Up to $200M tower renovation starting
It’s perhaps the best news for Downtown Cleveland’s troubled office market since 2020 when Sherwin-Williams announced it would build a new headquarters here. PNC Bank today confirmed to NEOtrans it will spend big on improving its own skyscraper — including adding new storefronts along Euclid Avenue.
Several persons spoke in recent days to NEOtrans on the condition of anonymity about the scale of the improvements to PNC Center, a 35-story tower built in 1980 by PNC predecessor National City Bank at 1900 E. 9th St. Those sources described the investment as reaching up to $20 million per year over 10 years.
A PNC spokesperson confirmed the improvements — news that follows the bank ending remote and hybrid work by requiring employees to return to the office five days a week which started May 4. More than 1,000 people work for PNC at its Cleveland office tower after the bank consolidated much of its Greater Cleveland workforce downtown in 2018.
“As part of our ongoing commitment to downtown Cleveland, we continue to invest in PNC Center and the broader Cleveland market,” said Lynn Sexton, PNC’s director of regional communications, in an e-mail to NEOtrans. She didn’t dispute the $200 million renovation figure when asked about it.
The planned improvements by Pittsburgh-based PNC include modernizing technology, making facility repairs including to the tower and parking garage, updating unused office spaces for lease, and replacing elevators.
PNC Center totals 668,500 square feet. Of that, the bank’s offices occupy only about 166,000 square feet. Although PNC’s tower is 35 stories and Sherwin-Williams’ $750 million HQ is 36 stories, PNC’s is only 410 feet tall. That’s 200 feet shorter than Sherwin-Williams’ HQ.
About $8 million worth of work is about to get underway on interior demolitions among floors 5, 6, 7 and 9, according to plans submitted to the city’s Building Department in May by IKM Architecture. The design firm was founded in Pittsburgh but added a Downtown Cleveland office in 2024.
Completely new interiors on each of those 19,100-square-foot floors — new partition layouts, new finishes, and new mechanical-electrical-plumbing systems — will follow and will likely represent a more significant dollar investment than the amount spent for the interior demolitions.
PNC will also be adding amenities for its employees and tenants such as new conference rooms, enhanced common areas, new fitness facilities and other improvements to make the building more competitive, the sources said.
But one of the most visible changes is already starting — on the ground level. PNC is investing $2.75 million on a reconstruction of the 14,280-square-foot PNC Plaza, located at the northwest corner of East 9th and Euclid Avenue, public records show.
Work will include new concrete pavement, new pavers atop the pavement, plus new fountain, bollards and landscaping. Rycon Construction Inc. of Cleveland is the general construction contractor and Osborn Engineering, also of Cleveland, designed the new plaza.
Next to the plaza, on the ground floor of PNC Center’s four-story annex, will be three new retail spaces along Euclid where none had ever existed before. Marketing materials for those spaces, offering more than 10,000 square feet in total, have already been released publicly.
“The retail storefront spaces at PNC Center are currently available and actively being marketed to prospective tenants,” Sexton said.
Cushman & Wakefield | CRESCO Real Estate is handling the leasing of the three retail spaces. Its Senior Vice President Ryan Fisher declined to comment.
According to the sources, PNC wants at least one of those retail spaces to be filled with a top-notch restaurant that will not only activate the indoor space but part of the plaza as well with an al fresco dining area.
“We are focused on building upon the positive momentum occurring downtown by activating these retail spaces with tenants and amenities that enhance the experience for employees, building visitors, and the surrounding community,” Sexton added.
Requests for proposals will also likely be issued for larger blocks of office space at PNC Center. One is for floors 2-4 in the annex and the other will reportedly be for floors 25-33 in the tower.
The upper floors in the tower were occupied by law firm BakerHostetler until 2006 when it relocated to Key Tower. Those office spaces, including an interior staircase, were never used by PNC.
This prime space has sat empty ever since. PNC will rebuild those eight floors so they and the annex can be marketed to larger tenants locally and nationally, the sources said.
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