Friday, April 10, 2026

AC Marriott Downtown Hotel, new CSA Group HQ get funding OK’d

The former Holiday Inn Express has closed and will be reopened as an AC Marriott Hotel,
Downtown Cleveland’s first. Built in 1896, the New England Building was the headquar-
ters of the National City Bank until it relocated in 1980 to the tower at right and was
absorbed by PNC. There are also two floors of condominiums at the top of this historic
structure (apartments.com). CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE THEM.

Two significant development projects won financing from the Port of Cleveland yesterday — with one project in Downtown Cleveland and the other in suburban Brecksville.

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Thursday, April 9, 2026

Ribbon cut on revived apartment tower that once was left for dead

Incredibly, the 10-story apartment tower 9410 Hough looks brand-new after a $47-million
redevelopment and includes the new-construction PCC Hub at right where supportive
community services are provided (NEOtrans). CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE THEM.

Today, developers Northern Real Estate Urban Ventures and SLSCO hosted a ribbon cutting celebration for the reopening of 9410 Hough at its namesake address in Cleveland’s Hough neighborhood. It officially marked the revival of a forlorn building that was left for dead and held back its surrounding neighborhood.

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City, GCRTA seek Broadway BRT, TOD

The No. 19A bus from downtown to Southgate Transit Center in Maple Heights stops on
Broadway Avenue at Harvard Road after passing the 140-year-old Holy Name Roman
Catholic Church. While much of Broadway’s urban fabric in Cleveland is gone, GCRTA
and the city are hoping developing the Broadway corridor with bus rapid transit here
will help revive it (Google). CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE THEM.

In 2008, the Greater Cleveland Regional Transit Authority’s (GCRTA) first bus rapid transit (BRT) line was the HealthLine east of downtown on Euclid Avenue to University Circle and East Cleveland.

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Wednesday, April 8, 2026

Kassouf buying downtown tower, garage

Bearing the name AmTrust Financial, 800 Superior was among the early risers on Downtown
Cleveland’s office tower canyon of East 9th Street that developed from the 1960s to the
1980s (Google). CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE THEM.

An affiliate of the Kassouf family is reportedly buying the 800 Superior office tower and its connected parking garage at its namesake address in Downtown Cleveland. That makes the third downtown property with a decayed garage in as many years that Kassouf has checked off its shopping list.

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Bedrock files Riverfront Amphitheater plans

Proposed to rise just north of the Lorain-Carnegie Hope Memorial Bridge, seen at upper-left,
is a new outdoor amphitheater sought by Bedrock Real Estate and Live Nation. The Cuya-
hoga River is just beyond Stones Levee Road to the lower-right (Bedrock).
CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE THEM.

The developer and operator of a proposed riverfront amphitheater in Downtown Cleveland submitted their preliminary, conceptual plans for the project to the city, revealing the proposed layout and amenities of the planned venue.

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Tuesday, April 7, 2026

Midtown Lofts in Asiatown near approval

A splash of color on new apartment buildings is planned with the larger one sought for the
north side of Payne Avenue in Cleveland’s Asiatown where the vacated Dave’s Super-
market stands. A second building is planned for the south side of Payne (MA Design).
CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE THEM.

With funding in hand, a development plan to reactivate the site of the first Dave’s Supermarket is entering the City of Cleveland’s design review process. And so far, the early reviews of a proposed mixed-use development at 3301 and 3338 Payne Ave. in the city’s Asiatown district are positive.

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Monday, April 6, 2026

Downtown data center to demo stores

These stores along the south side of St. Clair Avenue near East 17th Street at the edge of
Downtown Cleveland are to be razed to add generators behind a new screen wall for
the gray data center behind (Google). CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE THEM.

Amid the growing controversies surrounding the expansion of data centers in Ohio, Downtown Cleveland’s largest data center is about to get bigger. And, as part of that expansion, it’s evicting small businesses and proposing to demolish a row of storefronts along a major downtown street.

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