February 12, 20205 yr Beulah Park developer plans new event to show off $350M project after Parade of Homes cancellation -- https://www.bizjournals.com/columbus/news/2020/02/04/beulah-park-developer-plans-new-event-to-show-off.html Since the 2020 Parade of Homes will not be held in Grove City's 220-acre Beulah Park development, Beulah Park developers are looking at holding their own event instead. The event, according to Pat Kelley of Falco Smith & Kelley, "will be inclusive of the wide range of living options at Beulah Park," noting that several projects have made progress at the former racetrack in the past year. The $350 million project includes 264 apartments, 104 ranch homes, 80 townhome-style condominiums, a 94-unit assisted living facility, 84 larger estate-style home lots and 132 smaller starter-home lots. Townsend Construction recently went vertical on its 264-unit apartment development, while Pulte Homes has filed permits for a model home for another single-family portion of the development. The Danbury Assisted Living project is also under construction.
February 12, 20205 yr 40 minutes ago, Columbo said: The Building Industry Association of Central Ohio announced last week they were cancelling the 2020 Parade of Homes: https://www.dispatch.com/business/20200203/parade-of-homes-canceled-this-year-first-time-in-47-years https://www.bizjournals.com/columbus/news/2020/02/03/the-2020-parade-of-homes-is-canceled-heres-why.html The 2020 Parade of Homes was scheduled to be held in September at Grove City's 220-acre Beulah Park development. However, the cancellation had alot more to do with the direction that the Parade of Homes has taken and the overhang of unsold homes from last year's Parade of Homes in Delaware County's Evans Farm, then this year's Beulah Park site. Only three of the 14 homes from the 2019 Parade of Homes in Evans Farm site have sold, and two of those were pre-sold. This amount of very expensive unsold homes from last year’s event caused a lot of builders to be reluctant to commit for 2020. This is somewhat of a culmination of how the Parade of Homes has morphed into a showcase for ever more expensive and elaborate custom homes over the past two decades. The homes in last year’s event ranged from $725,000 to $1.3 million, illustrating how the Parade has grown far beyond the reach of most buyers. In a news release, the BIA said the Parade will return in 2021 after being reformatted “to meet the needs of both its members as well as consumers" and "as Central Ohio and the building industry evolve, so too will the Parade.” Speculation is that multiple sites involving more affordable homes might be a part of the 2021 format. I remember going to a Parade of Homes in the early '90s in Gahanna and people were like "My God, this house is $252,000!" I remember another one was $180K and people were more open to that.
October 19, 20204 yr Beulah Park redevelopment update from the Dispatch: https://www.thisweeknews.com/story/business/real-estate/2020/10/12/former-beulah-park-racetrack-now-alive-construction/5937062002/ The 212-acre development, on the site of the former Beulah Park racetrack, features a housing smorgasbord, with activity on almost all items: • After some supply chain delays, the first phase of Beulah Place Apartments, which includes 264 units, is expected to open in November following the recent completion of the apartment clubhouse. Another 141 apartments are planned in a second phase. • The first homeowners have moved into Epcon Communities' new patio home development, called The Courtyards at Beulah Park, which will include 102 homes when completed. • Work is well under way at the Danbury Senior Living facility, which will feature 92 homes for seniors when it opens in the spring along with 30 "villas" to be built next door. • Pulte Homes has just opened a model at its Grove at Beulah Park single-family home development. Work is under way on the development's first phase of 52 homes while another phase of 81 homes is planned. • Three homes have started in The Paddock, the community's single family custom home portion that will overlook the 32-acre park in the middle of the development.. • Work is scheduled to begin in the spring on 82 townhomes, the final item on the housing menu. The pandemic has slowed commercial activity at the development, but Beulah Park Living landed the first tenant for a string of commercial sites along Southwest Boulevard on the northern end of the project. OhioHealth plans to build a medical office at the southeast corner of Southwest Boulevard and Columbus Street. More info and photos of the Beulah Park construction is available at https://www.thisweeknews.com/story/business/real-estate/2020/10/12/former-beulah-park-racetrack-now-alive-construction/5937062002/
January 30, 20214 yr https://www.thisweeknews.com/story/news/local/grove-city/2020/12/29/grove-city-2021-focus-planning-not-just-year-but-next-20-plus/4002400001/ Projects that Grove City hopes to start in 2021: -- The Columbus Street extension that will serve to connect Grove City's Town Center with the new Beulah Park Living development. The Columbus Street project was originally expected to get underway in 2020, but the pandemic and the process of the city negotiating with the owners of 18 properties affected by the planned expansion lead to pushing the starting date back. "We hope to start construction before the end of January, and it will be a four- or five-month project," Mayor Stage said. -- The city also expects to take the first steps toward developing a 30-acre park that will be in the middle of the Beulah Park development. A public amphitheater is planned as a centerpiece for the park, but a timeline for its development is still being finalized. The city has applied for $1 million from the state's capital budget to help fund the $3.5 million amphitheater project, Mayor Stage said. -- Beulah Park is one of three public recreational-space projects the city has preliminary concepts for. The other two planned projects are the redevelopment of the old Grove City Public Library parcel on Park Street and an adjacent city-owned parcel into a park site and the creation of a new park in the Pinnacle development. -- The decisions regarding the parks at Beulah and the old library site will be shaped in part by the recommendations in the Town Center conceptual framework, which is expected to be adopted in 2021.
January 30, 20214 yr An updated version of Grove City's Town Center framework was presented at a special City Council meeting January 25: https://www.thisweeknews.com/story/news/local/grove-city/2021/01/28/grove-citys-town-center-framework-focus-shifts-but-core-goals-remain/4268548001/
April 5, 20214 yr Columbus Street extension - From Broadway north of the new Southwest Public Libraries: Grove City Branch to the Beulah Park Redevelopment (4-4-21) The Columbus Street extension will also connect to Meadow Lane The new extension will meet up with the now finished section of Columbus Street in the Beulah Park Redevelopment on the other side of the I&O tracks Just south of the extension, a mixed use building has been proposed at 3455 West Cleveland Ave (to replace the single family home pictured below) Beulah Park Redevelopment Redevelopment Map Beulah Park Apartments Looking south east towards the Columbus Street extension and Grove City Town Center Most of the redevelopment west of Columbus Street will be single family homes and condominiums around a central park managed by Grove City
April 6, 20214 yr ^Wouldn’t be cool if that railroad was a commuter rail line? It’s a straight shot to downtown. Just dreaming....
June 11, 20214 yr Grove City Council OKs Pulte Homes' preliminary plan by 3-2 vote Alan Froman - ThisWeek News - June 10, 2021 "A residential development proposed by Pulte Homes of Ohio will move toward a final development plan, but the developer will work with the city to address traffic and other issues. Grove City Council narrowly approved the preliminary development plan June 7 by a 3-2 vote. Pulte is proposing a total of 399 homes on a 145-acre site north of London Groveport Road (state Route 665) and east of Jackson Pike (state Route 104)."
September 8, 20213 yr "Bringing manufacturing back home": Grove City PPE glove factory plans to hire 400 Mark Williams - The Dispatch - Sep. 8, 2021 "A Grove City warehouse is being converted into a factory meant to bring back to the United States production of a key item in the fight against COVID-19: nitrile gloves. A Columbus native is behind the more than $100 million project that will create 400 jobs and initially produce 4.6 billion medical and nonmedical, latex-free nitrile gloves a year. Production at the 527,000-square-foot plant at 3500 Southwest Blvd. is expected to begin early next year. ... The company expects production to begin this winter, and all 12 lines of the first phase should be running in 2022. Those lines will be able to make 40,000 gloves per hour or 3.6 billion a year. As production scales up, so will hiring. Block said wages for production workers will mostly range from $45,000 to $65,000 per year."
September 8, 20213 yr 13 minutes ago, NorthShore647 said: "Bringing manufacturing back home": Grove City PPE glove factory plans to hire 400 Mark Williams - The Dispatch - Sep. 8, 2021 "A Grove City warehouse is being converted into a factory meant to bring back to the United States production of a key item in the fight against COVID-19: nitrile gloves. A Columbus native is behind the more than $100 million project that will create 400 jobs and initially produce 4.6 billion medical and nonmedical, latex-free nitrile gloves a year. Production at the 527,000-square-foot plant at 3500 Southwest Blvd. is expected to begin early next year. ... The company expects production to begin this winter, and all 12 lines of the first phase should be running in 2022. Those lines will be able to make 40,000 gloves per hour or 3.6 billion a year. As production scales up, so will hiring. Block said wages for production workers will mostly range from $45,000 to $65,000 per year." Absolutely brilliant idea. Nitrile gloves are the best type of disposable gloves for almost every situation, they're currently way too expensive, there's always a need for them and the food industry each year moves closer and closer to banning other types of disposable gloves which would make the market for nitrile even larger especially if they stop being $12 for 50 pairs.
September 9, 20213 yr 13 hours ago, TIm said: Absolutely brilliant idea. Nitrile gloves are the best type of disposable gloves for almost every situation, they're currently way too expensive, there's always a need for them and the food industry each year moves closer and closer to banning other types of disposable gloves which would make the market for nitrile even larger especially if they stop being $12 for 50 pairs. Depending on what you personally need them for may I suggest Harbor Freight
December 5, 20213 yr I was in Grove City earlier, so i thought i would drive through and check the progress on the redevelopment of the old Beulah Park property while I was there. Progress is evident but seems to be moving a little slower than other projects across Franklin County. Edited December 5, 20213 yr by CbusOrBust
December 5, 20213 yr 20 minutes ago, CbusOrBust said: I was in Grove City earlier, so i thought i would drive through and check the progress on the redevelopment of the old Beulah Park property while I was there. Progress is evident but seems to be moving a little slower than other projects across Franklin county. I wonder if for the single family houses they are selling individual lots to developers or waiting for people to buy the lots to build on it. My parents new house in Newark is in a neighborhood that was built like this. Not all cookie cutter, but you can certainly tell which ones were made by the same developer and then the ones where people purchased lots and built a custom home look completely different.
December 5, 20213 yr Just now, TIm said: I wonder if for the single family houses they are selling individual lots to developers or waiting for people to buy the lots to build on it. My parents new house in Newark is in a neighborhood that was built like this. Not all cookie cutter, but you can certainly tell which ones were made by the same developer and then the ones where people purchased lots and built a custom home look completely different. That's a good question. And I'm not really sure. But after being out at Evans Farm yesterday, it's pretty obvious they're moving quite a bit slower at Beulah Park.
January 13, 20223 yr More from Beulah Park: Looks like they're starting on some non-residential projects as well
January 19, 20223 yr Grove City's Beulah Park development cruising toward completion “A project the magnitude of Falco, Smith and Kelley's Beulah Park would typically take more than a decade to finish. The Grove City mixed-use project is an ambitious undertaking, sprawling across more than 210 acres, with 972 residential units including townhomes, apartments and single-family homes, according to its master plan document. Its commercial component contains a maximum of 196,800 square feet, and to top it off, the site contains about 30 acres of green space developer Pat Kelley refers to as Central Park. The project broke ground in May 2019, and was broken down into two phases. The second phase wrapped up its infrastructure — which Kelley said cost about $28 million — recently, bringing the timeline of the project significantly down from what it would typically be.“ https://www.bizjournals.com/columbus/news/2022/01/19/grove-city-beulah-park-development.html
May 6, 20223 yr Metro Development adding 48 apartment units near Grove City “Metro Development will add to Alkire Woods next to Brookfield Village, an apartment complex the developer created a few years ago. The 48 units will go in three additional apartment buildings. The existing apartments are next to single-family homes it put up in the early 2000s, said Tre' Giller, president and CEO of Metro Development. Giller said he hopes to break ground on Alkire Woods in the fall and wrap up in the spring of 2023. Metro owns the vacant site. Columbus City Council passed rezoning and variances for Alkire Woods this week.“ https://www.bizjournals.com/columbus/news/2022/05/06/alkire-woods-metro-development.html
June 2, 20223 yr Cardinal Health to create 100 jobs with Grove City distribution center "Drug distribution company Cardinal Health announced Thursday it will create about 100 jobs with the opening of a new distribution center in Grove City. The center is projected to be fully operational in November and is part of a multi-year warehouse modernization and growth plan, according to a press release. The 208,144-square-foot location will work to support Cardinal Health's at-Home Solutions business, which provides medical supplies for in-home care aimed at those with chronic or serious health conditions. It is the 10th distribution center in the U.S. for Cardinal Health at-Home Solutions. The news comes on the heels of a 574,670-square-foot distribution facility announced at the end of March and set to open later this year." https://www.dispatch.com/story/business/2022/06/02/cardinal-health-open-new-distribution-center-grove-city/7483260001/
June 9, 20223 yr TrePlus starts construction on Grove City project, eyes national expansion “After years of planning, Columbus-based TrePlus Communities has finally begun construction on its Grove City active adult community and is eyeing a nationwide expansion. The Grove City project, Sugar Maple Commons, will bring 105 units to the area, CEO Jane Arthur Roslovic told Columbus Business First. The firm is also getting ready to start work on its first out-of-state community, in Indianapolis. Sugar Maple will be the firm's sixth such community in Ohio. It has communities in Delaware, Dublin, Pickerington, Centerville, and last year, announced plans to put one in Westerville. Units will be available for adults 55 and older, according to TrePlus' website. The site's amenities include a clubhouse, pool and community garden.” https://www.bizjournals.com/columbus/news/2022/06/09/treplus-sugar-maple-commons-national-expansion.html
June 9, 20223 yr On 12/5/2021 at 12:59 PM, TIm said: I wonder if for the single family houses they are selling individual lots to developers or waiting for people to buy the lots to build on it. My parents new house in Newark is in a neighborhood that was built like this. Not all cookie cutter, but you can certainly tell which ones were made by the same developer and then the ones where people purchased lots and built a custom home look completely different. I grew up in a planned suburb but there were dozens of types of homes in all kinds of styles, sizes, materials, etc. I can't stand these new developments with everything looking alike. It is soul killing.
June 16, 20222 yr Grove City annexes land in Jackson Township, paving way for medical, innovation gateway "The city of Grove City's vision to create a Southwest Regional Medical and Innovation Gateway near the Mount Carmel Grove City hospital has moved another step closer to reality. City Council on June 6 approved the annexation of five properties totaling about 565 acres in Jackson Township. "This is probably the second-most vast annexation we've done in Grove City, at least in my time," Stage said "Generally speaking, the gateway is planned for an area south of Orders Road and west of Hoover Road", Stage said. "It's an area we've been looking at for a long time as being ideal to help meet the increased demand for office, research and development and light-industrial uses." Plans for the area also include infrastructure improvements such as a new I-71 overpass to unlock development opportunities and provide a new community connection to reduce the burden on the existing roadway network." https://www.dispatch.com/story/news/local/communities/grove-city/2022/06/16/grove-city-annexations-jackson-township-southwest-regional-medical-innovation-gateway/7626279001/
August 9, 20222 yr Grove City's Beulah Park Living: Lennar, Epcon home plans headed to council for approval “Grove City Council is next in line to consider approval of plans for two single-family developments planned for Beulah Park Living. The planning commission Aug. 2 voted to recommend that council approve the final plans for Lennar Homes' proposed 19-lot development along Kassidy Avenue and Rose Lane and Epcon Communities' proposal for a development on 11 lots on Rose Lane between Columbus Street and Beulah Park Drive. Both developments are within the same subarea portion of the Beulah Living development area. The Lennar development is expected to offer buyers about 15 types of elevations to choose from, said attorney Rebecca Mott, who represented the developer.” https://www.dispatch.com/story/news/local/communities/grove-city/2022/08/05/beulah-park-living-lennar-epcon-home-plans-headed-grove-city-council/
September 1, 20222 yr Hampton hotel, retail space planned for Grove City's Stringtown Road “Stringtown Road in Grove City has a modest vacant lot that a developer thinks is just right for a hotel and retail space. Columbus-based hotel development and management company Indus Hotels is seeking to build a mixed-use development at the 2.9-acre site that would feature 5,000 square feet of retail space for two tenants at the front of the site, with one tenant potentially a restaurant. At the rear would be a 15,500-square-foot 5-story Hampton Inn & Suites hotel with 128 rooms. The site is adjacent to the Waffle House at 4140 Marlane Drive on the south side of Stringtown Road and on the west side of Interstate 71, according to city documents.” https://www.dispatch.com/story/news/local/communities/grove-city/2022/09/01/grove-city-hampton-inn-suites-retail-space-planned-stringtown-road/
September 1, 20222 yr 4 minutes ago, amped91 said: Hampton hotel, retail space planned for Grove City's Stringtown Road “Stringtown Road in Grove City has a modest vacant lot that a developer thinks is just right for a hotel and retail space. Columbus-based hotel development and management company Indus Hotels is seeking to build a mixed-use development at the 2.9-acre site that would feature 5,000 square feet of retail space for two tenants at the front of the site, with one tenant potentially a restaurant. At the rear would be a 15,500-square-foot 5-story Hampton Inn & Suites hotel with 128 rooms. The site is adjacent to the Waffle House at 4140 Marlane Drive on the south side of Stringtown Road and on the west side of Interstate 71, according to city documents.” https://www.dispatch.com/story/news/local/communities/grove-city/2022/09/01/grove-city-hampton-inn-suites-retail-space-planned-stringtown-road/ Stringtown is a hellscape and is designed horribly. It’s almost impossible to get out of the businesses that are already there.
September 1, 20222 yr 1 minute ago, VintageLife said: Stringtown is a hellscape and is designed horribly. It’s almost impossible to get out of the businesses that are already there. I dread any time I have to go over there.
September 1, 20222 yr 55 minutes ago, VintageLife said: Stringtown is a hellscape and is designed horribly. It’s almost impossible to get out of the businesses that are already there. It is really bad and it reminds me of Hilliard-Rome also. It is barely tolerable outside of rush hours. I avoid both of these during rush hours if at all possible.
September 13, 20222 yr Mixed-Use Development Planned for Grove City’s Town Center A new proposal could bring 200 apartments and a 35,000-square-foot food hall to Grove City’s Town Center. Planned for about four-and-a-half acres of land at the corner of Broadway and Columbus Street, the project would essentially be built around the two existing single-story buildings that hold Zassy’s Tap Room and Grove City Brewing Company. A number of other buildings would need to be demolished to make way for the new development, including the former Schoedinger Norris funeral home and several commercial buildings on Columbus Street. The project was announced today by Axiom Ventures, a Columbus-based firm founded by Ethan Temianka and Tim Kaskewsky. Renderings released as part of the announcement show a two-story food hall and event center opening up to a central plaza. A four-story building on Broadway would hold apartments above ground-level retail, and a larger, six-story apartment building would be set back farther from the street. More below: https://columbusunderground.com/mixed-use-development-planned-for-grove-citys-town-center-bw1/ "You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers
September 13, 20222 yr Awesome - now all Grove City needs is a light rail connection to downtown Columbus! The track is there! 😃
September 14, 20222 yr Some Columbus suburbs are really starting to bring the heat with more and more urban (or urban-lite) development. It's great to see!
September 14, 20222 yr 2 minutes ago, cbussoccer said: Some Columbus suburbs are really starting to bring the heat with more and more urban (or urban-lite) development. It's great to see! Yep, I am happy to see all of it. Build up those urban centers and then fund better transit between all of them! This development also looks like it doesn’t have a lot of parking spaces, which is awesome.
September 14, 20222 yr 7 minutes ago, VintageLife said: Yep, I am happy to see all of it. Build up those urban centers and then fund better transit between all of them! Exactly. The more urban nodes we have spread throughout the metro area, ideally connected by reliable mass transit, the more realistic it becomes to live without a car or turn a two-car family into a one-car family.
September 14, 20222 yr 6 hours ago, cbussoccer said: Exactly. The more urban nodes we have spread throughout the metro area, ideally connected by reliable mass transit, the more realistic it becomes to live without a car or turn a two-car family into a one-car family. We really do need these denser nodes popping up all over the metro area-particularly along existing corridors so maybe some real mass transit can connect them-just like you said. Hopefully Intel and all it brings will only fuel the fire of growth and the needing housing(in addition to the that will come with it. Although they need to meet the growth and the backlog so they need to really get moving and building.
September 14, 20222 yr 23 hours ago, ColDayMan said: Mixed-Use Development Planned for Grove City’s Town Center A new proposal could bring 200 apartments and a 35,000-square-foot food hall to Grove City’s Town Center. Planned for about four-and-a-half acres of land at the corner of Broadway and Columbus Street, the project would essentially be built around the two existing single-story buildings that hold Zassy’s Tap Room and Grove City Brewing Company. A number of other buildings would need to be demolished to make way for the new development, including the former Schoedinger Norris funeral home and several commercial buildings on Columbus Street. The project was announced today by Axiom Ventures, a Columbus-based firm founded by Ethan Temianka and Tim Kaskewsky. Renderings released as part of the announcement show a two-story food hall and event center opening up to a central plaza. A four-story building on Broadway would hold apartments above ground-level retail, and a larger, six-story apartment building would be set back farther from the street. More below: https://columbusunderground.com/mixed-use-development-planned-for-grove-citys-town-center-bw1/ Grovetuc...er...Grove City is really surprising me here.
September 14, 20222 yr 49 minutes ago, Toddguy said: Grovetuc...er...Grove City is really surprising me here. Groveport is the real Grovetucky.
September 14, 20222 yr Columbus developer plans Grove City Town Center project with food hall, retail and apartments A Columbus-based developer has plans to transform a section of Grove City's historic district. Axiom Ventures, owned by Ethan Temianka and Tim Kaskewsky, wants to build a 35,000-square-foot food hall and event center in the suburb, part of a project that would also include large public plazas, a stage and roughly 200 apartments. Temianka said the project as currently proposed would cost between $75 million and $85 million. The development, dubbed Broadway Live, would also include a bar and restaurant and 10,000 square feet of retail along Broadway. More below: https://www.bizjournals.com/columbus/news/2022/09/14/grove-city-town-center-broadway-live.html "You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers
September 23, 20222 yr 441 new residences proposed in two Grove City areas "Pulte Homes of Ohio LLC has proposed two developments, with up to 441 residences, in Grove City. Communities at Plum Run would be on 144.2 acres north of state Route 665 and west of state Route 104, with up to 360 homes. Hickory Creek would have up to 81 dwelling units on 32.2 acres north of Orders Road and west of Southern Grove Drive. Each requires approval of a development plan and rezoning from single-family residential to planned-unit residential, still pending by the city. City Council is to hold a public hearing on the Communities at Plum Run proposal Nov. 7." https://www.dispatch.com/story/news/local/communities/grove-city/2022/09/23/two-housing-developments-totaling-441-homes-proposed-in-grove-city/69513691007/
September 23, 20222 yr SWACO: Green Economy Business Park could create 2,000-3,500 jobs "The Solid Waste Authority of Central Ohio’s leaders believe they will succeed at attracting businesses to a Green Economy Business Park, a development planned on 362 acres mostly on the north side of London Groveport Road (state Route 665) in Grove City. SWACO's goal is to attract manufacturers that use recycled materials in their products, said Hanna Greer-Brown, SWACO communications manager. "SWACO’s Green Economy Business Park will create a cluster of companies using research, technology and advanced manufacturing to bring together the supply chain for recycled materials," she said. "New jobs could be created, adding to local tax revenues and capital investment in the region. This innovative concept could create tomorrow’s products from today’s recycled materials." The SWACO website, swaco.org, predicts big economic benefits for the city. "Based upon models around the country and the economic momentum behind recycled materials, the site could create 2,000 to 3,500 manufacturing jobs at good wages, producing between $1.6 million and $4.2 million in local tax revenues and between $350 million and $500 million in capital investment," it says." https://www.dispatch.com/story/news/local/communities/grove-city/2022/09/23/swaco-green-economy-business-park-grove-city-ohio-could-bring-2000-3500-jobs/69513007007/
October 7, 20222 yr Epcon seeking approval for residential development west of I-71 in Grove City “Epcon Communities is proposing another residential development for Grove City. The developer, which is building The Courtyards at Beulah Park as part of the Beulah Park Living development, is seeking approval for The Courtyards at Mulberry Run, a 74-unit residential project planned for a 24.58-acre site on White Road east of McDowell Road and west of Interstate 71. Although the development is not specifically targeted for older residents, many of the amenities and features proposed for the homes, including passive recreational elements, floor plans and open space areas, are more likely to attract residents who are 55 and older as opposed to younger, more traditional single-family homebuyers, Epcon's Jason Coffey said. The developer presented a preliminary development plan at the Oct. 4 planning commission meeting.“ https://www.dispatch.com/story/news/local/communities/grove-city/2022/10/07/74-home-development-planned-between-mcdowell-and-i-71-in-grove-city/69544438007/
October 8, 20222 yr 1 hour ago, amped91 said: Why would they connect to the existing neighborhood in the southern portion but not to the existing neighborhood in the northern portion? Edited October 8, 20222 yr by aderwent
October 8, 20222 yr both sides only connect to existing residential with 20 foot emergency access points... https://www.grovecityohio.gov/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/Mulberry-Run-Prlim-Dev-Plan.pdf
October 27, 20222 yr Plans for Hickory Creek 'patio home community' move forward in Grove City “Eighty-one single-family ranch homes and patio condominiums designed with empty nesters in mind likely will be built along Grove City’s western edge. Pulte Homes of Ohio’s Hickory Creek “patio home community” would be built on 35 acres north of Orders Road and west of Southern Grove Drive. Grove City Council on Oct. 17 approved the necessary rezoning and development plan, and once the development’s construction-level plans are approved, construction may begin. "As stated in the preliminary development plan hearing, Pulte is proposing an empty-nester patio home community," Jim Hilz of Pulte told council.“ https://www.dispatch.com/story/news/local/communities/grove-city/2022/10/27/plans-hickory-creek-patio-home-community-move-forward-grove-city-ohio/69594659007/
January 18, 20232 yr Grove City's Beulah Park to gain new condo units, commercial building as part of $500M development's latest phase “The new townhome units, called The Strand at Beulah, are being constructed in separate two- and three-story buildings that extend along the southern border of the development near the park and a dedicated conservation area. The Strand will eventually include 66 units averaging approximately 1,500 square feet. Each unit comes with a one- or two-car garage, keyless entries, custom cabinets, granite countertops, appliances and balconies with views overlooking the park. Demand already is high for the apartments and single-family homes at Beulah Park. The 384-apartment complex is 96% occupied, a 103-unit single-family neighborhood is sold out, and the 52-unit first phase of another single-family development also is sold out. The senior living community is seeing strong demand as well, with 30 villas planned to accommodate a wait list for the property. In addition to the residential components, Beulah Park is slated for its first retail development. Dubbed The Shoppes at Beulah, the 15,000-square-foot building is being constructed at the intersection of Columbus Street and Southwest Boulevard. It will sit on 3.3 acres that are part of a larger, 12.3-acre parcel eyed for additional commercial development. It is also adjacent to the OhioHealth medical building. Prospective tenants for The Shoppes include a 4,400-square-foot restaurant, a 3,000-square-foot real estate office, a hair salon, a pizzeria and a bakery. Kelley said deals are still being finalized, so tenants could not be named at this time. However, he said announcements on a couple of those tenants are expected to be made in the near future.” https://www.bizjournals.com/columbus/news/2023/01/18/the-strand-the-shoppes-at-beulah-park-grove-city.html
January 25, 20232 yr Buckeye Ranch, Nationwide Children’s to open 48-bed youth mental health center in Grove City “Two of the largest caretakers of Columbus’ youth are teaming up to open a state-of-the-art facility to house kids recovering from mental illness. On Jan. 10, The Buckeye Ranch and Nationwide Children’s Hospital announced their plans to break ground this spring on a 48-bed mental health treatment center in Grove City to bolster the support network for youth facing mental health challenges, according to Vickie Thompson-Sandy, president and CEO of The Buckeye Ranch. The 57,000-square-foot facility, set to open in 2025, will complement The Buckeye Ranch’s existing Grove City campus at 5665 Hoover Road. Most of its residents will be children who are transitioning from a hospital stay but aren’t quite ready to return home. A step down from inpatient psychiatric care, the new center is designed to allow youth additional time to stabilize before moving back to their communities – a way to avoid back-to-back visits to a hospital’s emergency room, Thompson-Sandy said.” https://www.nbc4i.com/news/local-news/grove-city/buckeye-ranch-nationwide-childrens-to-open-48-bed-youth-mental-health-center-in-grove-city/
March 8, 20232 yr Lots of new housing going up along Jackson Pike between Stringtown Rd and 665 Snatched a few of Sugar Maple Commons, which started construction recently, a little earlier on my way through
March 8, 20232 yr 55 minutes ago, CbusOrBust said: Lots of new housing going up along Jackson Pike between Stringtown Rd and 665 Snatched a few of Sugar Maple Commons, which started construction recently, a little earlier on my way through I wish it was mandatory for developers to install sidewalks adjacent to the public roads they build these developments off of. I know people don't move to the suburbs with the intention of walking to places other than for exercise, but the presence of sidewalks would at least encourage them to be used.
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