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7 minutes ago, Cincy513 said:

FCC applied for $26 million on their new mixed use $332.8 million development.

Birkla applied for $8 million on their $101 million redevelopment of the former Terrace Plaza hotel. 

NewcrestImage applied for $9.5 million on their $174.7 million redevelopment of the former First National Bank building. 

Acabay applied for $5.3 million for their new $71.2 million partial redevelopment of the Atrium 1 building downtown. 

Circle Development applied for $1.5 million on their $129.7 million development in Blue Ash called the Blue

CIG Communities applied for $5.5 million for the last phase of its Gallery at Kenwood development.

PLK Communities applied for $13.4 million for its $134 million second phase of the Factory 52 development in Norwood.

Liberty Center LLC applied for $7.6 million for the $76.6 million second phase of its Liberty Center development. 

Bloomfield/Schon applied for $2.5 million for the $28.5 million redevelopment of the Schuler & Benninghoften Woolen Mill in Hamilton. 

 

I hope FCC wins the most as it's by far the biggest development.  After that I hope the downtown ones win over the suburbs. 

 

Isn't it early next year when the winners will be announced? 

 

For sure I’d hope FCC wins, as well as the other downtown projects. Don’t care as much as Blue Ash or Kenwood developments. 
 

To answer your question, yes they will be announced in January I believe.

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1 hour ago, Cincy513 said:

FCC applied for $26 million on their new mixed use $332.8 million development.

Birkla applied for $8 million on their $101 million redevelopment of the former Terrace Plaza hotel. 

NewcrestImage applied for $9.5 million on their $174.7 million redevelopment of the former First National Bank building. 

Acabay applied for $5.3 million for their new $71.2 million partial redevelopment of the Atrium 1 building downtown. 

Circle Development applied for $1.5 million on their $129.7 million development in Blue Ash called the Blue

CIG Communities applied for $5.5 million for the last phase of its Gallery at Kenwood development.

PLK Communities applied for $13.4 million for its $134 million second phase of the Factory 52 development in Norwood.

Liberty Center LLC applied for $7.6 million for the $76.6 million second phase of its Liberty Center development. 

Bloomfield/Schon applied for $2.5 million for the $28.5 million redevelopment of the Schuler & Benninghoften Woolen Mill in Hamilton. 

 

I hope FCC wins the most as it's by far the biggest development.  After that I hope the downtown ones win over the suburbs. 

 

Isn't it early next year when the winners will be announced? 

 

The only other one I wouldn’t mind seeing win that’s outside of downtown would be the Factory 52 one. But I do not see them and Fc getting the money. 

5 hours ago, Jimmy Skinner said:

The 9 projects in the TMUD

  • TQL- Two 13 story blgs, 167 residential units 188 unit hotel + entertainment venue
  • Atrium One -  246 residential apartments
  • First National Bank Building 280 room hotel + 16 residential units
  • Terrace Plaza Hotel - 180 apartments + retail + restaurant
  • Liberty Center Apartments (Liberty Township) - 264 apartments
  • Schuler & Benninghoften Woolen Mill (Hamilton, OH) 125 apartments, 10,000 SF commercial space
  • Factory 52 Phase Two (Norwood)
  • Gallery at Kenwood - 10-story, 129-unit apartment building + office + retail
  • The Blue (Blue Ash) 248 apartments + office + retail

So the 19 floors for the FC hotel is down to 13? 

3 hours ago, Ucgrad2015 said:

So the 19 floors for the FC hotel is down to 13? 

No surprise there.

Some more info per CBC article related to FC development.

 

The development includes a building with three floors of office space expected to house, according to the application, a new corporate headquarters tenant paying high-wage jobs. It will house 167 multifamily residential units spanning two floors, as well as ground-floor restaurant and retail space.

A second building will consist of a 188-key, 12-floor hotel with a large ballroom and meeting spaces for conferences, conventions and major events. A 40,103-square-foot entertainment venue will host concerts and major public events. The building will feature condominiums on the building’s 13th floor.

 

 

https://www.bizjournals.com/cincinnati/news/2024/11/07/fc-west-end-terraces-apply-ohio-tmud-tax-credits.html

Edited by ucnum1

3 hours ago, ucnum1 said:

Some more info per CBC article related to FC development.

 

The development includes a building with three floors of office space expected to house, according to the application, a new corporate headquarters tenant paying high-wage jobs. It will house 167 multifamily residential units spanning two floors, as well as ground-floor restaurant and retail space.

A second building will consist of a 188-key, 12-floor hotel with a large ballroom and meeting spaces for conferences, conventions and major events. A 40,103-square-foot entertainment venue will host concerts and major public events. The building will feature condominiums on the building’s 13th floor.

 

 

https://www.bizjournals.com/cincinnati/news/2024/11/07/fc-west-end-terraces-apply-ohio-tmud-tax-credits.html

Stupid that they only have one floor of condos. At least make it 3. 

16 hours ago, ucnum1 said:

It will house 167 multifamily residential units spanning two floors, as well as ground-floor restaurant and retail space.

This is incorrect. The residential tower is 10 stories, the office portion is 2 floors plus the ground floor retail for a total of 13 stories. 

6 minutes ago, ucgrady said:

The CBC article made it sound like 3 towers plus the entertainment venue for 4 total building in this phase of development.I am not sure that is accurate.Anyways I am curious if this new headquarters office tenant will be that fortune 500 company John Barrett alluded too a few weeks ago.

 

This is incorrect. The residential tower is 10 stories, the office portion is 2 floors plus the ground floor retail for a total of 13 stories. 

 

2 hours ago, ucnum1 said:

The CBC article made it sound like 3 towers plus the entertainment venue for 4 total building in this phase of development.I am not sure that is accurate.Anyways I am curious if this new headquarters office tenant will be that fortune 500 company John Barrett alluded too a few weeks ago.

 

This is incorrect. The residential tower is 10 stories, the office portion is 2 floors plus the ground floor retail for a total of 13 stories. 

ive always been really bad at reading and comprehension, but there has to be a better way to state these last few comments. let me try and please correct me. Building A will be a 13 story hotel and ballroom. Building B will be a 10 story apartment building. the first floor will be retail. 7 floors will be apartments and 2 floors will be business offices. Building C will be a 1 or 2 story entertainment venue.

 

Personally I would add a terrace garden to the top of Building A. Good views, watch the match from outside the facility. stick around and see the city the next day. how about 13 and a half.

The entirety of FC development in CBC article fwiw 

 

FC Cincinnati is requesting $26 million for the project, expected to include renovations and additions to TQL Stadium, two 13-story mixed-use buildings, an entertainment venue and plaza and concourse space. The project is expected to cost around $332.8 million.

FC Cincinnati mixed-use districtexpand

Conceptual plans from FC Cincinnati and global design firm RIOS for a mixed-use district in Cincinnati's West End neighborhood just north of TQL Stadium.

RIOS

The development includes a building with three floors of office space expected to house, according to the application, a new corporate headquarters tenant paying high-wage jobs. It will house 167 multifamily residential units spanning two floors, as well as ground-floor restaurant and retail space.

A second building will consist of a 188-key, 12-floor hotel with a large ballroom and meeting spaces for conferences, conventions and major events. A 40,103-square-foot entertainment venue will host concerts and major public events. The building will feature condominiums on the building’s 13th floor.

Edited by ucnum1

22 minutes ago, RJohnson said:

let me try and please correct me. Building A will be a 13 story hotel and ballroom. Building B will be a 10 story apartment building. the first floor will be retail. 7 floors will be apartments and 2 floors will be business offices. Building C will be a 1 or 2 story entertainment venue.

The images in the article are out of date, but the article's description is mostly accurate "two 13-story mixed-use buildings, an entertainment venue and plaza and concourse space." Basically from what I understand instead of four individual buildings of different uses, there are now two mixed-use towers, because the office and venue space are in their bases.

Let’s just hope they get the funding this time or we’re going to see Homarama 2026 there. 

but that one house has its own pool!

homerama 2026.jpg

2 hours ago, ucnum1 said:

FC Cincinnati is requesting $26 million for the project, expected to include renovations and additions to TQL Stadium, two 13-story mixed-use buildings, an entertainment venue and plaza and concourse space. The project is expected to cost around $332.8 million.

 

well, i would give them the 26 million because $332.8 million is a lot of investment in Cincinnati.

 

I'm losing my eyesight and brain much faster than I thought. 167 multifamily units on two floors makes it seem like a huge footprint, and a huge building. 

 

2 hours ago, ucnum1 said:

The development includes a building with three floors of office space expected to house, according to the application, a new corporate headquarters tenant paying high-wage jobs. It will house 167 multifamily residential units spanning two floors, as well as ground-floor restaurant and retail space.

A second building will consist of a 188-key, 12-floor hotel with a large ballroom and meeting spaces for conferences, conventions and major events. A 40,103-square-foot entertainment venue will host concerts and major public events. The building will feature condominiums on the building’s 13th floor.

 

The first building includes.....3 floors of office space and 167 residential units on 2 floors, plus a ground floor restaurant. I count a total of 6 floors.

A/The second building will be a 13-story, 188-room hotel, a ballroom, plus meeting spaces for conferences, conventions and major events. The 13th floor will feature condominiums.

 

Maybe it's saying, one footprint that houses 167 units on 2 floors and two towers atop the base footprint.

 

image.png.8cd3abc0747f9d1f8f2f598bd1a3ab0e.png

 

Edited by RJohnson

20 minutes ago, jack.c.amos said:

but that one house has its own pool!

 

"That's so cincinnati."

  • 4 weeks later...

From the Wasson Way Team:

 

Dear Neighbor, The Ohio Department of Transportation has been working on a proposal to extend the Wasson Way to Armleder Park and the Little Miami Trail. It would use this trestle over Red Bank Expressway (and the bridge over Wooster Pike), go behind Hyde Park Lumber, and then go south along the Duck Creek stream. It would be a wonderful improvement for the east side of the City... a linear urban greenway going from Avondale to Armleder to Loveland and all the way to Columbus!

 

We need your support!!! ODOT is holding a public event on Dec. 5th from 5 to 7pm at Karrikin's in Fairfax. The community needs to show strong support.

 

If you can't attend the open house you can visit their site and register your support.

Wasson Way Input Link

469249444_10162027542250700_3980157935965643189_n.jpg

  • 2 weeks later...

Council being proactive in filling up a city owned parking lot with housing.About time.

 

MR. JEFFREYS MOTION, submitted by Councilmember Jeffreys, WE MOVE that the Administration issue a Request for Proposal (RFP) for a modular or manufactured commercial apartment housing development to be piloted on a city-owned surface parking lot in Downtown. 

13 minutes ago, ucnum1 said:

Council being proactive in filling up a city owned parking lot with housing.About time.

 

MR. JEFFREYS MOTION, submitted by Councilmember Jeffreys, WE MOVE that the Administration issue a Request for Proposal (RFP) for a modular or manufactured commercial apartment housing development to be piloted on a city-owned surface parking lot in Downtown. 

Which lot is this proposed for?

1 hour ago, ucnum1 said:

Council being proactive in filling up a city owned parking lot with housing.About time.

 

MR. JEFFREYS MOTION, submitted by Councilmember Jeffreys, WE MOVE that the Administration issue a Request for Proposal (RFP) for a modular or manufactured commercial apartment housing development to be piloted on a city-owned surface parking lot in Downtown. 

Is modular referring to something like they did in Detroit? 
 

https://builtoffsite.com.au/news/modular-construction-top-down-skyscraper/

57 minutes ago, jwulsin said:

Which lot is this proposed for?

Maybe the lot that’s just west of Hustler?

My guess would be the lot just north of City Hall at 9th and Plum that was at one point supposed to be the Public Radio site. It's owned by the city manager's office. 

1 hour ago, jwulsin said:

Which lot is this proposed for?


It's not specified. It is just asking them to release a RFP for one parking lot that is owned by the city, not one single specific one. Knowing him, he probably has one in mind but is giving the administration the leeway to specify it themselves.

 

In any case, it was just filed today. Discussion in committee and vote at full council will follow at a later time. FWIW he did not have any cosigners.

I am personally interested in offsite and modular construction technologies. That being said, it seems odd to require a specific construction approach for a downtown site. Will be curious to learn more about this initiative!

Looks like Cincinnati got 11 buildings and about $15 million from this round of HTC awards 

 

A total of 37 historic Ohio buildings received more than $56 million in state historic preservation tax credits in the latest round of awards

Project/BuildingProject AddressProject CityOHPTC Tax Credit Requested

 

 1531 Vine St.Cincinnati $250,000

 

1546 Elm St.Cincinnati $250,000

 

1st National Bank Building105 E. Fourth St.Cincinnati $5,000,000

 

210 Charles St.Cincinnati$250,000

 

33 W. Fourth St.Cincinnati $1,325,000

 

607 Main St.Cincinnati $545,000

 

 

Harry Hake Building 2358 Gilbert Ave.-2355

Cincinnati $722,000

 

 

Hooper Building 151 W. 4th

St.Cincinnati $3,353,340

 

 

St Leo The Great School 2569 St Leo Place Cincinnati $994,500

 

The Bridge Montgomery Rd 3604-08 Cincinnati $903,000

 

The Regal Theater1201 Linn St.Cincinnati $1,200,000

 

Source: Ohio Department of Development 

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On 12/11/2024 at 3:10 PM, jwulsin said:

I am personally interested in offsite and modular construction technologies. That being said, it seems odd to require a specific construction approach for a downtown site. Will be curious to learn more about this initiative!

It’s cheaper and even cheaper when you consider its faster - especially beneficial in our climate and great for those variable-rate construction loans! I’m a huge supporter of this tech and excited to see the city being pro-modular. It’s the only way forward considering the MASSIVE labor shortage we’re going to encounter in a matter of years.

8 hours ago, columbus17 said:

It’s cheaper and even cheaper when you consider its faster - especially beneficial in our climate and great for those variable-rate construction loans! I’m a huge supporter of this tech and excited to see the city being pro-modular. It’s the only way forward considering the MASSIVE labor shortage we’re going to encounter in a matter of years.

The major issue, and I speak as someone who worked on two modular buildings, is that in dense areas you are extremely unlikely to have a staging area for the modules nearby. The end result is a near endless stream of trucks arriving on site during your construction with short windows to unload their specific module and move on. It is very, VERY easy for this to go awry if you have one day where things have to stop for whatever reason then your entire schedule is blown and you wind up needing to reschedule dozens of upcoming trucks. All it takes is a couple bad traffic days to completely throw a wrench in the delivery schedule for the building if you can't stage in the immediate vicinity.

 

I love the idea of modular, the benefits to construction quality, the less waste they produce, etc., but in urban areas they have some very expensive logistical issues which will often negate a lot of the cost benefits. In the case of the two buildings I worked on, the end result was that these logistical challenges more than outweighed the cost benefits of modular construction and the projects came in way over budget as a result.

1 hour ago, jmicha said:

The major issue, and I speak as someone who worked on two modular buildings, is that in dense areas you are extremely unlikely to have a staging area for the modules nearby.

Since I think you are in New York I can see why you've had issues, but with the city owned properties, they could use other nearby city owned lots as staging and lay-down areas, plus Cincinnati in general has much more available space for staging and less traffic. I want to see more of it in the area so this would be a good test case. 

3 hours ago, ucgrady said:

Since I think you are in New York I can see why you've had issues, but with the city owned properties, they could use other nearby city owned lots as staging and lay-down areas, plus Cincinnati in general has much more available space for staging and less traffic. I want to see more of it in the area so this would be a good test case. 

Absolutely, and you think correctly I am in New York haha. There's definitely more opportunity for modular staging to work. I love the benefits, so I'm hopeful they'll be able to make it work without major issues.

On 12/11/2024 at 1:14 PM, ucnum1 said:

Council being proactive in filling up a city owned parking lot with housing.About time.

 

MR. JEFFREYS MOTION, submitted by Councilmember Jeffreys, WE MOVE that the Administration issue a Request for Proposal (RFP) for a modular or manufactured commercial apartment housing development to be piloted on a city-owned surface parking lot in Downtown. 


The presentation for this is online for today's committee meeting. It's from InnovaLab Development, a modular home company based out of the Grand Rapids metro. Apparently they built The Mills of Carthage and St. Ambrose in Evanston.

Edited by Dev

21 hours ago, Dev said:

It's from InnovaLab Development, a modular home company based out of the Grand Rapids metro. Apparently they built The Mills of Carthage and St. Ambrose in Evanston.

Sorry if this sounds snobby... but after looking through InnovaLab's portfolio, I'm not sure I love the idea of them building something downtown. InnovaLab seems to be pretty good at adding "missing middle" density, but nothing in their existing portfolio has the higher density that I think downtown needs. I'd feel more excited about this motion if it were focused on redeveloping city-owned property outside downtown. I feel a bit conflicted about the St Ambrose project in Evanston. On the one hand, it is a good example of much needed, middle density housing. It's not the most beautiful project, but it's important to have some new construction that isn't exorbitantly expensive. That being said, it's sad to see the old brick apartment building at this location appears to have had much higher density: 2011 streetview. I don't know the history of who tore town the old apartment building and why it was deemed unfeasible to renovate. But, if I had my choice, I'd rather see the old apartment building renovated rather than have it torn down and replace with lower density, modular construction. 

Not sure if innolab is doing both but the RFB is for a parking lot downtown and one outside downtown. image.thumb.png.f3f8f7ba31a905555927b5377aab427e.png

21 minutes ago, jwulsin said:

Sorry if this sounds snobby... but after looking through InnovaLab's portfolio, I'm not sure I love the idea of them building something downtown. InnovaLab seems to be pretty good at adding "missing middle" density, but nothing in their existing portfolio has the higher density that I think downtown needs.


No, I get that. They do have a section of their website, and the presentation, with multi-family, but it's only 3 floors so it'll be interesting to see if they are looking for work that would be more ambitious. I'm also interested if it's just a demonstration project in downtown so more people can see it for themselves, knowing that not everyone is going to go visit the job site that is outside of downtown. If I'm being overly optimistic, maybe they build something with 5 stories and it lasts like ten years, to be demolished for an actual mid or high rise building when financing is easier to get, let along political willpower.

In any case, this would almost certainly have to put out to public bid so I don't think it's a guarantee that they would be the ones to build on it.

11 hours ago, Dev said:


No, I get that. They do have a section of their website, and the presentation, with multi-family, but it's only 3 floors so it'll be interesting to see if they are looking for work that would be more ambitious. I'm also interested if it's just a demonstration project in downtown so more people can see it for themselves, knowing that not everyone is going to go visit the job site that is outside of downtown. If I'm being overly optimistic, maybe they build something with 5 stories and it lasts like ten years, to be demolished for an actual mid or high rise building when financing is easier to get, let along political willpower.

In any case, this would almost certainly have to put out to public bid so I don't think it's a guarantee that they would be the ones to build on it.

I've got a company in Florida that can go up to 25 stories...

On 12/18/2024 at 10:51 AM, jwulsin said:

Sorry if this sounds snobby... but after looking through InnovaLab's portfolio, I'm not sure I love the idea of them building something downtown.

If this does end up on one of the city owned surface lots between 9th and Court Street, then 3-4 stories doesn't seem out of place actually. Much of 9th street is 3 story row houses and the few remaining builidngs along the block aren't much taller. North and west of that site is single family homes so while it's not ideal density it would be a huge improvement for that large vacant feeling corner of downtown. 

1 hour ago, ucgrady said:

If this does end up on one of the city owned surface lots between 9th and Court Street, then 3-4 stories doesn't seem out of place actually. Much of 9th street is 3 story row houses and the few remaining builidngs along the block aren't much taller. North and west of that site is single family homes so while it's not ideal density it would be a huge improvement for that large vacant feeling corner of downtown. 

Yeah... pretty much anything is an improvement over surface parking downtown. But, I still hope for good, urban design that meets the sidewalk appropriately and creates a pleasant streetwall. I agree that 3-story buildings can be ok downtown, if well designed. I just don't think the InnovaLab 3-story buildings look appropriate for downtown. 

  • 4 weeks later...

https://maps.app.goo.gl/X2dHRwPBkLBxuXnc8

 

 

HEARING: HISTORIC CONSERVATION BOARD  HEARING DATE: 02-24-2025   at   3:00 PM  HEARING LOCATION: Centennial II Building, Room 508, 805 Central Avenue, Cincinnati, Ohio 45202  PRE HEARING DATE: 02-05-2025   at   9:00am  PRE HEARING

 

LOCATION:The pre-hearing conference will be conducted through a virtual platform at   https://cincinnati-oh.gov/planning/prehearing. No registration is required for the   pre-hearing.  

 

APPLICANT: BECK ENGINEERING LLC  REFERENCE REQUEST:  The applicant requests a Certificate of Appropriateness to rehabilitate the Historic Landmark St. Leo the Great School into a   25-unit senior housing apartment, including door and window modifications located in the community of North Fairmount.   Additionally, the applicant seeks Use Variance approval for a 25-unit multi-family use in a single-family District.

  • 2 weeks later...

Cincinnati set to fund demolition of long-vacant incinerator for eventual redevelopment

By Chris Wetterich – Staff reporter and columnist, Cincinnati Business Courier

Jan 23, 2025

Updated Jan 23, 2025 2:42pm EST

 

Cincinnati City Council has approved spending nearly $1.6 million to demolish an old, unused incinerator, matching money needed so the Port of Greater Cincinnati Development Authority can remove the eyesore for future redevelopment.

 

It’s been 44 years since the city of Cincinnati last burned trash in South Cumminsville, with the West Fork Incinerator sitting vacant ever since.

 

MORE

west-fork-incinerator_900x506x4032-2267-0-0.jpg

4 hours ago, The_Cincinnati_Kid said:

Cincinnati set to fund demolition of long-vacant incinerator for eventual redevelopment

By Chris Wetterich – Staff reporter and columnist, Cincinnati Business Courier

Jan 23, 2025

Updated Jan 23, 2025 2:42pm EST

 

Cincinnati City Council has approved spending nearly $1.6 million to demolish an old, unused incinerator, matching money needed so the Port of Greater Cincinnati Development Authority can remove the eyesore for future redevelopment.

 

It’s been 44 years since the city of Cincinnati last burned trash in South Cumminsville, with the West Fork Incinerator sitting vacant ever since.

 

MORE

west-fork-incinerator_900x506x4032-2267-0-0.jpg

Not an eyesore to me, but I understand why you wouldnt want to rehabilitate an old incinerator. That said I could make that a totally rocking house for 4mil. I'd wear a respirator around. Guess i need to head over soon and get some final pics.

 

Edited by SleepyLeroy

Springdale Cinemas project advances with Port of Greater Cincinnati Development Authority aid

 

A plan to build hundreds of apartments and townhouses on part of a parking lot north of Showcase Cinemas Springdale is moving forward.

 

More below:

https://www.bizjournals.com/cincinnati/news/2025/01/24/sprindale-cinemas-port-bonds-fund-project-advances.html

 

s.png

"You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers

  • Author

Between this and the Tri-County redevelopment, there's going to be a lot of new residents in Springdale.

2 hours ago, Lazarus said:

As much as I’d love to see Sundance move here I don’t think it’s gonna happen. A lot of people who go to Sundance are very outdoorsy and want the mountains and skiing. I just don’t see them flying into Cincinnati in February. I think the only upside to us is that we’re close to other large cities that could draw people down or up to cincy. 

The cost of attending the event will weigh heavily in Cincinnati's favor.As well as the Big city amenities the urban core can offer.But sure Coastal Bias may also be a element factoring into the Bid.I actually think Cincinnati will win the bid because of cost attending the event will be less than half of that of Sundance in Park City or Boulder.

 

Utah does seem to be out of it.Boulder maybe the compromise choice though.

Boulder may actually make the most sense.  Liberal college town full of artists, next to the mountains, Top 5 airport nearby for travel, pedestrian mall already existing for crowds, blah blah.  Over-the-Rhine would be amazing for a cinema festival but Sundance I've always associated with nature/mountains.  

"You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers

Sundance leaderships main priority is bringing the cost of attending the festival down considerably and making their event more accessible to more people.

 

Cincinnati offers enough amenities to interest the Hollywood folks but let's be honest this thing will likely come down to the tax breaks offered.Sundance has been losing money the past few years.That is honestly why they will be leaving Utah.

 

https://www.causeiq.com/organizations/sundance-institute,870361394/

Edited by ucnum1

"The importance that everyone has put on the arts has been one of the things that has kept the politics at bay... The politics of it or the worry of interference hasn’t ever been a factor in Cincinnati.”

 

 

ummmmmmmmm.

2 minutes ago, zsnyder said:

"The importance that everyone has put on the arts has been one of the things that has kept the politics at bay... The politics of it or the worry of interference hasn’t ever been a factor in Cincinnati.”

 

 

ummmmmmmmm.

Mapelthorpe yeah ?

Looks like Pig Works the Flying Pig marathon non profit org is in the process of buying 792 East McMillan with renovation plans for their new headquarters.

 

 


AGENDA
PRESENTATIONS
1. 202500160 PRESENTATION submitted by Sheryl M. M. Long, City Manager, dated 
1/27/2025, regarding the Cincinnati Regional Sports Commission. 
Sponsors: City Manager
Transmittal
Presentation
Attachments:
MOTIONS
2. 202500136 MOTION, submitted by Vice Mayor Kearney, WE MOVE that the 
Administration provide a report within two (2) weeks reviewing the plan by Pig 
Works to acquire and renovate 792 E. McMillan in Walnut Hills for use as its 
headquarters with $340,000 in funding from the Capital Project Fund. This 
report should include a brief summary of the project, past requests and funding 
of the project by the City of Cincinnati, any pertinent information from the 
Administration on the project, and a final recommendation by the 
Administration as to whether to fund the project. (STATEMENT ATTACHED)
Sponsors: Kearney
City of Cincinnati Page 1 Printed on 1/27/2025
1

Developer plans $13.8M housing project in Mount Washington

 

Sieber Construction got approval in December 2024 for Ohio low-income housing tax credits to finance construction of the 54-unit housing project on Beechmont Avenue.

 

More below:

https://www.bizjournals.com/cincinnati/news/2025/01/28/sieber-construction-senior-housing-mt-washington.html

 

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"You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers

Overall this years there’s going to be a good chunk of mid/high rises under construction. 

Under construction/starting this year

 

1. Convention Center Hotel (26 floors)

2. FC Cincinnati development (2-13 floor towers)

3. Factory 52 development (10 floor? Apartment tower)

3. Medpace (7 I think floor tower)

4. Uc Block 1 and 2 (9/14 floor towers) (6 floor smaller tower)

5. Peace Bell site(7 floor hotel)


Maybe this year?

 

1. District at Clifton Heights tower (26 floors) (haven’t heard any updates on this) 

2. Other developments around UC (seems to be a decent amount of new apartment buildings in the works around campus, not sure of the floor counts though) 

3. Margaritaville hotel (15 floors)

4. Covington Central riverfront (not really and renderings but could see a couple 6-7 floor buildings) 

 

No idea if/when it will happen 

 

1. Western and Southern development (no idea of size but did mention a 400 room hotel)

2. Gallery at Kenwood (10 floor tower) 

3. Central Parkway apartments (7 floors at the Northwestern corner of Central Parkway and Vine)

4. Spot just to the East of Convention Center hotel (was mention of a possible tower but that was a few years ago)

5. Northeast corner of 7th and Vine (7 floor apartment tower)

 

Im sure there may be some that I am missing and some that could prolly be moved around but just what I am getting from most up to date news article. 
 

Hopefully Cincinnati can start gaining more new mid/high-rises. Seems like Cleveland has been doing decent and Columbus seems to be heating up. 

 

 

 

Edited by Ucgrad2015
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