Cleveland, OH

Apartment tower groundbreaking waits on property transfer

NEOtrans

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The 23-story City Club Apartments on lower Euclid Avenue in downtown Cleveland is making progress toward a groundbreakingVocon

The 23-story City Club Apartments on lower Euclid Avenue in downtown Cleveland is making progress toward a groundbreaking, said a city building department official. But no visible construction work can apparently begin until a property transfer occurs first.

For more than two months, an approved construction permit for the foundation of a high-rise apartment tower in downtown Cleveland has sat at the city’s Department of Building & Housing office, ready for the architect of record or general contractor to come pick it up.

No one directly involved with the 23-story City Club Apartments project was willing to say precisely why construction workers haven’t descended upon the current parking lot site at 720 Euclid Ave. to build the tower. But a high-ranking city building department official said a typical reason why a construction permit isn’t pulled right away is because contractors are waiting for the subject property’s sale to close. That was backed up by other information.

“The foundation permit was reviewed and approved 8-10-21 and is awaiting the contractor to pick it up,” said Chief Building Official Thomas Vanover in responding to an e-mail from NEOtrans. “It is not uncommon for people to wait for the property to close before they pull the permit.”

The approved permit that’s awaiting pickup is for the apartment tower’s foundation and site utilities along with an earth retention system for the protection of adjacent properties. Phased approval of permit applications, 44 to 146 pages each, for foundation/utilities, structure, civil/landscaping, architectural features, interior, tech/specialty, mechanical systems, electrical systems and others is being pursued, a common practice. City Planning Commission reviewed and approved the general design of the project in August 2020.

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The half-acre site for the new apartment tower is to be sold to an affiliate of Michigan-based City Club Apartments.Vocon

The half-acre site for the new apartment tower is to be sold to an affiliate of Michigan-based City Club Apartments. It is at the north end of a nearly 2-acre property currently owned by the Goldberg family which extends south from Euclid Avenue to Prospect Avenue. It includes a mid-block parking garage to be used by residents of the City Club Apartments, primarily at night.

“There has been quite a bit of progress in this project,” Vanover said. “There hasn’t been a delay. Like most projects of this size, it has been submitted in phases beginning with the site and foundation and then the structure.”

With the foundation permit approved, Vanover said his staff is now in the process of reviewing the structural plans for the nearly $100 million project. Some aspects of the plans need revision via an adjudication order to be made soon, but that is routine in projects both large and small, he said.

However, in the most recent submittal of plans, the city assigned the wrong ownership for the property — that of David Bishoff of Columbus who owns the neighboring City Club Building, 850 Euclid. Neither he or his property are affiliated with City Club Apartments, a chain of residential buildings headquartered in the Detroit suburb of Farmington Hills.

Bishoff said he had nothing to do with filing the apartment tower documents with the city. After he was asked by NEOtrans about it, Vanover had the ownership information corrected on the filing by the end of today.

“It appears that the wrong parcel number was used,” he said. “Because the address 776 Euclid does not currently exist, a place holder is put in until the transfer closes. This is then changed prior to (permit) issuance. In this case, it looks like the assumption was made that the City Club Apartments were on the City Club (Building) parcel.”

The nearly 2-acre property extending south to Prospect Avenue is owned by affiliates of the Goldberg family, GSK 720 Euclid, LLC & 720 Euclid Garage, LLC. A half-acre piece of the property fronting Euclid on which the 300-unit, market-rate apartment tower will rise was carved out of the 2-acre parcel last November and will transfer to CCA CBD Cleveland, LLC, an affiliate of City Club Apartments.

Original content at NEO-trans.blog

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