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Tag: Huntington Bank Field

  • Cleveland Picks DiGeronimo as Master Developer to Lead Post-Stadium Lakefront – Cleveland Scene

    Cleveland’s waterfront authority has picked a master developer to lead the future vision of Downtown’s lakefront.

    DiGeronimo Development, a family-owned builder based in Brecksville with a track record of mixed-use construction, was chosen to guide those 50 acres of land where a soon-to-be-demolished stadium and parking lots stand today.

    The selection team of the North Coast Waterfront Development Corporation, which includes Mayor Bibb, Council President Blaine Griffin and Destination Cleveland’s David Gilbert, picked DiGeronimo due to the company’s string of recent successes and the virtue of them being right down the road, they said.

    “They bring deep local roots, a proven track record and a strong commitment to collaboration and community benefits,” Griffin said in a statement.

    “Having a local partner means greater accountability, stronger connections to our workforce and neighborhoods and more project dollars staying in our regional economy.”

    Spearheaded by CEO Victor “Vic” DiGeronimo, Jr., and his cousins, Rob and Kevin, the company has contributed to some recent landmarks in the past half century. 

    In the 1970s, DiGeronimo helped build the downtown Justice Center. In 2018, it cut tape on Pinecrest in Orange Village, the ritzy east side mixed-use complex. It also helped develop Tremont’s Electric Gardens, a behemoth of an apartment complex, and Brecksville’s Valor Acres, the new mixed-use location by Sherwin-William’s new R&D facility.

    It’s also currently working on the WaterWood Resort, a private cluster of luxury townhomes with 40-boat marina to boot in Vermilion. Downtown’s lakefront would be the company’s first major public project situated on water.

    Scene reached out to DiGeronimo for comment, but did not receive a call back by Thursday afternoon.

    The city’s team still has to officially replace Field Operations, the master planning and design consultant they hired in 2023 to drum up what the lakefront build may look like when it’s finally done. A new consultant will be picked in early 2026, with yet another new plan made public by the summer, the city said.

    DiGeronimo will work with a variety of other developers, about a dozen or so that submitted ideas to Bibb and NCWDC last month. “Mixed-income housing,” a hotel, a “food hall concept”, “waterfront promenades” and an “indoor/outdoor music venue with approximately 10,000 seats” are all on the table.

    Cleveland has $150 million in federal and state money that’s set to go towards a landbridge linking Mall C with whatever’s to come after Huntington Bank Field goes away in 2029. It’s also raised the $284 million needed to convert the Shoreway into a slower, pedestrian-friendly boulevard and negotiated a $100 million payout from the Haslams for the Browns’ departure to Brook Park.

    All reasons Bibb’s reassured that he will be the mayor to actually pull this thing off.

    “We have the resources to make meaningful progress,” Bibb said, “connecting people to the water, creating economic opportunity for residents, and reshaping Cleveland as a true waterfront city that supports downtown businesses year-round, not just a few days a year.”  

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    Mark Oprea

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  • Cleveland Picks DeGeronimo as Master Developer to Lead Post-Stadium Lakefront – Cleveland Scene

    Cleveland’s waterfront authority has picked a master developer to lead the future vision of Downtown’s lakefront.

    DeGeronimo Development, a family-owned builder based in Brecksville with a track record of mixed-use construction, was chosen to guide those 50 acres of land where a soon-to-be-demolished stadium and parking lots stand today.

    The selection team of the North Coast Waterfront Development Corporation, which includes Mayor Bibb, Council President Blaine Griffin and Destination Cleveland’s David Gilbert, picked DeGeronimo due to the company’s string of recent successes and the virtue of them being right down the road, they said.

    “They bring deep local roots, a proven track record and a strong commitment to collaboration and community benefits,” Griffin said in a statement.

    “Having a local partner means greater accountability, stronger connections to our workforce and neighborhoods and more project dollars staying in our regional economy.”

    Spearheaded by CEO Victor “Vic” DiGeronimo, Jr., and his cousins, Rob and Kevin, the company has contributed to some recent landmarks in the past half century. 

    In the 1970s, DeGeronimo helped build the downtown Justice Center. In 2018, it cut tape on Pinecrest in Orange Village, the ritzy east side mixed-use complex. It also helped develop Tremont’s Electric Gardens, a behemoth of an apartment complex, and Brecksville’s Valor Acres, the new mixed-use location by Sherwin-William’s new R&D facility.

    It’s also currently working on the WaterWood Resort, a private cluster of luxury townhomes with 40-boat marina to boot in Vermilion. Downtown’s lakefront would be the company’s first major public project situated on water.

    Scene reached out to DeGeronimo for comment, but did not receive a call back by Thursday afternoon.

    The city’s team still has to officially replace Field Operations, the master planning and design consultant they hired in 2023 to drum up what the lakefront build may look like when it’s finally done. A new consultant will be picked in early 2026, with yet another new plan made public by the summer, the city said.

    DeGeronimo will work with a variety of other developers, about a dozen or so that submitted ideas to Bibb and NCWDC last month. “Mixed-income housing,” a hotel, a “food hall concept”, “waterfront promenades” and an “indoor/outdoor music venue with approximately 10,000 seats” are all on the table.

    Cleveland has $150 million in federal and state money that’s set to go towards a landbridge linking Mall C with whatever’s to come after Huntington Bank Field goes away in 2029. It’s also raised the $284 million needed to convert the Shoreway into a slower, pedestrian-friendly boulevard and negotiated a $100 million payout from the Haslams for the Browns’ departure to Brook Park.

    All reasons Bibb’s reassured that he will be the mayor to actually pull this thing off.

    “We have the resources to make meaningful progress,” Bibb said, “connecting people to the water, creating economic opportunity for residents, and reshaping Cleveland as a true waterfront city that supports downtown businesses year-round, not just a few days a year.”  

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    Mark Oprea

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  • Haslams to Pay Cleveland $100 Million for Stadium Demolition, Lakefront Development – Cleveland Scene

    After a in-person meeting and two Cokes at Jimmy and Dee Haslam’s home in Bratenahl on Friday, Mayor Bibb believed he came to a fair deal with the Browns owners he has been fighting against in court and public opinion since they announced their intentions to move to Berea.

    Haslams Sports Group will pay to demolish the current Huntington Bank Field on the lakefront after the lease with Cleveland is up in 2029. They will also, Bibb announced in a press conference on Monday, pay the city $90 million combined through a lump sum and installments over the next 20 years.

    All pending lawsuits between the Browns and the City of Cleveland, after years of complaints and filings, are now dropped as well.

    “I think the fight we put up was the right fight,” Bibb said from a podium in the Mayor’s Office’s Red Room. “This deal shows that the fight worked. And we have a win-win for the city and a win-win for the region.”

    Jimmy Haslam, coming off yet another embarrassing Browns loss, said the $100 million heading the city’s way is very much in line with Bibb’s vision for Cleveland.

    “After such a bumpy time period, we’ll just describe it as this: How excited we are to make this investment in the City of Cleveland with Mayor Bibb. I think these dollars will be put to good use, [and] will make Cleveland an even better place to live, work and raise a family,” he said.

    Cleveland will receive the first $25 million of the money this year. Starting on Jan. 1, 2029 the Haslams will pay Cleveland $5 million a year until 2033. That amounts to $80 million in cash.

    The remaining $20 million will come in the form of a specific community benefits project paid in $2 million installments until 2045. Neither Bibb nor Haslam elaborated on details on that point.

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    Mark Oprea

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  • Haslam Says Average Browns Ticket at Brook Park Dome Will Be ‘Over $200’ – Cleveland Scene

    Ahead of another Browns loss, this one being different than the others because it happened in another country, Browns co-owner Jimmy Haslam gave a brief update on the Brook Park dome project.

    Bulldozers were already moving dirt, he said, despite various legal entanglements still lingering and ongoing traffic studies and planning still working out how to accommodate the crowds. Work on the $2.4-billion megastadium and village was underway ahead of the team’s expected arrival in 2029 and there’s every reason to be excited.

    Even if the sticker comes with a bit of shock.

    “The average ticket will be over $200 plus food and beverage,” Haslam told the Associated Press, “so we want [fans] when [they come] to a game to have a great time and say, ‘You know, that was a lot but it was worth it, and I want to do it again’.”

    Again, that’s before food and beverage, and before parking. All of which are sure to come with stiff price tags.

    And those estimates are four years out. Who knows how much the ticket will actually cost by the time the Browns, and whoever is serving as general manager, coach and quarterback by that time, step foot in Brook Park.

    Haslam’s price tag for a seat in the Dawg Pound (and beyond) rings of an air of overconfidence to some, especially to long-time fans wary of both a flashy suburban stadium and of a team that, in their minds, has not proven its worth the move. (Or tickets that can run into the four figures.)

    “I think a lot of fans, myself included, feel like $200 on average is a tough pill to swallow,” Rodney Symons, the head of the Lakewood Dawg Pound Browns Backers chapter, wrote Scene in an email.

    The team does currently sport the lowest average ticket price in the NFL, according to StubHub, at $158. Only six teams have prices below $200. The Eagles, meanwhile, command $475 a ticket, on average. Nine teams average more than $300 to get in the building.

    The Haslams’ campaign over the years to sell the move, with its promised hotels and wintertime ice rink, still seems to miss the mark of what most fans actually yearn for, Symons said.

    “We just want a fair deal and a stadium experience that feels like it is still ours,” he said. “It is about keeping the Dawg Pound alive, keeping families coming to games and remembering what makes Cleveland football special.”

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    Mark Oprea

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  • Browns sue city of Cleveland

    Browns sue city of Cleveland

    The Browns’ back-and-forth battle with Cleveland over a planned move into a new suburban stadium has gone to court.The NFL team said Thursday it has filed a lawsuit in federal court asking for clarification of the “Modell Law,” which the city has threatened to use to keep the Browns from leaving after their lease at lakefront Huntington Bank Field expires in 2028.Video above: Cleveland Browns players robbed at gunpointThe team has played its games in downtown Cleveland since the 1940s, and in its current 65,000-seat stadium, which is leased to the team by the city, since 1999.Browns owners Dee and Jimmy Haslam announced last week they are moving forward with plans to build a domed stadium and entertainment complex in Brook Park, about 15 miles south of Cleveland.Earlier this week, the Cleveland city council threatened to block the move by invoking the “Modell Law,” named after former Browns owner Art Modell. After losing his fight with the city to get a new stadium built, Modell moved his franchise after the 1995 season to Baltimore, where it became the Ravens.The state law passed in 1996 was used to stop the Columbus Crew of Major League Soccer from moving from Ohio to Texas in 2019. The team stayed and was bought by the Haslams, who are also part owners of the NBA’s Milwaukee Bucks.”Today’s action for declaratory judgment was filed to take this matter out of the political domain and ensure we can move this transformative project forward to make a new domed Huntington Bank Field in Brook Park a reality,” Dave Jenkins, CEO of Haslam Sports Group, said in a statement.”We have no interest in any contentious legal battle but are determined to create a project that will add to greater Cleveland by building a domed stadium and adjacent mixed-use development. … This project will bring premier events and economic activity that will generate significant revenue for the city, county and state.”The Browns explored other options, including a makeover of their current stadium, but said the remodeling was too costly. The city had offered to pay $461 million toward a renovation it hoped would lead to development of the lakefront area adjacent to the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame.Clevland Mayor Justin Bibb called the Haslams’ decision to move the team “frustrating and profoundly disheartening.”

    The Browns’ back-and-forth battle with Cleveland over a planned move into a new suburban stadium has gone to court.

    The NFL team said Thursday it has filed a lawsuit in federal court asking for clarification of the “Modell Law,” which the city has threatened to use to keep the Browns from leaving after their lease at lakefront Huntington Bank Field expires in 2028.

    Video above: Cleveland Browns players robbed at gunpoint

    The team has played its games in downtown Cleveland since the 1940s, and in its current 65,000-seat stadium, which is leased to the team by the city, since 1999.

    Browns owners Dee and Jimmy Haslam announced last week they are moving forward with plans to build a domed stadium and entertainment complex in Brook Park, about 15 miles south of Cleveland.

    Earlier this week, the Cleveland city council threatened to block the move by invoking the “Modell Law,” named after former Browns owner Art Modell. After losing his fight with the city to get a new stadium built, Modell moved his franchise after the 1995 season to Baltimore, where it became the Ravens.

    The state law passed in 1996 was used to stop the Columbus Crew of Major League Soccer from moving from Ohio to Texas in 2019. The team stayed and was bought by the Haslams, who are also part owners of the NBA’s Milwaukee Bucks.

    “Today’s action for declaratory judgment was filed to take this matter out of the political domain and ensure we can move this transformative project forward to make a new domed Huntington Bank Field in Brook Park a reality,” Dave Jenkins, CEO of Haslam Sports Group, said in a statement.

    “We have no interest in any contentious legal battle but are determined to create a project that will add to greater Cleveland by building a domed stadium and adjacent mixed-use development. … This project will bring premier events and economic activity that will generate significant revenue for the city, county and state.”

    The Browns explored other options, including a makeover of their current stadium, but said the remodeling was too costly. The city had offered to pay $461 million toward a renovation it hoped would lead to development of the lakefront area adjacent to the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame.

    Clevland Mayor Justin Bibb called the Haslams’ decision to move the team “frustrating and profoundly disheartening.”

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  • Bibb: Browns Move to Brook Park Will Economically Harm Cleveland, Cuyahoga County

    Bibb: Browns Move to Brook Park Will Economically Harm Cleveland, Cuyahoga County

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    Mark Oprea

    Mayor Justin Bibb announced that Browns owners Jimmy and Dee Haslam have decided to move the Browns to a soon-to-be-built $2 billion stadium village in Brook Park.

    In an alternately solemn and feisty speech in front of a packed Red Room at City Hall on Thursday, Mayor Justin Bibb announced that Jimmy and Dee Haslam intend to officially move the Cleveland Browns to Brook Park in a new domed stadium.

    The decision, apparently conveyed to Bibb in a phone call Wednesday night, put the mayor on the defensive as he outlined a laundry list of moves he and City Hall deployed to convince the Haslams that keeping the team in their namesake city, on a lakefront the owners had implored/demanded the city improve, was the right thing to do. Absconding to Brook Park will create an annual $30 million economic hit to downtown, he reported a recent impact study found, and detract from and compete with public infrastructure that the city and county have already poured hundreds of millions of dollars into.

    Noting that Cleveland’s offer and attendant lakefront moves — $461 million in subsidies to the Haslams, state and federal grants collected to convert the Shoreway to a pedestrian-friendly boulevard and build a landbridge connector, the formation of a waterfront development corporation to guide projects — met all of the Haslams’ suggested demands when the two sides first talked after he entered office, Bibb said their desire for a dome came later. This, he said, wasted precious time.

    And when it became clear a dome was the only option the Haslams would consider, the city quickly moved to find other options downtown, including the offer of land at Burke. This, he said, simply didn’t meet their timeline or financial plans.

    “This is a deliberate choice—one driven by a desire to maximize profits rather than positive impact. They had the opportunity to reinvest in Cleveland, transform the current stadium into a world-class facility, enhance the fan experience and remain highly profitable,” Bibb said from the Red Room podium days after Cavs owner Dan Gilbert’s company cut the ribbon on a new riverfront development that will include the team’s new training facilities.

    Both the financial strife and the emotional weight of losing the negotiations brought out a heavy-hearted Bibb on Thursday, who often bit his lip or raised his hands when recalling the city’s two years of work.

    From the start, Bibb and the city sought to address the Browns’ concerns — “fan experience,” “traffic” and ensuring Cleveland “would really accelerate lakefront development.”

    “Every milestone they’ve asked for, we hit,” Bibb said. “We created a new waterfront development authority. We got state support for the land bridge. We got federal support—with more on the way.”

    Compared to the Brook Park plan, “We believe the renovation was a competitive deal,” he said.

    Bibb’s sentiment has been mirrored by a swath of public officials, from U.S. Senator Sherrod Brown to County Executive Chris Ronayne, the latter who reiterated succinctly in a press release during Bibb’s speech that, “the Browns stadium should remain downtown.”

    In a short statement Thursday afternoon, the Haslams said: “We’ve learned through our exhaustive work that renovating our current stadium will simply not solve many operational issues and would be a short-term approach. With more time to reflect, we have also realized that without a dome, we will not attract the type of large-scale events and year-round activity to justify the magnitude of this public-private partnership. The transformational economic opportunities created by a dome far outweigh what a renovated stadium could produce with around ten events per year.”

    The Haslams have previously said they would pay for half of the $2.4 billion dome. Ronayne, again, has said the county is not interested in forking over dough. The sin tax, legally speaking, can only be used to fund the current lakefront stadium. And so far Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine has been silent on how much the state could possibly contribute, though the Haslams appear to hope for around $600 million. The team has explored a variety of other novel financing concepts involving that public-private partnership to come up with the rest.

    92.3 The Fan reported that Bibb has asked the Haslams for three things given their decision to leave for Brook Park: “The first was that the Browns pay for the demolition of the current stadium, which should cost between $15-25 million. Bibb also sought financial support for small business owners impacted by the team’s departure to Brook Park as well as support from the Haslam Sports Group and Browns for the development of the lakefront.”

    In closing, Bibb said that if the Brook Park plan turns out not to be viable, he stands willing and with open arms to continue talks about keeping the Browns downtown.

    “It’s the wrong time not to choose Cleveland,” he said. “And the wrong time not to choose our lakefront downtown.”

    Mark Oprea

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