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Uptown, Lagrange (Polish) and Warren-Sherman neighborhood are located in between downtown and the Old West End neighborhood; here are some various photo shots of this area:

 

Map of Uptown

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The former Hillcrest Hotel which is now the Hillcrest with a combination of apartments and condos

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Looking south on 16th Street in Uptown

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Mercy College in Uptown

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St. Vincent Mercy Hospital in Warren-Sherman and the time progression pictures of under-construction of the new Hearts CenterSTV.jpg

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Abele Funeral Home in Warren-Sherman

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Uptown's "mini" downtown along Adams Street

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Central Catholic High School in Warren-Sherman

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Beautiful restored house converted into law firm offices

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St. Mary's Assumption Church in Warren-Sherman

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The new Lagrange Library which opened in early 2005

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Is there any retail in the mini downtown? Any clubs, bars restaurants?

 

Thanks for educating me on a city I have passed through hundreds of times.

Yes, there are some restaurants, dry-cleaners, bakerys, retail stores and social agency offices; in the Uptown area there will be a popular tavern opening up called Ottawa Tavern which was burned down back in 1999 from another part of the city and they wanted to reopen a legendary jazz-theme tavern up again.  There are some that are empty but in my opinion I think it's the best location to open a small business since residential population is increasing and high energy costs.

Love the Hillcrest! Great pics!

Love the Hillcrest! Great pics!

 

I was going to move in there several years ago, but they don't take big dogs.  Poo on them!   :x

I love these neighborhood tours.

  • 1 month later...

Finally more snapshots of Lagrange neighborhood are here; Enjoy!:

 

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  • 8 months later...

From the 3/16/07 Blade:

 

$1.3 million Lagrange renovation announced

Shoppes on Lagrinka to be ready by fall

By CLYDE HUGHES

BLADE STAFF WRITER

 

The row of buildings in the 2800 block of Lagrange Street, in the heart of the Polish International Village, doesn't look like much - with peeling paint, tattered interiors, and fading "For Lease" signs in the windows.  Yesterday, city of Toledo and Lucas County officials crowded into one of the empty buildings and joined representatives of Lagrange Development Corp. in announcing a $1.3 million renovation of four turn-of-the-century buildings that corporation officials hope will become a destination point. 

 

The project, called The Shoppes on Lagrinka, will take six months to complete and will be ready for occupancy by the fall, said Terry Glazer, president of the corporation.  Mr. Glazer said he has received roughly 60 calls about the buildings, but business owners wanted to see renovation work in progress before committing.  That work begins this week.

 

Mr. Glazer said Lagrange Development cobbled together nine funding sources and 13 funding programs in raising the money needed to renovate the structures.  The city of Toledo, for example, contributed nearly $300,000 in grants for the project. The Toledo office of the Local Initiatives Support Corp. loaned Lagrange $200,000 to buy the buildings. KeyBank also provided a $376,000 loan and other help.  Mayor Carty Finkbeiner praised Lagrange for its determination to make the project a reality and credited the neighborhood for its cleanliness.

 

More at http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070316/NEWS16/703160340/-1/RSS10

 

 

  • 1 year later...

North Toledoans work on plan to uplift their community

Neighbors want better quality of life

http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20081115/NEWS16/811150317

 

A neighborhood with high-quality schools, and state-of-the-art family resource centers and parks.  A neighborhood where it is safe to live, work, and play.  A neighborhood with good jobs.  North Toledoans are working, step by step, with a new Quality of Life plan to bring those amenities to where they live.

 

Residents in the roughly five-square-mile area bound by Cherry Street, the Maumee River, I-75, and Manhattan Boulevard have completed the neighborhood's first such plan.  The plan focuses on five key areas - schools, parks and community facilities, safety, housing, and jobs and economic development.  "We're just getting started," said Beth Lewandowski, a North Toledo resident and vice president of the Lagrange Village Council who worked on the plan.

 

The neighborhood, through Lagrange Community Development and North River Community Development - the groups work together as United North - has been working on the plan for over a year.

  • 6 months later...

What's in a name? Lagrange says a lot

Area wants to lose 'North' in Toledo

Article published May 21, 2009

By CARL RYAN, BLADE STAFF WRITER

 

Can you "rebrand" a neighborhood?  Organizers in North Toledo think so.  Last night 150 people attended a meeting in the Zablocki Senior Center to kick around new names for their part of the city.

 

Two North Toledo improvement groups - the Lagrange Development Corp. and NorthRiver Development Corp. - are behind the renaming effort.  The two organizations, which are in the process of merging, are following through on the recommendation of a neighborhood study that calls for giving North Toledo a new name.

 

Terry Glazer, Lagrange Development's executive director, said the goal is not to eliminate familiar and historic names such as "Lagrange" and "Vistula."  "We're not trying to get rid of them. We want a better name for all of North Toledo. How dull is 'North Toledo,'" he said.

 

MORE: http://www.toledoblade.com/article/20090521/NEWS41/905210394

  • 2 years later...
  • 2 weeks later...

State OKs $100,000 to redo Ohio Theatre

BLADE STAFF

Published: 2/16/2012

 

The Ohio Cultural Facilities Commission said Wednesday it has approved $100,000 for United North Corp.’s refurbishment of the Ohio Theatre on Lagrange Street in the Polish Village.

 

The 964-seat theater has been shuttered since 2009, when it was purchased by the community development corporation.

 

MORE: http://www.toledoblade.com/local/2012/02/16/State-OKs-100-000-to-redo-Ohio-Theatre.html

  • 10 months later...

Senior housing proposed for former St. Hedwig School

BY JENNIFER FEEHAN, BLADE STAFF WRITER

Published: 12/6/2012

 

Since school let out for the last time in the spring of 2005, St. Hedwig School in North Toledo’s Polish Village only has been used sporadically by community groups.  Now the community development corporation United North Inc. is floating a plan to purchase and convert the 1901 school into 41 apartments for low-income seniors.  While the convent and two garages on the site would be demolished as part of the estimated $7 million project, the historic St. Hedwig Church and rectory would remain under the ownership of the Catholic Diocese of Toledo.

 

Toledo’s Plan Commission is scheduled to discuss the proposal when it meets today.  Specifically, United North is seeking a major site plan review, a zoning change from “duplex district” to “multi dwelling residential,” and approval to vacate two alleys between Bronson Avenue and Dexter Street.  Plan commission staff have recommended the changes with some conditions.  The overall concept, they say, is a good one for the Lagrange Street neighborhood.

 

Under the plan, the school would be converted to 23 apartments on three floors with the top floor used as a community recreation room.  A walkway would be built to connect the building to a new three-story structure that would contain 18 units for a total of 41 apartments.

 

READ MORE: http://www.toledoblade.com/North/2012/12/06/Senior-housing-proposed-for-former-St-Hedwig-School.html

More about the senior housing proposal for the former St. Hedwig School from Toledo News Now.  Toledo's Plan Commission approved the zoning changes for the project.  More about this along with a video report on the project at the link below:

 

Toledo News Now: St. Hedwig School may get new life

 

 

The State of Ohio's Historic Preservation Tax Credit Program announced a new round of awards earlier this month.  The Ohio Theatre in the Toledo's Lagrange neighborhood received one of the tax credits awarded in this latest round.  Below is the text of the award from the Ohio Development Services Agency press release:

 

Ohio Theatre (Toledo, Lucas County)

 

Total Project Cost: $8,568,900

Total Tax Credit: $1,368,500

Address: 3112 Lagrange Street, 43608

 

The Mark of Zorro premiered on the Ohio Theatre’s opening night in February 1921, complete with a live orchestra.  After entertaining area residents for decades, the doors of the vaudeville and movie house have been shut since 2009.  The local community development corporation, United North, purchased the facility in 2010 and will undertake improvements and an addition, allowing the theatre to reopen.  The project is targeted as a catalyst for the surrounding Lagrange Street Business District, which currently faces a 25 percent vacancy rate.  United North estimates that at least 50 jobs will be created as a result of reopening the theatre.

Awesome news! I love Lagrange. The narrow streets and density give it a ton of potential. There also are still a lot of commercial buildings standing. It wasn't hit as hard with arsons as the South End or West-Central Toledo (South End still probably has potential, not sure about West-Central Toledo). Lagrange, Vistula, and East Toledo are where the city should be focusing urban development (along with saving all the abandoned buildings in the core). Those neighborhoods still have the narrow streets and high density of a once outstanding city. They just need more people!

  • 3 years later...

Anyone local to Toledo know if the Ohio Theater renovation ever came to fruition?

Anyone local to Toledo know if the Ohio Theater renovation ever came to fruition?

 

Yes. It's open. I was there for an event in the fall. There is still work being down, but the marquee is up, the lobby was pretty much finished, the theater pretty much just needed some paint. It's near the end of the second phase of the renovation right now.

^Very good news!

  • 3 years later...
  • ColDayMan changed the title to Toledo: Lagrange / Vistula: Development and News

Sounds like a good project! Good to see some development coming to Toledo's neighborhoods.

 

  • 3 years later...

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