MIDDLETOWN
City provides wide array of support
Middletown city officials believe that a revitalized urban area is a great tool to attract millennials,
tourists, and it also provides services supporting businesses and residents.
City officials outlined several examples of the type of support they provide for downtown projects that
include:
* The city funds façade grants providing the matching funding up to a cap. It awarded a $10,000
matching grant for improvement to the Snider Building as part of that redevelopment efforts.
* Obtaining pipeline grants to support the historic designation of projects and it advocates to the state
historic preservation office for project listing on the historic register; Among the projects awarded from
these grants was for the Manchester Hotel and the Snider Building for listing on the Register of
National Historic Places.
* Creating Community Reinvestment Areas so that property taxes on real estate improvements can be
abated for a period of time.
* Jump-starting the redevelopment of downtown by supporting the development of Pendleton Art
Center, BeauVerre Riordan Stained Glass Studio, and Cincinnati State as downtown anchors.
* Designating much of the downtown business district as an entertainment district which is poised to
be the first city in Ohio to create an outdoor refreshment area for open alcohol consumption.
* Supported brownfield cleanup of several projects downtown as well as acquiring multiple grants to
facilitate projects, include a targeted brownfield grant worth approximately $30,000 for an updated
Phase I and Phase II for the Snider Building.
* Advocates the funding of projects, meeting with lenders, port authorities, and other grant and loan
providers; including regional authorities.
* The city funds a Small Business Development office to support small business growth as well a
portion of Downtown Middletown Inc.’s costs to establish a Main Street program.
* Participating with other regional organizations such as the Convention and Visitors Bureau, the Great
Miami River Corridor Committee to market the river as well as with Ohio-Kentucky-Indiana Regional
Council of Governments and the MetroParks of Butler County and the Tri-State Trails Alliance.
* Working with a professional marketing team to assist in publicity for downtown and the city, and are
currently creating a downtown marketing collateral piece.
Slow progress is being made on several key building rehabilitation projects in the downtown
Middletown core, while others, such as the much-anticipated redevelopment of the historic Manchester
Inn hotel, have stalled for various reasons.
Revitalizing the downtown is one of the key strategies city officials are pushing in an effort to return
Middletown to vibrancy. City officials have invested hundreds of thousands of taxpayer dollars in the
purchase of vacant buildings that they’ve turned around and sold at a reduced rate, and in some cases
given away, to investors and groups to redevelop.
City officials are banking on success stories like Cincinnati State Middletown and the Pendleton Arts
Center to be catalysts for change downtown. And there has been some momentum with a number of
new businesses and restaurants opening during the past few months and more events and activities
being planned downtown.
But progress has been slow, or as City Manager Doug Adkins is fond of saying,”you can’t change
Middletown on Thursday.”
Local developer Mike Robinette who has been working to redevelop the Goetz Tower, located at the
southeast corner of Central Avenue and South Main Street, said it has taken his group three years just
to get the project to the construction phase.
“If it were easy, then everybody would be doing it,” Robinette said of downtown redevelopment.
“Redevelopment is much more difficult than greenfield development.”
In addition to the demolition, painting, rehabilitation or other construction going on
downtown, the city is in the midst of creating Ohio’s first Designated Outdoor
Refreshment Area in which the downtown core would become an open container
area for patrons purchasing alcoholic beverages from designated bars to enjoy
outside. The DORA could be in operation in the next few months as it completes
the city’s legislative process.
In an effort to gauge the progress of the city’s downtown redevelopment plans, the
Journal-News spoke with city officials and developers last week to get the latest
updates on the status of various building projects in downtown Middletown.
According to Robinette, the Goetz Tower is the midst of an ownership transfer. The
seven-story Art Deco building was awarded $600,000 in Ohio Historic Preservation
Tax credits and is qualified for an additional $600,000 in federal historic tax grants.
Robinette declined to discuss the status of the new ownership group as those details will not be finalized for several weeks.
However, he expects the project will proceed as previously announced to redevelop
the building into 24 market-rate apartments as well as 2,000 square feet of
retail/commercial space. The building currently houses a Fifth Third Bank branch.
The cost of the project has been estimated at more than $2.5 million, with nearly 50
percent of the cost being covered by the state and federal tax credits.
Robinette said all of the building code issues have been resolved and construction
documents and plans are in the process of being drawn up.
Robinette, a former Middletown and Franklin economic development director, said
the city can only do so much for a development project and that the state officials
have been very cooperative in assisting with the project and providing “clear
guidance” in obtaining the competitive historic preservation tax credits.
Robinette’s group is also working on rebuilding the former Rose Furniture building
for retail space.
The building, located at 36 S. Main St., was heavily damaged by rain in fall 2013.
The damage included a collapsed roof.
Robinette said the demolition work has been completed behind the facade, which
also included the removal asbestos from the site.
He said all three floors of the new building will be used for retail and that
construction plans are also being prepared for this project.
In less than two weeks, the former Bank One/Barnitz Bank building will reopen as
the The Windamere, the city’s newest event venue and art gallery.
“It’s crunch time,” said owner Mica Glaser. “We open in two weeks.”
She said the first event will be a networking event for 100 to 125 wedding vendors
in the Cincinnati/Dayton region. Glaser said the venue will be decked out as a
wedding reception.
“I’m really looking forward to introducing our building to people in the Middletown
and surrounding area,” she said. “We’ve already had a lot of interest from the
Cincinnati and Dayton areas.”
The Windamere’s first wedding reception will be on Oct. 24.
Glaser said renovations have been ongoing for nearly four months after the
purchase was completed on June 15 and has cost about $250,000. Some of those
renovations at the new venue will incorporate many of the former bank’s features
such as the two balconies that overlook the main room as well as the vault. In
addition, the renovation also uncovered a terrazzo floor that is being refinished as
the dance floor, Glaser said.
“It’s perfect for dancing,” she said.
Glaser said the 12-foot-by-24-foot vault still has all of its safe deposit boxes and
keys and is being offered to couples to store their wedding keepsakes.
“I already have two brides who have picked out their safe deposit boxes,” she said.
During the renovations, some former bank employees have stopped in to take a
look at where they used sit when they worked there, Glaser said. She said sections
of the bank teller windows as well as some of the safe deposit privacy walls have
been incorporated into the décor to take advantage of the old bank’s characteristics.
Glaser said she’s always looking for photos and stories about the building when it
was a bank.
In addition, Glaser said venue will also feature the gallery of local artist Chris
Walden, which is becoming another attraction for Windamere. She said 55 people
from the Cincinnati Art Club will be taking a bus trip to Middletown in the coming
weeks to see Walden’s work as well as visiting the Sorg Opera House and the
BeauVerre Riordan Stained Glass Studio.
Windamere will also host art shows and exhibits as well as other community events.
A grand opening and an open house are being planned for November, Glaser said.
As the Middletown campus continues to grow in enrollment, Cincinnati State will
have options to accommodate that growth and be a catalyst in driving economic
development efforts in the downtown area.
The buildings include the former Cincinnati Gas & Electric Building, 1 N. Main St.;
the former First Financial Bank, 2 N. Main St.; the former Butler County Job and
Family Services building at 1021 Central Ave.; and the former Middletown Senior
Citizens Center at 140 Verity Parkway.
Jean Gould, the college’s vice president of marketing and communications, said
the Middletown campus and its programs are growing.
As of now, Gould said the only real development at the downtown campus has
been some repairs at the former Butler County JFS building where the Midd State
Academy is located.
She said there were plans to house a welding lab in that building, however, the
college felt that would not be a good use of that space as Butler Tech had built new
welding bays at their facility. Gould said the Middletown City Schools approached
the college about housing 150 students for its Middie Academy where they can
earn high school and college credit.
The college and the school district signed a five-year agreement in June.
“It’s a great partnership with the high school,” Gould said.
Manchester Hotel/Snider Building projects
Last week, it was announced that plans to transform a vacant Middletown building
into a brewery and hotel are on hold, according to the developer behind the project.
A lack of support from the city is among the reasons William Grau said he is putting
the Snider Building microbrewery and Manchester Hotel projects on hold. However,
city leaders say Grau is expecting too much financial support from the city to keep
his project afloat.
“The Manchester Hotel and Snider Building/Brewery are currently on hold pending
an increase in outside support and interest in the projects … ” Grau recently told the
Journal-News. The Illinois-based developer also said he is considering selling both
properties.
For the second time in the past several months, Grau did not submit an application
for Ohio historic preservation tax credits for the latest funding round that had a Sept.
30 deadline. Last spring, Grau opted not to submit the tax credit application for
Manchester Hotel, saying the strategy then was to get the microbrewery in Snider
Building up and running first to create a destination venue before starting the hotel
portion of the project.
Grau said he also could not get grants from the Duke Energy Foundation or interest
from JobsOhio and the Ohio Development Services Agency for the projects. The
state agency oversees job creation and the historic tax credit programs.
Both buildings are structurally sound, according to Grau, and roof leaks have been
repaired. Ongoing inspections and repairs are being completed as necessary, he
said.
In the past year, Grau has run into snags getting through the pre-application process
with the State Historic Preservation Office to get the projects cleared to allow the
historic tax credits application to be submitted.