Posted April 30, 20223 yr I would've sworn there already was a Clermont County thread but I couldn't find it. If I missed it and this is a duplicate then please merge them. This is The Union in the Eastgate area. https://www.bizjournals.com/cincinnati/news/2021/02/23/miller-valentine-group-plans-36m-apartment.html Edited April 30, 20223 yr by Cincy_Travels
June 24, 20231 yr Author I'm not sure what's going on with this hotel but it's been under construction for a while now. I think it's supposed to be a Home2Suites
June 24, 20231 yr Author TQL's growth is extremely impressive. They've got quite the campus now with this current expansion. I'm curious what their next expansion will look like
July 22, 2024Jul 22 The Works, Bad Tom Smith Brewing coming to new Union Township development A mixed-use project with a brewery, a restaurant and more is planned for an increasingly walkable, densifying area of Union Township in Clermont County. The 17,000-square-foot project is intended for five parcels, totaling 4 acres, around 4531 Glen Este-Withamsville Road, near several multifamily developments completed, underway or in the planning stages. The Union Township Zoning Commission will consider a zoning change for the project at its July 24 meeting. Co-applicants on the zoning change request include the Union Township Community Interest Company, or CIC, as well as Sizemore Holdings LLC and Jordan Mefford. The Union Township CIC is the township’s economic development arm. It acquired the five parcels in separate transactions from 2016 to 2020. More below: https://www.bizjournals.com/cincinnati/news/2024/07/22/union-twnship-clermont-works-pizza-bad-tom-brewery.html "You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers
September 20, 2024Sep 20 UC Clermont sets ambitious growth plan with 5,500-student target More than 50 years ago, Clermont General and Technical College opened its doors with 97 full-time and 184 part-time students. Today, University of Cincinnati Clermont College (the name was changed in 1987) counts nearly 4,000 students, 60 academic programs, and has plans to keep growing. In its early years in the ‘70s, UC Clermont catered mainly to adult learners with a program of evening classes. The college evolved with the times and with the demand for affordable higher education. In the early 2000s, the college became an attractive place for traditional college-age students to study and explore the higher ed waters for two years, then use their college credits to enroll at UC’s main campus or another four-year college for the remaining two years. As adult learners shifted to online classes, UC Clermont moved into offering online programs. Today, a variety of students, from first-generation college students to adult learners, are enrolled, either virtually, in person, or a mix of both methods, said the college’s dean, Jeffrey Bauer. More below: https://www.bizjournals.com/cincinnati/news/2024/09/20/uc-clermont-increase-enrollment-online-first-gen.html "You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers
September 20, 2024Sep 20 Clermont County untapped? Builders see new frontier for affordable housing boom With the most mature parts of the market increasingly ill-suited to development, homebuilders are turning to untapped Clermont County, where inexpensive land and flexible zoning keep home prices affordable. Drive out 22 miles east of downtown Cincinnati on state Route 32, just past the new Batavia High School, and you’ll come upon a sprawling patch of upturned earth with homes in every state of completion. This is Harvest Meadows, a 139-acre, 400-home subdivision that Fischer Homes, the region’s largest homebuilder, is bringing out of the ground one house at a time. It can’t build them fast enough. The land developer only planned to sell Fischer Homes 40 lots per year, according to Chip Stewart, zoning director for the village of Batavia. Since starting sales in January, they’ve sold 66, and they’re already approved for phases two and three of the development. “They actually ran out of single-family non-patio homes there in June,” Stewart said. “It’s going crazy.” More below: https://www.bizjournals.com/cincinnati/news/2024/09/20/homebuilders-clermont-county-affordable-homes-boom.html "You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers
September 20, 2024Sep 20 Cincinnati VA to open new medical center in Eastgate The Cincinnati VA plans to expand with a new medical center in Clermont County. In partnership with Indianapolis-based Innovative Veterans Affairs Real Estate (Innovcare VA), the project’s developer, Cincinnati VA will move into a 26,919-square-foot facility on more than 4 acres of land owned by Cincinnati Children’s Hospital in Eastgate. The facility will be the new home to the VA’s Clermont County Clinic, which is a community-based outpatient clinic. Currently, it is operating out of a 15,000-square-foot space on Beechwood Road. More below: https://www.bizjournals.com/cincinnati/news/2024/09/20/va-medical-center-lease-eastgate-center-childrens.html "You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers
September 20, 2024Sep 20 Head east $180M in road projects will dramatically expand Clermont County’s growth horizon Lifelong Clermont County resident David Painter remembers when Interstate 275 came roaring through rural Union Township. The state Route 32 interchange went up with it, back when 32 was just a two-lane road with farms on either side. It was 1976. Eastgate Mall wouldn’t open for another four years. But Painter, who would become president of the OKI Regional Council of Governments, recalls thinking to himself even then the entire county seemed destined for change. “And it did start to move in that direction,” said Painter, now president of the Clermont County Board of Commissioners. “But it kind of stalled at the mall, and the reason was 32. It was completely congested.” The congestion worsened. It didn’t take a traffic engineer to see why. Endless traffic lights choked the route. By the 2000s, Eastgate, located in Union Township, was a dependable logjam. Retailers dithered; vacancies increased. Clermont County’s main approach had become a hindrance. No longer. Route 32 isn’t so much a logjam today as a wormhole. Newly reconstructed as part of the Eastern Corridor project, the road has vastly expanded the county’s growth horizon, like a breadbasket brought within reach by scrunching up the tablecloth. Eastgate won’t look the same in 10 years. Neither will Batavia – or Williamsburg. The Ohio Department of Transportation hosted the first public meeting for the Eastern Corridor project in December 2007. Beginning with the reconstruction of the I-275/Route 32 interchange, the project envisioned Route 32 being fully separated from Eastgate, with all local connections rebuilt in the form of interchanges and overpasses. No traffic lights. Fewer delays. Faster commutes. More below: https://www.bizjournals.com/cincinnati/news/2024/09/19/eastgate-clermont-county-growth-road-development.html "You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers
September 20, 2024Sep 20 Historic New Richmond plans $13M riverfront revamp similar to downtown's Smale Park New Richmond has been a staple of Cincinnati’s riverfront since its founding in 1814 as a commercial center and steamboat construction hub. It later transitioned into a power plant-based village with the establishment of the Walter C. Beckjord and William H. Zimmer stations nearby. But after the two power plants closed in 2014 and 2022, respectively, New Richmond saw stagnation as those jobs and their economic impact were removed from the area. “Any time you put 100 jobs in the community … you can look around and see the economic impact those jobs have, and then you take that away,” said Joy Lytle, president and CEO of the Clermont Chamber of Commerce. Now, thanks to a $13.4 million grant from Ohio’s Wonderful Waterfront Initiative through the Appalachian Community Grant Program, the village is bustling with overhaul projects set to bring a new wave of development to the area. The state initially gave New Richmond a $25,000 grant in 2020 to design the Liberty Landing project. In 2021, village officials submitted a proposal to the Clermont County Port Authority and the state for $877,500 to build the project. More below: https://www.bizjournals.com/cincinnati/news/2024/09/20/new-richmond-riverfront-grant-kzf-theater-trail.html "You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers
February 21Feb 21 New York developer OK Management plans $100M apartment project in Cincinnati suburb By Brian Planalp – Staff reporter, Cincinnati Business Courier Feb 21, 2025 A New York developer is planning a massive $100 million residential project in the village of Batavia. Sundeep Dhiman, director of New York-based OK Management, is pursuing a plan to build 518 apartments in eight multifamily buildings between three and six stories on the banks of the East Fork Little Miami River. The development site comprises 27 acres of flat, undeveloped land immediately west of Haskell Lane. The land, sometimes used as soccer fields, abuts the former Red Barn Flea Market, which closed some years ago and is now leased to multiple private companies. MORE
February 21Feb 21 6 minutes ago, The_Cincinnati_Kid said: New York developer OK Management plans $100M apartment project in Cincinnati suburb By Brian Planalp – Staff reporter, Cincinnati Business Courier Feb 21, 2025 A New York developer is planning a massive $100 million residential project in the village of Batavia. Sundeep Dhiman, director of New York-based OK Management, is pursuing a plan to build 518 apartments in eight multifamily buildings between three and six stories on the banks of the East Fork Little Miami River. The development site comprises 27 acres of flat, undeveloped land immediately west of Haskell Lane. The land, sometimes used as soccer fields, abuts the former Red Barn Flea Market, which closed some years ago and is now leased to multiple private companies. MORE Sheesh that’s bad.
February 21Feb 21 TOO TALL!!! 😏 "You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers
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