January 16, 20205 yr 2 minutes ago, cbussoccer said: Hopefully we get real BRT and not just a specially branded bus. Yea, dedicated lanes would definitely be the major step in that direction. Hopefully it's not just wishful thinking. Also, don't they want to figure out a way to connect all the way to Broad as part of the Olentangy Corridor transit study? Imagine how awesome it would be to have transit going north into the OSU Innovation District and then connecting to Broad St with CoverMyMeds and other tech companies in the area. Could be an awesome hub of tech and research. Nationwide Children's just announced a new gene therapy biofactory that will be going to the Innovation District as well.
January 16, 20205 yr Here's a conceptual sketch from the CU article for those that don't feel like clicking through to the article.
January 16, 20205 yr BRT on Broad is the way to go. The city and COTA both seem to want to do it. COTA officially has said they want it in a Dispatch article form sometime last year (might try to find it). Found it: https://www.dispatch.com/news/20190130/west-broad-street-might-get-next-rapid-transit-bus-line-cota-officials-say Edited January 16, 20205 yr by Zyrokai
January 16, 20205 yr I'll read the full plan at another time but at first glance, it seems this plan hinges alot on getting the state to release land for private development. I'm sure there are more details for the rest of Hilltop but a majority of the CU article focuses on that and transit so I'm curious to see what other factors they are looking into. Otherwise, if it is heavy on the eastern portion of Hilltop (ironically the non hill top portion of Hilltop), it just seems to be an extension of helping Franklinton.
January 16, 20205 yr The plan uses a good portion of Rhodes Park - that's a bad move. The last thing Columbus should do is use parkland for development. https://radio.wosu.org/post/columbus-loses-points-quality-public-parks#stream/0
January 19, 20205 yr On 1/16/2020 at 9:09 AM, DTCL11 said: From my understanding, the bottoms was originally contextualized by the geographic terrain and propensity to flood. Also, being the bottom of the western ridge above the river. During white flight, the context was changed. The bottoms was often meant to refer to the 'bottom of the barrel' in that it was an extremely unsafe and unattractive part of the city. I know people born and raised in or near Columbus that only know it under that context as the days of flooding are long gone. The term was never formally adopted from a city standpoint to my knowledge. That connotation stuck for decades. With the resurgence, people thaht have embraced 'the bottoms' see the return to Franklinton as a white washing and just another example of gentrification. People that understand the later context don't embrace a the seemingly derogatory term (to many) as much as the formal term. NPR had some interesting reporting a couple years ago about renaming or 'nicknaming' established neighborhoods once they become attractive through displacement and gentrification. I personally think it would be worth it to keep the name the bottoms even if it becomes a sub neighborhood of Franklinton. Perhaps the commercial and retail hub of West Franklinton could be the 'Bottoms District' Years ago some people over at the now-defunct James Howard Kunstler forum did some sleuthing and found that the Scioto was once a navigable river. Not in modern terms, mind you -- able to accommodate barges, large riverboats or today's speedboats -- but capable of moving some goods. This all changed with large-scale farming and land clearing in the mid-1800s leading to the "silting up" of the Scioto. I know I've talked about this before, but when the river was dredged in the Scioto Peninsula vicinity for powerboat racing in the late '80s (at a cost of hundreds of thousands of dollars) it took only 3 years for it to fully silt up again much to the race promoter's and city's chagrin. Nobody expected it to fill back in that quickly. So, initially when Franklinton was founded as a town it wasn't as subject to flooding due to the lack of silt fill.
January 19, 20205 yr On 1/16/2020 at 4:25 PM, Pablo said: The plan uses a good portion of Rhodes Park - that's a bad move. The last thing Columbus should do is use parkland for development. https://radio.wosu.org/post/columbus-loses-points-quality-public-parks#stream/0 Columbus has a lot of parkland that can't be walked to. Parkland in concentrated near places like Groveport, the East Side/Southwest Side and Reynoldsburg that haven't been blasted as severely with subdivisions due to their school systems scoring poorly.
January 19, 20205 yr 28 minutes ago, GCrites80s said: Years ago some people over at the now-defunct James Howard Kunstler forum did some sleuthing and found that the Scioto was once a navigable river. Not in modern terms, mind you -- able to accommodate barges, large riverboats or today's speedboats -- but capable of moving some goods. This all changed with large-scale farming and land clearing in the mid-1800s leading to the "silting up" of the Scioto. I know I've talked about this before, but when the river was dredged in the Scioto Peninsula vicinity for powerboat racing in the late '80s (at a cost of hundreds of thousands of dollars) it took only 3 years for it to fully silt up again much to the race promoter's and city's chagrin. Nobody expected it to fill back in that quickly. So, initially when Franklinton was founded as a town it wasn't as subject to flooding due to the lack of silt fill. I don't know about that. Documented floods occurred regularly in Franklinton throughout the 19th Century.
January 19, 20205 yr I'm not saying flooding didn't happen. Rather flooding in Franklinton was less severe before the mid 1800s
January 24, 20205 yr First Look: New rendering released for Columbus' next library renovation project Columbus Metropolitan Library's Hilltop branch will close for about a year for an expansion and renovation increasing space by 50%. The library is seeking nearby space for a temporary location until the 32,000-square-foot building at 511 S. Hague Ave. opens in 2021. The exact date of the "wallbreaking" hasn't been set. The $14 million project is one of four in the second phase of the library's modernization program. The other three will be new buildings, $21 million apiece, for Karl Road, Gahanna and Reynoldsburg. More below: https://www.bizjournals.com/columbus/news/2020/01/24/first-look-new-rendering-released-for-columbus.html "You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers
March 11, 20205 yr On 1/15/2020 at 9:23 PM, GCrites80s said: Pretty sure the area considered the Scioto Peninsula is east of the tracks but is also still in East Franklinton. The area between the tracks and the river is the Scioto Peninsula, and is officially part of downtown Columbus. Isn't there a sign or something on one of the railroad bridges that says something like "welcome to East Franklinton"? I may be mistaken on that, but east of the tracks is downtown Cbus. What I am not sure about is the division between East, West, And South Franklinton. Is it 315 dividing East from West, 70 separating West from Hilltop, and 70 and 62 separating south from the rest? *sorry this is a late reply I was offline for over two months.
April 12, 20205 yr https://www.dispatch.com/news/20200410/sidewalks-kick-off-sullivant-avenue-improvements ‒ The city of Columbus has begun $10 million in improvements to Sullivant Avenue that will continue into next year. The projects getting underway this spring will focus on a Hilltop stretch of Sullivant between I-70 and Hague Avenue. ‒ It will begin with $2 million in sidewalk upgrades, alley rehabilitation, street sign replacement and landscaping ‒ followed by $7.5 million next year for new traffic signals, street bump-outs to slow traffic, new crosswalks, streetlights and artwork. ‒ In February, Mayor Ginther announced a revitalization effort that seeks to inject city investments into the area ‒ eventually to include a new police substation that will double as a neighborhood-pride center, community garden and basketball court.
November 13, 20204 yr On 1/24/2020 at 4:39 PM, ColDayMan said: First Look: New rendering released for Columbus' next library renovation project Columbus Metropolitan Library's Hilltop branch will close for about a year for an expansion and renovation increasing space by 50%. The library is seeking nearby space for a temporary location until the 32,000-square-foot building at 511 S. Hague Ave. opens in 2021. The exact date of the "wallbreaking" hasn't been set. The $14 million project is one of four in the second phase of the library's modernization program. The other three will be new buildings, $21 million apiece, for Karl Road, Gahanna and Reynoldsburg. More below: https://www.bizjournals.com/columbus/news/2020/01/24/first-look-new-rendering-released-for-columbus.html https://www.bizjournals.com/columbus/news/2020/10/14/columbus-metropolitan-library-construction.html The Hilltop branch renovation/expansion was mentioned in this article about the status of four library projects approved by the CML's Board of Trustees last year - pre-coronavirus. Two projects are moving ahead with construction and two are pausing before construction begins. The Hilltop branch is still moving ahead with its construction because it is at mid-renovation. It is expected to reopen in 2021.
November 13, 20204 yr https://www.bizjournals.com/columbus/news/2020/11/09/columbus-1-4b-capital-budget-2020.html Some Hilltop neighborhood items reported in the City's latest capital improvements budget: $10 million in infrastructure improvements along Sullivant Avenue. $6.5 million for the Hilltop Education Center, a preschool expected to break ground this year.
November 19, 20204 yr On 11/13/2020 at 12:16 PM, Columbo said: https://www.bizjournals.com/columbus/news/2020/10/14/columbus-metropolitan-library-construction.html The Hilltop branch renovation/expansion was mentioned in this article about the status of four library projects approved by the CML's Board of Trustees last year - pre-coronavirus. Two projects are moving ahead with construction and two are pausing before construction begins. The Hilltop branch is still moving ahead with its construction because it is at mid-renovation. It is expected to reopen in 2021. Final steel beams were installed this week at the Hilltop branch construction project: https://www.columbuslibrary.org/press/library-tops-out-transformed-hilltop-branch The CML website also has a slideshow of the construction work at the Hilltop location: https://www.columbuslibrary.org/buildings_phase_two
December 9, 20204 yr Construction starts on city-funded $22M Hilltop pre-K The center will serve as many as 240 children in a two-story, 50,000-square-foot building that will connect Highland Elementary School with a community center.
June 9, 20214 yr Sullivant Avenue Public Art Project Prepares Hilltop Residents for Improvements, ‘Brightens Up’ Area Taijuan Moorman - Columbus Undergdound - June 9, 2021 "Along with the $10 million in improvements on Sullivant Avenue — including new sidewalks, improved streetlights, traffic signals, bus bulbs and parklets set to be underway next year — is a public art project to get residents ready for the changes, and liven up the street. Sullivant Bright is a project by Designing Local in partnership with the City of Columbus Department of Public Service, and includes temporary murals illustrating where the permanent infrastructure improvements to Sullivant Avenue will be. ... Residents were able to provide input on the project and will be able to do so again for a second phase, which will include a permanent mural at the I-70 underpass bridge."
June 12, 20214 yr On 6/9/2021 at 12:48 PM, NorthShore647 said: Sullivant Avenue Public Art Project Prepares Hilltop Residents for Improvements, ‘Brightens Up’ Area Taijuan Moorman - Columbus Undergdound - June 9, 2021 "Along with the $10 million in improvements on Sullivant Avenue — including new sidewalks, improved streetlights, traffic signals, bus bulbs and parklets set to be underway next year — is a public art project to get residents ready for the changes, and liven up the street. Sullivant Bright is a project by Designing Local in partnership with the City of Columbus Department of Public Service, and includes temporary murals illustrating where the permanent infrastructure improvements to Sullivant Avenue will be. ... Residents were able to provide input on the project and will be able to do so again for a second phase, which will include a permanent mural at the I-70 underpass bridge." The Dispatch had some more about this Sullivant Avenue project today, including a slideshow of the street mural work: Columbus artists paint murals on Sullivant Avenue ahead of infrastructure project Painting began Monday afternoon as city officials gathered nearby for a news conference outside the Burroughs Elementary School to announce the full scope of a $10 million infrastructure project on Sullivant Avenue between I-70 and Hague Avenue that is intended to improve sidewalks and pedestrian crossings and also allow public transit vehicles to better make in-lane stops. As the Department of Public Service prepared to begin years of infrastructure improvements in 2020 to about two miles of Sullivant Avenue, officials saw an opportunity to incorporate public art into the multimillion-dollar project. It was decided that $200,000 would be designated for what organizers are calling "Sullivant Bright," a two-phase public art project intended to celebrate the history, community and creative spirit of the corridor. The first phase of "Sullivant Bright" involves commissioning 21 Columbus artists to create a series of temporary and permanent pavement murals. ... The second phase of "Sullivant Bright" — a permanent mural and artistic lighting at the I-70 underpass — will be installed after the completion of the infrastructure project. Residents are already being invited to define what that artwork will look like by taking a survey at sullivantbright.com. All told, the $10 million Sullivant Avenue improvement project that began last year includes sidewalk replacement, roadway repair, alley rehabilitation, stormwater ponding mitigation, new pavement markings, traffic signal replacement and new LED street lights. The work began with the replacement or repair of nearly 2,800 feet of sidewalk on the north side of Sullivant Avenue in 2020. Similar improvements are targeted for the south side of the roadway this year. The project will continue in 2022, when the city plans to install new marked pedestrian crosswalks complete with curb extensions. Several bus stops will also get "bus bulbs" — extensions that align the bus stop with the parking lane so buses can stop to board or discharge passengers without leaving the travel lane. MORE: https://www.dispatch.com/story/news/2021/06/12/artists-paint-murals-sullivant-avenue-ahead-area-renovations/7575903002/
June 13, 20214 yr Another mural project is also going on in the Hilltop. This one is on the side wall of the Third Way Cafe located at 3058 W. Broad Street. NBC4 visited it last week while the artists were working on it: https://www.nbc4i.com/news/local-news/hilltop-area-brought-to-life-with-new-artwork-by-non-profit-group/
June 13, 20214 yr Hilltop project news seems to be coming in bunches this past week. This one is about three Hilltop neighborhood streets being converted from one-way to two-way: Columbus converting three Hilltop streets from one-way to two-way to slow traffic Speeding is a problem on some of the Hilltop's residential streets, many of which are one-way. So beginning next week, the city of Columbus will be converting three of those streets from one-way to two-way to try to slow down traffic. On Monday (June 14), crews will begin converting South Harris Avenue, South Warren Avenue and South Ogden Avenue, all between Sullivant Avenue and Eakin Road, from one-way to two-way in a pilot program lasting three months. The conversion, which is part of the city's Slow Streets effort and includes installing signs and removing others, will take two weeks. The city will gather data on speed, volume and crashes with the change to two-way. If the pilot is successful, the city could convert more streets to two-way, said Justin Goodwin, the city's transportation planning manager. ... In September 2020, the city started a Slow Streets pilot project in North Linden, converting four streets from one-way to two-way. The pilot ran until December 2020, with city officials reporting that they found the conversions helped slow down traffic. ... The streets remain two-way. MORE: https://www.dispatch.com/story/news/2021/06/12/city-converts-three-hilltop-streets-one-way-two-way/7598888002/
June 13, 20214 yr And an update on the renovation/expansion of CML's Hilltop library branch at 511 S. Hague Avenue, which is expected to reopen later in 2021. From CML's website: https://www.columbuslibrary.org/new-buildings-phase-two/ Rendering: Exterior under construction: Interior under construction: Interior under construction:
October 2, 20213 yr (Cross-posted from the CML branch library projects thread) The renovated Hilltop library branch located at 511 S. Hague Ave., (corner of Hague and Sullivant avenues) is now open: https://www.columbuslibrary.org/new-buildings/library-opens-new-hilltop-branch/ https://news.wosu.org/news/2021-09-30/columbus-metropolitan-library-celebrates-opening-of-new-hilltop-branch
February 11, 20223 yr The Dispatch’s “mobile newsroom” has recently set up shop in the Hilltop. Here’s one of their stories about a recent redevelopment effort: 'There are stories here': Restaurant, rooftop deck planned for vacant Hilltop building “A long-vacant structure built more than 100 years ago that greets commuters as they enter the Hilltopfrom Franklinton could be on its way to becoming a restaurant with a rooftop deck. Felisha Lyons bought the parcel at 1945-1947 W. Broad St. in August for $76,500. In addition to the restaurant, she said she hopes to have a social enterprise business either start or expand its operation in the space, which is in disrepair. There's also a duplex and carriage house in the rear, which Lyons plans to renovate into apartments. Lyons' proposal received support last week from the Greater Hilltop Area Commission, and the owner of ReVest Realty is seeking variances from the Columbus City Council for reducing the number of required spaces in a planned parking lot and more. Most spaces in the parking lot would be reserved for tenants of the restored duplex and carriage house.“ https://www.dispatch.com/story/news/2022/02/11/restaurant-rooftop-deck-planned-hilltop-building-plans/6647813001/
February 11, 20223 yr 14 minutes ago, amped91 said: The Dispatch’s “mobile newsroom” has recently set up shop in the Hilltop. Here’s one of their stories about a recent redevelopment effort: 'There are stories here': Restaurant, rooftop deck planned for vacant Hilltop building “A long-vacant structure built more than 100 years ago that greets commuters as they enter the Hilltopfrom Franklinton could be on its way to becoming a restaurant with a rooftop deck. Felisha Lyons bought the parcel at 1945-1947 W. Broad St. in August for $76,500. In addition to the restaurant, she said she hopes to have a social enterprise business either start or expand its operation in the space, which is in disrepair. There's also a duplex and carriage house in the rear, which Lyons plans to renovate into apartments. Lyons' proposal received support last week from the Greater Hilltop Area Commission, and the owner of ReVest Realty is seeking variances from the Columbus City Council for reducing the number of required spaces in a planned parking lot and more. Most spaces in the parking lot would be reserved for tenants of the restored duplex and carriage house.“ https://www.dispatch.com/story/news/2022/02/11/restaurant-rooftop-deck-planned-hilltop-building-plans/6647813001/ Always hoped something would happen to this building. Not sure I would enjoy sitting outside on broad in that area, but this is great.
February 11, 20223 yr 1 hour ago, VintageLife said: Always hoped something would happen to this building. Not sure I would enjoy sitting outside on broad in that area, but this is great. If they do a quality job on it, the rooftop terrace/dining area actually would have a pretty nice, perched view of the city already being up the hill. I'm definitely intrigued by this, and glad to see continual investment going westward. :)
February 23, 20223 yr In other Hilltop news, looks like Roosevelt is teasing a new location at W Broad and N Wayne. Update. It's apparently part of a larger project called the Hilltop Bank Block. As much as I like exposed brick, and i fully appreciate the cost savings, I'm a little sad they didn't keep the plaster walls with molded plaster arches. Even if it was for one wall. The ceiling looked unsalveagable but the walls looked decent from their pictures. Edited February 23, 20223 yr by DTCL11
February 23, 20223 yr ^That's awesome! This stretch of W Broad still has a good amount of it's commercial buildings intact. Glad to see the renovation.
February 26, 20223 yr They kept one of the plaster walls with detail! That makes me so happy and it looks great.
March 25, 20223 yr “The high ceilings, exposed brick and the door to an old bank vault are echoes of the Hilltop Bank Block's namesake. But these days, what a visitor to the site is most likely to notice is a rich smell of coffee. A large roaster and other pieces of equipment from Roosevelt Coffee Roasters — which moved in earlier this month — take up half the room of the development's main building at 2374 W. Broad Street, a sign that it and nearby spaces are finding new purpose. Brothers Preston and Parker Steele are working to change the block — which includes the former bank building built in 1928 and a few other buildings next to each other between North Wayne and North Oakley avenues — into a destination. All told, the project accounts for 29,000 square feet of retail space and six residential spaces. "It's got story behind it. It's architecturally significant," said Preston Steele, a part-owner of the block of buildings that is being called the Hilltop Bank Block. "It's beat up a little, but we're used to old buildings."’ https://www.dispatch.com/story/news/local/2022/03/24/hilltop-bank-block-roosevelt-coffee-roasters-community-destination/7047931001/
November 16, 20222 yr Hilltop Early Learning Center to Open in January “An opening date has been set for the Hilltop Early Learning Center. After missing a planned October start-date, doors are now set to open for the first classes for pre-kindergarten students on January 15. The new $20 million facility – located at 45 Claredon Ave. – will also hold a 3,000-square-foot healthcare center, to be be run by Nationwide Children’s Hospital. A major initiative of the City of Columbus, the project was first announced in Mayor Andrew Ginther’s 2019 State of the City address, and has been held up as a key part of the city’s equity and neighborhood-focused agenda. Work started on the building in late 2020, but the idea for it was hatched after a 2018 report that found that fewer Hilltop children were enrolled in high-quality early learning programs than anywhere else in the city.” https://columbusunderground.com/hilltop-early-learning-center-to-open-in-january-bw1/
November 16, 20222 yr A mini-version of the newish CMA wing? I dig it. "You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers
November 20, 20222 yr New rec center coming to the Hilltop... Nonprofit empowering Muslim youth through new Hilltop rec center "For nearly a decade, a Columbus nonprofit has been uplifting youth and underprivileged communities in the Hilltop neighborhood. Zerqa Abid, founder and president of My Project USA, created the organization, which began as a community food pantry then expanded to provide a youth soccer league and other engaging programs. Abid is now aiming to create the organization’s own recreational center to provide protection and engagement for her neighborhood’s youth. Abid estimates that the new facility will be built next year." https://www.nbc4i.com/news/local-news/columbus/nonprofit-empowering-muslim-youth-through-new-hilltop-rec-center/
November 20, 20222 yr I’m glad it sounds like she’s finally getting the rec center; I’ve been following this story for what seems like a couple years now. Any sort of help for the Hilltop is welcome news imo. This has nothing to do with the story, but why are all of these large media conglomerate owned broadcast network websites so horrible? Pop up ads, pop up videos—makes reading a three paragraph article way too much of a chore.
November 20, 20222 yr 4 hours ago, GCrites80s said: They're aimed at people who aren't good at the internet. LOL! Truth. And yeah I am not so good with technology either but I always am nice and grateful to the younger tech support people I regularly need after I make a mess of my laptop, phones, etc. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ And also, the Hilltop sure does need help. Does the name itself still bring to mind "insane asylum" or has that died out?
November 21, 20222 yr ^My grandfather still associates "The Hilltop" with the asylum. "You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers
March 31, 20232 yr Expansion of the MOFC "smart farm" in the Hilltop continues on Wheatland Ave Couple links for reference: https://mofc.org/mid-ohio-farm/ https://www.dispatch.com/story/news/local/2022/04/04/mid-ohio-farm-urban-farm-columbus-hilltop-set-expand/6851930001/
June 29, 20231 yr KCG Development plans $63 million affordable housing project in Columbus' Hilltop neighborhood “Indianapolis developer KCG Development is planning an affordable housing project in southwest Columbus. The $63 million development would bring 264 units of affordable housing to the Greater Hilltop area. The new community, called Retreat at Scioto Creek, will be located at 4646 Hall Road. All of the one-to-four bedroom units will be at or below 60% of the area median income. The units will measure between 700 square feet and 1,400 square feet, with monthly rent ranging from $960 to $1,417. Because it is an affordable housing project, KCG is eligible to receive a 4% Low Income Housing Tax Credit from the state and has received funding through Franklin County's Magnet Fund Program. The Franklin County Board of Commissioners unanimously approved a resolution authorizing a $1.35 million affordable housing development agreement for the project at a meeting this week.” https://www.bizjournals.com/columbus/news/2023/06/29/retreat-at-scioto-creek-southwest-columbus.html
June 29, 20231 yr 3 minutes ago, amped91 said: KCG Development plans $63 million affordable housing project in Columbus' Hilltop neighborhood “Indianapolis developer KCG Development is planning an affordable housing project in southwest Columbus. The $63 million development would bring 264 units of affordable housing to the Greater Hilltop area. The new community, called Retreat at Scioto Creek, will be located at 4646 Hall Road. All of the one-to-four bedroom units will be at or below 60% of the area median income. The units will measure between 700 square feet and 1,400 square feet, with monthly rent ranging from $960 to $1,417. Because it is an affordable housing project, KCG is eligible to receive a 4% Low Income Housing Tax Credit from the state and has received funding through Franklin County's Magnet Fund Program. The Franklin County Board of Commissioners unanimously approved a resolution authorizing a $1.35 million affordable housing development agreement for the project at a meeting this week.” https://www.bizjournals.com/columbus/news/2023/06/29/retreat-at-scioto-creek-southwest-columbus.html Nice but I wish that they would stop with the "Greater Hilltop" thing when these are as far as you can get and still be within 270 and are farther west than the dead Westland mall.
June 29, 20231 yr Since when is the Georgesville Road and 270 area considered the Hilltop? Edited June 29, 20231 yr by NW24HX
June 30, 20231 yr 2 hours ago, NW24HX said: Since when is the Georgesville Road and 270 area considered the Hilltop? “Greater” Hilltop 😆
June 30, 20231 yr I didn't know that the Hilltop had that strong of a brand that people would ascribe areas not that close to it as it. Of course people call the entire Noe-Bixby area Groveport so what do I know.
June 30, 20231 yr 15 hours ago, Toddguy said: Nice but I wish that they would stop with the "Greater Hilltop" thing when these are as far as you can get and still be within 270 and are farther west than the dead Westland mall. They are probably calling it Greater Hilltop because it's within the Greater Hilltop Area Commission... https://cbusareacommissions.org/greater-hilltop/
July 5, 20231 yr Anyone have insight on this? I don’t remember seeing any redevelopment for this spot.
July 6, 20231 yr 4 hours ago, VintageLife said: Anyone have insight on this? I don’t remember seeing any redevelopment for this spot. Looks like it’s probably just this :/
July 6, 20231 yr 19 minutes ago, amped91 said: Looks like it’s probably just this :/ Damn, that’s super exciting haha
July 6, 20231 yr 13 hours ago, VintageLife said: Damn, that’s super exciting haha And you expected more from someone with this email address?
July 6, 20231 yr 26 minutes ago, Airsup said: And you expected more from someone with this email address? And it’s aol hahahaha
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