![]() ![]() Google may also transfer this information to third parties where required to do so by law, or where such third parties process the information on Google's behalf. Google may use the data collected to contextualize and personalize the ads of its own advertising network. Google will use this information for the purpose of evaluating your use of the website, compiling reports on website activity for website operators and providing other services relating to website activity and internet usage. The information generated by the Cookie about your use of the website (including your IP address) will be transmitted to and stored by Google on servers in the United States. The Oodles dumpling bar closed earlier this month.įewer questions were raised on the apartment building proposal. The building, in roughly a U-shape with a wing jutting to the south, would include about 222 apartments, parking, and a raised terrace with a pool in the rear. The complex's main entrance would be on the west, onto Thurber Drive East.This website uses Google Analytics, a web analytics service provided by Google, Inc. Others in the meeting expressed concern about traffic, especially at the intersection of Neil and Collins and the fate of the remaining tenants in the current strip center – Nails on Neil, Great Clips and Boston Stoker Coffee Co. "We do not have a blank slate … In order for this project to go forward, there are certain conditions we must work within." "We hear you loud and clear and have communicated those concerns to our tenant," he said. Leibowitz acknowledged that the buildings might seem too conventional for a historic urban setting but said Casto's hands are tied by its lease with CVS. "It does feel like a suburban design that doesn’t necessarily fit into the neighborhood," said Harrison West Society Vice President Josh Hinderliter, echoing the concerns of many. Many of the comments during the society's Wednesday meeting, which attracted more than 150 participants, focused on the design of the commercial buildings – single-story, standalone buildings next to surface parking. "That’s as far as we can go on that front." "We do believe this is a tenant the community will be excited about," Leibowitz said. Casto has a preliminary agreement with a single tenant for the building that it cannot identify, said Eric Leibowitz, vice president of development and leasing for Casto. The other commercial building, 20,900 square feet, would sit at Neil and Collins avenues. Plans call for the building to have a drive-through. Thurber Village shopping center: Redeveloping Harrison West siteĬasto is seeking to redevelop the site after the March 2017 closing of the Giant Eagle, which was followed less than three years later by the closing of the "Last Call" discount liquor operation in the former grocery store.Ĭasto's new plan for the site includes a standalone 13,000-square-foot building at the corner of Neil and Buttles for CVS, which is the largest remaining tenant in the center. Two years ago, the company presented a mixed-use plan for the site that called for an eight- to 10-story apartment building. This is Casto's second run at redeveloping the 5-acre site and 28-year-old shopping center. In Wednesday's Zoom presentation, Casto's proposal received a lukewarm reception from neighbors, who called it too bland and too "suburban."ĭevelopment: Downtown Columbus high-rise may see new life with rooftop pool, terrace The plan, which Casto presented to the Harrison West Society Wednesday night, calls for replacing the current strip center, which is anchored by a closed Giant Eagle, with two single-story commercial buildings fronting Neil Avenue and a five-story apartment building with enclosed parking in the back. ![]() The Columbus development company Casto is again floating a plan to redevelop the Thurber Village shopping center at Neil and Buttles avenues in Harrison West. ![]()
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