Properties that were part of Stark Enterprises’ ill-fated nuCLEus megaproject are in the process of being sold in a private, off-market transaction. However, the scope of the sale, the buyer’s identity and the buyer’s intentions remain a mystery. Public records emerged this week showing that there is a pending transaction.
Friday, December 31, 2021
Wednesday, December 29, 2021
The 20 most-viewed news stories of 2021 on NEOtrans
Screenshot of the most viewed NEOtrans article of 2021 — Cleveland Clinic plans to demolish the former Cleveland Play House complex on Euclid Avenue (NEOtrans). CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE THEM |
Personal experiences matter. That’s the lesson of why one news article gets opened and another article does not. It’s why the pending demolition of the Cleveland Play House was the most-read story of 2021. It got read because people went to see a show there once upon a time, not because it was the only Cleveland-area project designed by a famous Cleveland-born architect, Philip Johnson.
Monday, December 27, 2021
Is Downtown Cleveland in Target’s bullseye?
The upscale discount retail giant Target is in expansion mode. It is focusing on locations in downtowns, near colleges and dense suburbs for small, urban-format stores. But will downtown Cleveland or perhaps University Circle be under consideration?
Friday, December 24, 2021
Brooklyn Masonic Hall repurposing as Lofts On Pearl
A Lakewood real estate entrepreneur and construction contractor has acquired the vacant Brooklyn Masonic Temple, 3804 Pearl Rd., in Cleveland and plans to renovate it into a mixed-use building called the Lofts On Pearl. It remains to be seen if the project will live up to the Masonic purpose of making good men better.
Thursday, December 23, 2021
Baker Building to be The Fidelity Hotel, speakeasy
Wednesday, December 22, 2021
Kan Zaman expands, Ohio City parking crater endures
Monday, December 20, 2021
Cleveland’s new police HQ, mounted unit, fire station all start
City officials broke ground for three major developments for the Department of Public Safety last week, in the waning days of Mayor Frank Jackson’s administration. They were a new police department headquarters, a relocated Mounted Police facility and a new Fire Station No. 26, replacing Cleveland’s longest-operating fire station. All three new developments are located on the city’s East Side.