. That also means federal taxpayers may have to eat millions of dollars paid for the unfinished work.

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Thursday, April 24, 2025

Chick-fil-A opening first storefront in Cleveland

The bustling Uptown section of University Circle is where Chick-fil-A will
open its first storefront location in the city of Cleveland. The national chain
has locations inside Cleveland Hopkins International Airport and the
Cleveland State University Student Center plus two lunchtime-only
kiosk locations in the central business district (NEOtrans).
CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE THEM.

Amid all of the big development news happening around town, there’s lots of smaller commercial projects that can have a big impact on individual neighborhoods. And nearly all of these are new or expanded commercial offerings that are due to pop up on the landscape in the coming months.

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Tuesday, April 22, 2025

Metroparks seeks to redevelop riverfront lands

A centerpiece of the properties included in a request for proposals by the Cleveland
Metroparks is this 19th-century flour mill that closed in 2020. But there are other,
even older structures located away from the river that could be attractive for re-
development in a public-private partnership that is now being sought (NPS).
CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE THEM.

When the Cleveland Metroparks began seeking state funds in January to help clean up and possibly demolish a 19th-century flour mill in the Flats, there was a bit of a pushback. The Metroparks, which has done a lot of demolition along the Cuyahoga River to create public spaces, was urged by preservationists to take a different approach here.

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