Seeds & Sprouts XVIII — Hingetown bags grocer, Innovation Square to rise, Franklin West spaces out
Hingetown bags grocer, Innovation Square to rise, Franklin West spaces out.
Read MoreHingetown bags grocer, Innovation Square to rise, Franklin West spaces out.
Read MoreAn executive-level committee at Sherwin-Williams (SHW) has made a critical decision — the final height of its new headquarters tower just west of downtown Cleveland’s Public Square. According to sources on the HQ design team, the height decided by SHW’s Building Our Future Committee is 600 feet.
Read More600 feet above the street: Sherwin-Williams sets HQ height Read More »
A 23-story apartment tower proposed to rise on Euclid Avenue in downtown Cleveland has seen potential groundbreaking dates come and go, delayed by several factors. While most of the factors are largely beyond the control of Farmington Hills, MI-based City Club Apartments (CCA), some of the delays are reportedly the developer’s fault.
Read MoreCity Club Apartments tower sees delays Read More »
As first reported here at NEOtrans last summer, Cleveland State University (CSU) began a search for a consultant to help it design a new downtown campus masterplan. That consultant has been found, with CSU hiring Boston-based Sasaki Associates Inc.
Read MoreCSU starts campus masterplan process Read More »
In addition to a spate of high-rise developments on the horizon, there are also new low- to mid-rise developments just around the corner, too. One of them is a project that was originally proposed to be a mid- to high-rise building.
Instead, a mixed-use building representing the first salvo for the second half of the Flats East Bank development will be reduced from 11 or 12 stories down to seven or eight stories. And, as NEOtrans learned this week, its construction timeline will be pushed back by about five or six months.
New Flats East Bank tower to be shorter, groundbreaking delayed Read More »
Construction is beginning on the first of three buildings that will comprise a $60-million mixed-use project in Cleveland’s Clark-Fulton neighborhood. The building is being developed by The NRP Group, The MetroHealth System and CCH Development Corp. — a public-private partnership that will strengthen and revitalize the west side neighborhood by filling a need for high-quality housing.
Read MoreWork starts on Via Sana on West 25th near MetroHealth Read More »
Clark Avenue is one of those strange streets in Cleveland with an odd mix of buildings.
It has a lot of older structures. On the sidewalks are storefronts and taverns topped by a few apartments. There’s a scattering of light industrial buildings from the 1800s and early 1900s. And then there’s all those newer single-use buildings — mostly fast-food restaurants and small-box stores — set back behind lots of pavement and empty parking spaces.
First new multi-family housing in a century planned on Clark Ave. Read More »
UPDATED DEC. 16, 2020
One of the last surviving Euclid Avenue mansions is facing possible demolition to make way for a significant mixed-use real estate development by a national developer. It is one of several real estate developments popping up in the area.
Read MoreEuclid Avenue mansion may be razed for new development Read More »
This week I took a tour of the completed portion of the Opportunity Corridor, a project whose side mission is to change land use and turn dirt in a part of the city where the dirt hasn’t been turned in a very long time.
Read MoreSeeking opportunity in the Opportunity Corridor Read More »
Presidential candidate Ross Perot in 1992 famously referred to a “huge sucking sound” when it came to jobs leaving the USA. When money starts pouring into a city like Cleveland, it ought to make a sound, too. It is, and people are noticing.
Read MoreCleveland’s profile soars among out-of-state investors Read More »