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Tag: Ohio City

  • Forest City Shuffleboard Has Closed, But a Deal to Reopen it With New Operator Already in the Works – Cleveland Scene

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    Yesterday, the owners of Forest City Shuffleboard (4506 Lorain Ave.) in Ohio City decided to close the business. But founder Jim Miketo assures local fans of the “eatertainment” facility that plans already are in the works to reopen it.

    Miketo opened Forest City Shuffleboard in the spring of 2017 after a significant building renovation and restoration project. The business has flourished for years – save for the expected Covid downturn – and the founder was working to expand the brand to other cities.

    But last summer, as Miketo’s real estate development ventures started to become all-consuming, he sold Forest City Shuffleboard to Larks Entertainment out of Dallas. The sale was kept quiet to give the new operators the best chance of success, says Miketo.

    “It broke my heart to sell the business because of all the relationships and work that I put into it,” he explains. “It was getting hard for me to keep my fingers on the pulse of the business. I’m not a half-in, half-out kind of guy.”

    After a year of out-of-state management of Forest City Shuffleboard, Larks Entertainment decided to close the doors yesterday. But Miketo says that he’s already working hand-in-hand with Larks to secure a new local operator to take over.

    “One thing I learned through this process is that Clevelanders love Clevelanders,” he says. “I will endeavor to find a local partner who has the same pride and passion for this city and for that business.”

    Miketo says that news of a handoff could come within weeks, assuring that a popular entertainment destination reopens under local control.

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  • Arsenal Cider House in Ohio City Has Closed – Cleveland Scene

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    Arsenal Cider House, the Ohio City taproom of the Pittsburgh-based cidery, has closed. The bar (4507 Lorain Ave.) had its last day of service on December 27. Bill and Michelle Larkin launched the cidery in the Lawrenceville neighborhood of Pittsburgh about 15 years ago, adding the Cleveland location in January of 2020, which all but guaranteed a slow start.

    The Larkins announced the sad news last week.

    “After a lot of thought and examination of our options, we have decided to close our Cleveland tap house. Fear not!  We will continue to self-distribute to local bars, restaurants and retailers in Cleveland and beyond. Be sure to request that your favorite spots send us an email through our website to get onto the delivery list!”

    There will be no changes to service at the PA locations in Wexford, Dormont, Lawrenceville and Penn Hills, the Larkins added.

    “Thanks to all that supported us over the last 6 years and, of course, thanks to our awesome team members. We’ve met some great people and will continue to visit the great City of Cleveland!”

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    For 25 years, Douglas Trattner has worked as a full-time freelance writer, editor and author. His work as co-author on Michael Symon’s cookbooks have earned him four New York Times Best-Selling Author honors, while his longstanding role as Scene dining editor has garnered awards of its own.

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  • Cordelia Owners to Open Rosy in Ohio City in Late January – Cleveland Scene

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    When guests visit Rosy (2912 Church Ave.) for the first time – especially those who previously dined at Alea – they will observe a dramatically different interior despite existing within the same four walls. Partners Andrew Watts and Vinnie Cimino worked with local design-build group Shred and Co. to soften and calm the space, which was minimal and hard-edged.

    “We’ve been so secretive about all of this because we want people to be wowed, to see how special this place is to us,” says Cimino.

    Ohio City neighbors who have attempted to sneak peeks throughout the months-long construction process have been thwarted by plastic-covered windows. Writers like this one who had hoped to snap some photos during a recent interview were similarly rebuffed by management. But having borne witness to the before and after, I can attest to the newly achieved warmth and luster of the after.

    Alea, which closed a year ago, was appreciated for its open kitchen and live-fire cooking suite, which sits conspicuously behind the bar. That former slab bartop is now a smooth and sweeping Douglas fir kitchen counter with a generous bullnose edge. It has been beefed up to accommodate more diners and more plates. A winding wooden banquette has replaced the flinty fixed seating of the predecessor. Other Bauhaus-style touches can be found in the many bentwood curves, corners and alcoves.

    Since opening Cordelia on East 4th Street three and a half years ago, Watts and Cimino have racked up accolades such as multiple James Beard Award nominations, a Food & Wine Best New Chefs nod, and the love and support of an ever-expanding fanbase. It was only natural that the pair would begin exploring expansion plans.

    “Once we got our legs underneath ourselves at Cordelia we were looking toward the next thing,” Watts explains. “We explored a multitude of properties and opportunities, but none felt just right until this space became available. We’ve always been fans of this place and neighborhood.”

    Tucked into the Hingetown area of Ohio City, Rosy sits shoulder-to-shoulder to distinctive spots like Amba, Larder, Jukebox and Rising Star Coffee. It is a dense, walkable neighborhood – and that characteristic guided the owners’ plans for Rosy.

    “We want this to be fun and upbeat and vivacious and rosy like we are,” adds Cimino. “We love hospitality and love feeding folks and what better way to do it than around a fire. The point of this space is to cherish the moment.”

    As they have been with respect to the interior, the owners are keeping many of the food particulars close to their vest. But diners can look forward to an ever-shifting selection of dishes sourced “hyper-locally” and cooked in plain view over a wood-fueled grill suite.

    “Cooking over a live fire is one of my most favorite things to do,” chef Cimino states. “We do Outstanding in the Field every single year and it’s one of my favorite events because we just go outside and cook.”

    There will be no printed menus, instead a roster of 10-12 a la carte items will be available – until they aren’t, with the selections “changing at will, on a whim.” Groups can also opt for the main event, a four-course menu that might start with smaller bites before progressing to larger family-style plates. Every meal ends with soft-serve ice cream, dispensed from a sleek wall-mounted apparatus.

    The food is described as “European backyard barbecue,” a loose genre that will take nods from Eastern Europe, Western Europe and beyond. The style of delivery will seem familiar to fans of Cordelia’s “bellie up,” a freewheeling chef’s-counter feast, albeit trimmed down.

    “I want you to trust us enough to know that we’ll cook you food that we’d like to eat,” says Cimino. “We had so much success telling stories with our ‘bellie up’ menu at Cordelia. This is another way for us to tell more and deeper stories. But we don’t want to have to wheel you out of here after. I want people to be able to come here and make it part of their evening, not the only thing they do.”

    Rosy is billed as fun not fine dining, where every table is a communal table. By building custom furniture for the dining room, the owners were able to increase seating capacity from 35 to 50. They reconfigured the storefront by installing a wider window ledge that will become an indoor-outdoor seating area for 14 when the garage door is raised. Down the road, the newly leveled sidewalk out front will expand the outdoor dining.

    When it opens in late January or early February, Rosy will be dinner-only Thursdays through Mondays.

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  • First Look: Le Burger 4304, Opening at Intro in Ohio City on Dec. 17th – Cleveland Scene

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    Le Burger 4304 (2407 Lorain Ave., 216-998-5355), the restaurant that replaced Pioneer at Intro in Ohio City, will open Wednesday, December 17. The concept comes from JJJ hospitality, a Minneapolis-based hospitality group that opened the original location in that city last year.

    “Our goal when creating Le Burger was to put an incredible amount of backend work into the food, just like we would at the nicest fine-dining restaurants that we operate or have worked in but have the end result be really approachable for the guest,” says Jonathan Gans of JJJ hospitality.

    In Minneapolis, Le Burger is a high-volume fast-casual eatery. In Ohio City, it has been reworked into a full-service operation with draft beer, wine and cocktails. The stars of the menu are the wagyu-blend burgers cooked on a flattop and topped with a variety of ingredients such as foie gras, smoked bacon, fried onions, truffle aioli and special sauce.

    “Le Burger is what happens when fine-dining chefs get nerdy about burgers,” says management. “We spent years perfecting every detail – from our signature meat blend to the burger salt, to the miso butter we brush on our house-baked buns.”

    The restaurant also offers staters like beer-battered cheese curds, house-made chips and creme fraiche dip, bountiful salads, crispy chicken sandwiches, fried cod sandwiches and housemade vegan and vegetarian patties. A pair of entrees – steak frites and slow-roasted chicken frites – are also on the menu.

    Those triple-cooked frites are big hit in Minneapolis, adds Gans.

    “We take a huge amount of pride in our french fries,” he explains. “They’re really very special.”

    There is also a kids’ menu and desserts like soft-serve ice cream and pot de crème.

    After removing the live-fire cooking suite and pulling out all the camping-chic décor, the space is now light, bright, airy and open. Most of the color comes from the ceramic tableware and serving trays.

    When it opens this coming Wednesday, Le Burger will serve lunch and dinner seven days a week.

    In early 2026, JJJ will reopen Jaja upstairs. Diners can expect the same maximalist setting but an all-new menu from executive chef Logan Abbe, formerly of The Last Page.

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  • Larder Supply Debuts This Week With First Public Event, Plans for Program of Classes and Services – Cleveland Scene

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    In early 2024, Jeremy and Allie La Valle Umansky announced their plans to open Larder Supply, a multi-faceted culinary hub in Hingetown, just steps away from their popular delicatessen and bakery, Larder (1455 W. 29th St., 216-912-8203). The plan was to marry a heavy retail component with a steady lineup of culinary classes, events and services.

    But now, thanks to steep import duties, many of those retail products have become cost prohibitive.

    “We had to re-hash what the vision of the business would be,” explains Jeremy. “Instead of being driven primarily by retail, we will be more driven by the classes and events and engagement aspect as we build up our inventory and realize the full vision.”

    To start, the Umanskys will shelve most of the Japanese kitchen knives, European cooking and baking equipment and other imported culinary products. Instead, they will go all in on the culinary education events. Larder Supply will be the place to go for events and classes covering fermentation, miso making, meat curing, animal butchery, cocktail making and more.

    “All of the classes that we have traditionally done at Larder will be moved to Larder Supply,” he adds. “We’re going to be bringing some really fun gastronomic professionals into town for events – on top of all the culinary classes.”

    In the works is a miso workshop with Rich Shih, Umansky’s co-author of “Koji Alchemy.” James Beard Award-winning author Danny Childs, who penned “Slow Drinks,” will teach an upcoming mixology session.

    Those classes will be joined by services such as knife sharpening, culinary equipment repair and recipe consulting.

    Umansky had always planned to offer a selection of upcycled and restored kitchen equipment that he has amassed over his many years in the industry. That “Larder Line” will consist of items such as rehabbed cooking knives, restored cast-iron cookware and other vintage tools and equipment.

    “Stuff that has already been around for 50 or 100 years that we feel we can get another 50 out of,” says Umansky.

    This Sunday, the shop will host its first public event, a knife-sharpening open house. Knives will be sharpened while you wait for a fixed price of $7 per blade regardless of size or style.

    When they arrive, visitors will find a cozy space that feels like a natural extension of Larder. The Umanskys once again worked with Christopher Maurer of Redhouse Studios to achieve a consistent look and feel. Many of the building supplies, such as the mix-and-match wood flooring, were reclaimed and repurposed.

    Check the Larder and Larder Supply social media pages to keep abreast of upcoming events.

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  • Bookhouse Brewing in Ohio City to Close at Year’s End – Cleveland Scene

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    Vaughn Stewart opened the doors to Bookhouse Brewing (1526 W. 25th St.) in 2018, a neighborhood brewery and taproom that served as the antithesis to cacophonous beer halls. Here, sturdy wooden beams, fine carpentry, exposed brick walls and stocked bookshelves lend a cozy vibe in which to enjoy Stewart’s wonderful brews.

    Sadly, all that ends “on or around” New Year’s Eve, according to Stewart.

    “We’ve had a good run with Bookhouse and I’ve been really fortunate to be able to do it,” says the brewer-owner.

    Opening two years prior to the pandemic, Stewart had no idea what lay in store for him, his business, and the industry in general, he says.

    “I think what a lot of people still don’t grasp about food, beverage, hospitality post-pandemic is that everything is so totally different and those intervening years were so similarly unpredictable,” he explains. “Everything was just gone as far as any kind of structure, predictability.”

    Stewart encourages his fans to visit and say their goodbyes through the rest of the year.

    “We’ve got a good amount of product on hand and I also have three new beers in the tanks to help close things out,” he says.

    What makes this transition so hard, he adds, isn’t the loss of business but rather the separation from his clientele.

    “The work of craft beer has been so challenging and for so long,” he says. “But I never want to come across as undervaluing or not appreciating the people who have been our huge fans. That’s the part that is hardest to move on from – moving on from those relationships and those connections. The liquid is secondary and it always has been.”

    Stewart says that he has “some irons in the fire” for his next move. And as for that beautiful old space in Ohio City, a building dating back to 1866, there are a few irons as well.

    “We’re incredibly optimistic that the space will live on as a public gathering place – as a place to appreciate all the history and character of the building,” Stewart hints.

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  • Photos: Visible Voice’s New Ohio City Location is a Temple to Books, and the Arts – Cleveland Scene

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    Hundreds of eager, curious Clevelanders gathered on a snowy Monday evening to see firsthand just what Dave Ferrante has built in the new home for Visible Voice books in Ohio City. And what they saw was a stunner.

    The 6,000-square-foot, two-story shop is a temple to books, and the arts, with a sandwich cafe, a theater space, five rows of auditorium-style seats, and 300% more books on display for sale than the original space in Tremont.

    “This is the pinnacle of 23 years in the making,” Ferrante said in a speech Monday night. “Books. Music. Food. What’s more to life than that?”

    And books there are. Visible Voice has some 15,000 in its collection, all now splayed out on beautiful wood shelves around the labyrinthe store.

    Visitors took immediate note.

    “This is definitely a destination bookstore,” Miesha Headen, who owns her own bookstore in Lorain, said while browsing the Philosophy section. “People will come from out of town to get that, like, Harry Potter experience, if you know what I mean.”

    Up on the second floor, which houses Children’s literature and a room full of vintage magazines (Scene for $3 an issue!), was Matt Weinkam, the head of Literary Cleveland. “To go from idea to this is just extraordinary,” he said. “This scale, this level of thought, of detail—there’s not a lot around here like this.”

    Visible Voice owner Dave Ferrante highlighted his new store’s three-pronged nature. “Books. Music. Food. What more is there to life?” he said. Credit: Mark Oprea

    Your average bookseller understands that, for many, around a fifth of their profit comes from non-book sales—from selling bagged coffee to literary calendars. As does Ferrante, who said he’s positioned the store’s café and its stage (for hosting poetry nights, say, or jazz quartets) to act as Visible’s main moneymakers.

    “Hey, if it was easy, it’d just be a bookshop,” Trey Kirchoff, the former Coffee Coffee Coffee owner tapped to run Ferrante’s kitchen, told Scene. Instead, Kirchoff is throwing thoughtfully-curated, New York-style sandwiches into the mix.

    “Dave’s doing what I hope to see more of in this community,” Kirchoff added. “Daring to bring a big, creative vision where it wasn’t previously.”

    Ohio City’s longest corridor of shops and restaurants has inched westward in the past few years. The Judith, Cent’s Pizza + Goods, Sacred Vortex, Guitar Riot and Sartorial have replaced vacant storefronts in the past few years. With more development, and construction headaches, on the way.

    Though a two-mile street repaving, with cycletrack and new sidewalks, could makeover the public side of the corridor, Lorain’s improvement is still scattered, with tire shops and closed funeral homes dotting the stretch down toward West 65th.

    Ferrante himself, with his warm-lit book mecca off West 46th, hopes to be part of the change.

    On Monday evening, dozens of Ferrante’s friends and family members sat eating hors d’ouevres as Ferrante professed his undying commitment to Visible’s new home of Ohio City.

    “I don’t like that some sports teams are moving to Brook Park, out of the city,” Ferrante said, reading from a bundle of notes. “We need to move in the same stream. This is why I’m staying in Cleveland.”

    Applause abounded. Ferrante looked around, then said, “I’m here forever. This is my retreat.”

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  • Coming Soon: Juneberry To Go, a Grab-and Go Market by Karen Small – Cleveland Scene

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    When opportunity knocked on Karen Small’s kitchen door, she answered the call.

    Since opening Juneberry Table (3900 Lorain Ave., 216-331-0338), the chef’s three-year-old breakfast-and-lunch diner in Ohio City, demand has always outpaced supply. Waits for a table in the charming bistro are common, especially on weekends, and the kitchen desperately needed more prep space.

    “We had the opportunity to take the next-door space over,” says Small. “We’ve always been in need of more space.”

    While Juneberry fans understandably might desire that newfound space be used for more seating, that arrangement isn’t feasible, Small explains.

    “We have a limitation to how many more tables we can handle because of our kitchen size,” she says.

    After giving the matter some thought, Small settled on a multi-purpose space that she is calling Juneberry To Go. The shop gives people waiting for a table next door a place to browse the shelves, stocked with products like retail wine, regional foodstuffs, and housemade items like apple butter.

    There will be a selection of grab-and-go salads, cold sandwiches and pastries, including those dreamy cheddar and chive biscuits. A long communal table will offer some seating for shoppers.

    The shop also presents an opportunity for small events like wine tastings, private gatherings and other meetups.

    When it opens in the coming week and a half or so, Juneberry To Go will be open 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Thursday through Sunday.

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  • First Look: Soho Chicken + Whiskey, Now Open in Ohio City – Cleveland Scene

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    Last spring, Soho Chicken and Whiskey owners Nolan Konkoski and Molly Smith announced that they had found a new location for their restaurant, which had been a fixture on West 25th Street for 14 years. Rising rents led to a decision to decamp as the landlord opted to welcome a future Chipotle location to the space.

    In June, they ceased operations at their original home and began renovating the former Xinji space on Lorain, a process that took a bit longer than expected.

    But tonight, after a roller coaster ride that began last February, Soho officially reopens in its new home (4211 Lorain Ave.).

    “We’re very happy with the location, with the building,” says Konkoski. “I don’t think we could have ended up with a better situation.”

    The beautiful new restaurant looks and feels like Soho, but in a mature, elevated sort of way. Overall, the restaurant gained a total of four seats, two at the bar and two in the dining room, but that was never a goal, Konkoski states.

    “We didn’t want to be a lot bigger,” he says. “We liked our old size.”

    Apart from the room, Soho reopens with the same concept, people and hospitality that diners have come to love since 2011. Keen regulars will notice a bit more variety on the menu, mainly with the addition of new appetizers, salads and vegetarian items.

    The move comes at a time when West 25th Street continues to evolve in ways that crowd out the little guy, leaving small independents like Soho scrambling for new homes. For many local operators, Lorain Avenue has become that haven.

    “We always stayed true to our neighborhood roots, but the neighborhood was changing over there,” says Smith.

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  • At Long Last, Build the Pho in Ohio City Opens Today – Cleveland Scene

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    It’s all systems go for Build the Pho (2084 W. 25th St.) in Ohio City. When it opens its doors today at 11 a.m. it will be the neighborhood’s first restaurant dedicated to the famous Vietnamese beef noodle soup.

    Set in the former Campbell’s Sweets space, the meticulously designed restaurant joins the first Build the Pho, which opened at Uptown in University Circle in June of 2022, and a second location that opened this summer at Great Northern Mall in North Olmsted.

    As the name suggests, Build the Pho is a build-your-own-bowl-style concept, with diners having numerous options with respect to noodles, broth and meats. Owner Eric Weng says that customers prefer the customization model over having to select from a short roster of predesigned bowls.

    “People like the way we do things because we let them order what they want,” he says. “Nobody wants a Happy Meal.”

    The broths – beef or vegan – are made in the restaurant each day. Noodle options include rice, wide rice, egg and vermicelli. Diners can add any combination of proteins – including double or triple portions – from a list that includes rare beef, beef brisket, meatballs, beef tendon, beef tripe, sliced chicken, shrimp and tofu. Weng says that a spicy version of the beef broth likely will be added to the menu down the road.

    In addition to the noodle soups, the restaurant serves rice and vermicelli noodle bowls topped with various meats and starters like spring rolls, summer rolls and mango shrimp salads. The owner says that soup dumplings and pork steamed buns will be a new addition limited to the Ohio City location.

    At the Uptown location, diners are encouraged to place their orders through an efficient QR code-based ordering system. In Ohio City, the focus will shift to more of a full-service model (although the QR codes will still be available).

    As he and his partners did with the Korean BBQ and hot pot experience at One Pot in Cleveland Heights, Weng seeks to elevate the pho-eating experience. The dining room seats about 85 people at blond wood tables and spacious booths and banquettes.

    Weng says that future Build the Pho locations are all but guaranteed – however the owners are in no rush.

    “We want our brand to go big,” Weng says. “Either we do it the best way possible or we don’t do it.”

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  • Cleveland Police Chief Says Officers ‘Actively Investigating’ Recent Rash of Car Break-Ins – Cleveland Scene

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    Car windows are breaking in Ohio City, Tremont and elsewhere once again.

    Over the past week or so, a string of car break-ins—more smash than grab, police said—has plagued the city, including in Tremont, Ohio City, and University Circle. Videos shared by residents show suspects piling out of cars and quickly bashing in windows en masse.

    Once again, those residents are calling on city officials with the question posed ad nauseum: What are you doing about this?

    “Let us be clear: addressing this issue is not as simple as a quick fix,” Police Chief Dorothy Todd wrote in a letter to the public on Wednesday.

    “While some may feel that not enough is being done, please know that our officers, detectives, and command staff are actively investigating these cases and working diligently to identify those responsible,” she said. “It’s not a matter of if arrests will be made, but when.”

    But for those who woke up Monday morning to a hole where their driver’s side window used to be, Todd’s message of reassurance didn’t quite cut it. Facebook community groups are littered with complaints. Why aren’t there more visible patrols? Given the lack of public visibility, should residents form community watch walks?

    A police spokesperson told Scene this week’s string “predominantly” resulted in broken glass and not valuables stolen. But broken windows are expensive, and annoying, to fix. And the lasting feeling of insecurity—that my block isn’t safe—is a clear threat to quality of life.

    “I don’t care what kind of press releases or smoke and mirrors marketing spins that the Cleveland Police Department puts out there or how much they are telling the news stations about their patrolling efforts,” one resident in Ohio City wrote in an Instagram post on Monday

    “This is a MAJOR issue in this neighborhood,” she added, and urged visitors: “DO NOT leave anything in your vehicles and either Uber or take the Red Line in, if you can.”

    Brittany Kraus, another resident of Ohio City, told Scene she’s had her car windows smashed twice this year. She suspects the culprits are teenagers on a late-night destruction spree.

    But she’s adapted since: she keeps nothing but her phone charger in her car. She even started waking up early in the morning to do a spot check, yet stopped out of a sense of distress.

    “All around it’s just a headache, time and resources that I’ll never get back,” she wrote.

    Cleveland police are somewhat limited when it comes to catching and arresting those suspected of vandalism or breaking and entering. Ring cameras struggle to catch legible license plate numbers at night, as do the city’s 100 license plate readers fixed on poles. (Though most are trained to catch licenses attached to active cases.)

    And police chase policy, cemented by the city’s Consent Decree, forbids cops from chasing suspects at high speeds for vandalism charges alone.

    “Criminals know that! So they immediately take off,” Ward 3 Councilman Kerry McCormack told Scene. “They know if I drive away recklessly, they won’t chase me—so that’s what they do.”

    After a policy review by the Community Police Commission this summer, police resumed using drones, though only in high-risk scenarios: missing person searches, serving search warrants or navigating disasters.

    McCormack believes that they could be used to help curb break-ins in lieu of chase policy, usage that could help arrest suspects without the risk of a dangerous car chase across the city.

    “I haven’t seen it at this level in a very long time.” he said. “What’s left out of this conversation is my residents who deserve a safe place to live. Where is their peace? Where are their rights?”

    Cleveland police told Scene they’re looking over video footage and interviewing witnesses. No arrests have been made as of Thursday afternoon.

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  • West 29th in Hingetown Set to (Finally) Become an Open Street by Next Year  – Cleveland Scene

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    On a recent Tuesday morning, West 29th St. in Ohio City’s Hingetown neighborhood was bustling and buzzing with people carrying coffee from Rising Star Coffee Roasters, pushing baby strollers, or going for a morning jog in the late September sunshine. In the next year, it could also be home to spin and yoga classes, a farmers market, concerts and other activities. That’s because the city of Cleveland has finalized plans to close a portion of the street between Church and Clinton Avenues. 

    It’s part of a larger push by the Bibb administration to create more pedestrian-friendly spaces across the city. Two years ago, the city also closed Market Avenue in Ohio City to cars, allowing people to lounge on lawn furniture and drink their lattes al fresco. At a recent Cleveland Landmarks Commission meeting, city planning director Calley Mersmann told members that creating pedestrian-friendly streets is an important priority for the city. 

    “This is part of Mayor Bibb’s overall push to create more places for people to be in our neighborhoods,” Mersmann said. “The purpose is to create a safe, pedestrianized plaza for people to gather.” 

    Marika Shioiri-Clark, who along with her husband Graham Veysey owns the firehouse building  where Rising Star and Larder are located, is a big supporter of the project. “To me, our neighborhood doesn’t have that many open public spaces, especially spaces that feel safe and welcoming for kids and families in the neighborhood,” she said. “The outdoor seating areas that are already outside the firehouse and Transformer Station are so popular and well used. I see kids and families walking across the street all the time between those two spaces. To me, it seems really natural to expand those spaces together to make a neighborhood-scale plaza.” 

    The street closure, which would extend from the intersection of W. 29th and Church to the southern edge of the Transformer Station property, has been at least two years in the making. A pilot project was rolled out last year using a $100,000 grant from the nonprofit Project for Public Spaces; during that brief two-week span, the street was treated like an outdoor living room. People organized their own dinners, held a bike repair workshop, did chalk drawings, and hosted a concert for kids with local musician Jesse Jukebox. After the 14-day trial, the street was reopened to traffic and organizers sought feedback on how it went. 

    The original plan was to permanently close it this year, but that was before business pushback over lack of notice, rushed planning, and lack of a maintenance plan. “We felt initially the plan was to open it at the end of summer without any announcement, without programming, wayfinding signage, or communication,” said Anne Hartnett, who owns the Vitrolite building on Church Avenue as well as the Harness Collective. “We knew it wouldn’t be successful. They were probably just going to show up one day to close the street, and that was a concern to business owners. The city really heard that, and we had a collaborative meeting at the Vitrolite.” 

    After that meeting, the original timeline was pushed back to next year once Project for Public Spaces okayed the plan. At its recent meeting, landmarks approved the project, albeit with reservations, paving the way for the closure in the spring of next year. 

    “This is a quick build installation we hope to leverage into a long-term investment,” explained Mersmann, citing a plan including Thomas barriers at either end of the street, tree pits, some heavyweight furniture like picnic tables, other moveable furniture, and either a groundcover called SYNlawn – basically fake grass – or painted asphalt (it hasn’t been decided yet). She said the street would also be repaved before closing it to car traffic. “The current potholed street is not sufficient,” she said. 

    At the landmarks meeting, current councilmember Kerry McCormack weighed in with his support. “I appreciate the time spent having additional discussions,” he said. “The feedback I’ve heard from businesses is they want to make sure it’s done right, to ensure we’re thoughtful on maintenance, maintenance funds, and who’s going to ensure that maintenance happens. We need to make sure this project is done well so it’s not seen as something we tried and it didn’t work.”

    Not all of the landmarks members were convinced that the plan to close the street was fully baked. “My concern is that it feels a little bit rushed, and that has to do with the funding mechanism (Project for Public Spaces),” said member Chris Loeser. “There’s a lot of opportunity here, but also a lot that still needs to be resolved in terms of making this feel like an intentional space. SYNlawn is not the right choice; it feels like more of a temporary thing. I like the idea of this being used for public art, but the barriers create roadblocks and don’t necessarily create an inviting space. You should think about removable bollards instead. Allow the space to bleed into the neighborhood rather than being bookended by heavy, not-so-inviting elements.”

    Mersmann replied that the current installation can be considered temporary and just the first phase. “We’re sort of walking the line bearing out the proof of concept before making irreversible changes here,” she said. 

    Shioiri-Clark said allowing additional time for the rollout helps ensure buy-in from businesses. While originally there was discussion about closing the street all the way from Clinton to Detroit, that got scaled back over business concerns. “If it goes well we could theoretically talk about expanding it,” she said. “This is the area where it makes the most sense to start.”

    After getting reassurance from the city that business owners would be part of the planning process, Hartnett organized a letter expressing business support for the project. “I’m an advocate for it but it has to be done well,” she said. Next steps include forming a steering committee of residents and business owners to help shape the rollout. “Now there’s plenty of time,” said Hartnett. “We’re hoping it can be a model through being a collaborative process.” 

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  • The Pierogi Bucket in Ohio City Puts a Modern Twist on an Old-Fashioned Favorite – Cleveland Scene

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    There’s a new fast-casual lunch option in Ohio City that puts a 21st-century spin on an old-fashioned comfort food. The Pierogi Bucket (2304 Bridge Ave., 216-741-0871) offers deep-fried, bite-size dumplings and serves them by the bucket with contemporary sauces. The buckets are available for pickup-only at the Ohio City Farm’s new Roundstone Pavilion. 

    “This is actually something I started with my friends at Perla Pierogies in Parma,” says owner Miroslav Parashikov. “But this project is new.”

    Whereas Perla Pierogies offers traditional Eastern European dumplings with a variety of fillings served with sour cream and onions, the Pierogi Bucket does things a little differently.

    “It’s like a modern twist on the traditional pierogies,” adds Parashikov. “I know that deep frying is not a new thing with pierogies, but we’re offering different sauces like garlic parmesan or buttermilk ranch, things that people are familiar with but not so much pairing with pierogies.”

    The mini potato and cheddar-filled pierogi are flash fried and served in three different sized buckets. The Family Bucket includes 24 pieces, the Half-Bucket 12, and the Mini-Bucket 5. The sauces are included in the price.

    Within the next week or so, Parashikov says that he will be adding a kielbasa option to buckets, with the hot, smoked links coming from a local purveyor.

    For now, the Pierogi Bucket is open 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday. To order, visit the website here.

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    Douglas Trattner

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  • Kerry McCormack Stepping Down Early from Council, Names Lauren Welch as Successor – Cleveland Scene

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    With 112 days left in his last term on Cleveland City Council, Kerry McCormack has called it quits.

    On Thursday, McCormack, who’s represented Ward 3 for the past decade and earlier this year announced that he would not be seeking re-election, said that he was stepping down from his seat a tad early, just months before Council’s refresh in January. He will nominate Lauren Welch, a communications strategist for Say Yes! Cleveland and an RTA board member, to finish his term. (Council has historically approved whoever a departing councilperson nominates.)

    McCormack told Scene the reasons behind his premature departure after a decade in the politics was twofold: to start a new job and allow a buffer period before Cleveland’s new ward maps go into effect.

    “I’m taking one quick step back to allow the community to have an open conversation about the new councilperson who will start in January,” McCormack said in a phone call. And for “the folks in the majority of Ward 3 to have a conversation with these candidates.”

    Ward 3 will pretty much become Ward 7, boundaries that encompass Tremont, Ohio City, The Flats, the North Coast and Burke Lakefront Airport. It holds some of the most exciting development prospects, including Irishtown Bend Park and the big-picture plans for the lakefront.

    Welch, McCormack said, is a natural choice to segue from old to new.

    She grew up in Ohio City, campaigned for President Obama, was a Ward 15 precinct leader, is on three boards of trustees and works days as a communications strategist for Say Yes! Cleveland, a nonprofit that gives CMSD kids a leg up applying for college. She also founded her own marketing firm, Laurel Cadence, in 2019.

    Welch was ecstatic when McCormack offered her a chance to succeed him. As she saw it, the opportunity is yet another way she’s being “called to serve” the public.

    Even if that means a little challenge.

    “I think that anytime you take on a leadership position in this capacity, one that has to do with raising the profile, the visibility, the livelihood and the safety of residents, it’s going to be challenging work,” Welch said in a call.

    But, she added, “I’m already working on those things on a regular basis already.”

    McCormack will depart from the gig on October 3, which means Welch, the first Black woman leader of Ward 3, will serve for about three months on council before either Austin Davis or Mohammad Faraj takes over in January. The two will square off in November’s general election after advancing in this week’s primary.

    As for McCormack, he will be working as a Cleveland-based public affairs leader for Flock Safety, a surveillance tech company headquartered in Atlanta.

    Ensuring that we continue to build safe and thriving neighborhoods remains my professional passion,” McCormack said in a statement. “I look forward to joining the team at Flock as they partner with thousands of communities and organizations across the country to achieve that goal.”

    Joining Council in 2016, McCormack championed bringing Cleveland further into the 21st century.

    He long advocated for a nonprofit leader of the West Side Market, urged the city open up more public access to Lake Erie and worked with Mayor Bibb to pass the city’s first Complete and Green Streets ordinance in 2023, which sets legal standards for bike lanes and tree lines on newly-built or repaved city streets.

    “It’s been a great 10 years—almost 10 years,” he said.

    “I think about advocacy and reproductive freedom. I think about getting folks through the pandemic. I think about, you know, rebuilding playgrounds and parks around the ward,I think about making our roads safer,” he said. “I mean, like, these are the things that I believe we’ve contributed to make sure that the city is in a better direction.”

    And as for getting out of politics altogether, he said, “I never wanted to overstay my welcome. I just thought it was a good time for me to move on.”

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    Mark Oprea

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  • Visible Voice Books to Relocate to Larger Space in Ohio City This November

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    AODK Architecture

    Visible Voice Books, a Tremont mainstay since 2007, will be moving to a new, expanded storefront in Ohio City this November.

    When Dave Ferrante opened up Visible Voice Books in Tremont 18 years ago, he moved in with a belief that a bookstore, done well and sufficiently-stocked, would be a boon to a growing neighborhood.

    “I felt that the area, for what I was doing, would be supportive,” Ferrante told The Plain Dealer in 2007. “It’s a more artistic area, and I felt it had people who would ‘get it’ and enjoy the store.”

    This year, Ferrante’s making similar moves.

    In November, Ferrante will be relocating Visible Voice Books to the western fringe of Ohio City, on a part of Lorain Avenue experiencing a renaissance comparable to what Tremont witnessed in the late aughts.

    And the move is also to help the bookstore grow. Visible Voice’s new spot, a former theater at 4601 Lorain, will be spacious enough to accommodate a full café, three conference rooms for club meetings, 150 attendees for concerts or readings and a book selection “three times the size” of its current one.

    In Tremont, “I’m on the second floor, at just 1,100 square feet,” Ferrante told Scene. “So, I thought, ‘Let me see what’s out there.’ I’ve always envisioned a larger operation—I’m going to go to 6,000 square feet.”

    “I think it will be a win-win for everybody,” he added. “For me. For the store. For the city.”

    click to enlarge Visible Voice's new location will make use of a stage once used by the building's old tenants, the Lorain Theater. A mezzanine level will overlook shelves of used and new books. - AODK Architecture

    AODK Architecture

    Visible Voice’s new location will make use of a stage once used by the building’s old tenants, the Lorain Theater. A mezzanine level will overlook shelves of used and new books.

    Visible Voice’s move to a Lorain Avenue rehab comes along a trove of businesses helping to makeover the corridor, along with a refreshed streetscape in the coming years. Sartorial, a menswear store; The Judith Café; Cent’s Pizza, and others have already opened up shop with upcoming debuts including Noble Beast’s Biergarten and Soho Chicken + Whiskey’s new home.

    It’s also close to Ferrante’s other ventures. The business owner opened up Proof, a barbecue eatery three blocks east, last year, and Guitar Riot, a music instrument and equipment store situated next door to the future bookstore space.

    As for the store itself, Ferrante is eager to expand on all sectors. He’ll be hiring two new employees to run a café sporting a food menu—sandwiches, small plates, salads—designed by Melt founder Matt Fish. He’ll be booking local and national bands to play on a rehabbed stage in the back of the store.

    And more books. Visible Voice’s backstock of 3,000 mostly used books will be displayed on a ground and mezzanine level.

    The move will leave two-thirds of the building at 2258 Jefferson Ave. vacant come November. (Crust, the pizzeria downstairs, closed last Friday. Danny’s on Professor, a late-night bar, will stay open.) Which Ferrante said will soon bring a new asset to Tremont in a few months.

    “There are a couple irons in the fire; it won’t stay empty too long,” he said about the building. “It’s not going to be left in any worse situation than when I bought it” in 2007.

    Visible Voice is planning for a soft opening in its new location for Wednesday, November 12.

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    Mark Oprea

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  • Ohio City Car Crash Shuts Down Jaja and Pioneer ‘Until Further Notice’

    Ohio City Car Crash Shuts Down Jaja and Pioneer ‘Until Further Notice’

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    Mark Oprea

    Construction workers had already started repairing the entrance to Jaja Thursday afternoon. Both Jaja and Pioneer will be closed, statements read, “until further notice.”

    Two of Ohio City’s newest restaurants will be closed until “further notice” as they undergo repairs following a fiery car crash Thursday morning.

    Around 3 a.m. on October 31, a black Audi speeding west on Abbey Road lost control, hit a fire hydrant and slammed straight into the main entrance of Jajaon the eastern side of the INTRO building. Part of an entrance to its sister restaurant, Pioneer, was destroyed as well.

    Cleveland Police said that a 24-year-old man was hospitalized in “serious condition” on Thursday. They’ve not released whether or not the driver was drunk or impaired as the Audi slammed into the building.

    No one was hurt besides the driver, Cassandra Luz, property manager at INTRO, told Scene on Thursday.

    “We were very lucky that there was nobody else involved,” she told Scene from her office. “I mean, it was very tragic that that had even happened to begin with.”

    Shortly after the Audi crashed, INTRO’s concierge alerted tenants via the building’s app notification system. Fire and smoke from the car set off several alarms. Some residents on the opposite side of the building were skeptical, however, minding recent car-related incidents in Ohio City.

    “I’d like some evidence that something actually happened,” one resident said on the app’s message board. “I’m started to get desensitized to these two to three a.m. fire alarms and people doing donuts outside.”

    “Yes, there was a car that ran into the building,” another responded, “and I believe it was on fire.”

    click to enlarge A 24-year-old speeding in a black Audi slammed into Jaja's entrance around three a.m. Thursday morning. CPD said they're investigating possible criminal implications. - Mark Oprea

    Mark Oprea

    A 24-year-old speeding in a black Audi slammed into Jaja’s entrance around three a.m. Thursday morning. CPD said they’re investigating possible criminal implications.

    One resident, who wished not to be named, recalled being woken up to fire alarms and messages from nearby friends. “It’s good no one was hurt,” he told Scene in INTRO’s lobby.

    Both Jaja and Pioneer announced on Instagram that their restaurants will be closed “until further notice.” Both suggested supporting Edda Coffee nearby to make up for lost revenue in the coming weeks.

    “Please know we are working hard to reopen our doors as quickly as possible,” a statement on Pioneer’s page read, “and can’t wait to welcome you back soon.”

    Scene reached out to Cleveland Police for further information, yet did not receive a call back Thursday afternoon.

    In an interview with WKYC, Sgt. Freddy Diaz said they will be looking into the cause as more details are available.

    “We’re gonna investigate it,” he said. “Whatever the factors are, [whatever] the investigation reveals, and we can handle it from there.”

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    Mark Oprea

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  • Metroparks Secures $11M Federal Grant for Irishtown Bend Park

    Metroparks Secures $11M Federal Grant for Irishtown Bend Park

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    Plural Design Studio

    Irishtown Bend Park, shown here in renderings from March, just scored $11 million in federal support.

    Irishtown Bend Park, which will be the largest riverside greenspace in Cuyahoga County, just got another notch closer to completion.

    This week, the Metroparks, the overseers of the park’s design, received $10.8 million in federal grants for construction purposes—for the build of Irishtown’s amphitheater, its plazas, picnic areas and boardwalk, the latter a missing piece to connect the region-wide Lake Link Trail.

    The funding win is another score for the parks system. Earlier this year, the Metroparks oversaw the groundbreaking for the North Marginal Trail, the first cycletrack connection between Downtown and the East Side. And just last week, the Metroparks helped the Cleveland Soccer Group purchase the site for what could be Cleveland’s first dedicated soccer stadium.

    “We maintain a commitment of progress for the community and this substantial federal investment brings a shared vision held by many project partners to reality,” CEO Brian Zimmerman said in a press release. “The advocacy of Senator Sherrod Brown and Congresswoman Shontel Brown to secure support for this project and will have a lasting impact on the community for generations to come.”

    Ohio City Inc. confirmed Thursday that the project still has roughly $15 million to lock down, money that could be secured with similar federal grants or smaller donations.

    “We’re chipping away at the remainder,” Ohio City, Inc. spokesperson Katy Baumbach told Scene. “We’re getting there.”
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DL38bCx7C2E

    As touted earlier this spring, the park is partly designed to be an homage to its past as a haven for Irish immigrants, with artifacts used to make up an outdoor museum of sorts. There will be old doorways, former coal dock hoisting rigs and doorways converted into bird blinds.

    Overall, as a newly posted video tour shows off, the entire park would be a game changer. Sailboat-studded playgrounds would sit next to swings and grill gardens. Wetland gardens (with mini piers) could neighbor wide lawn terraces for ideal golden hour viewing. And a cafe would mark an entry plaza off West 25th and Detroit, long dominated by a vacant eyesore.

    If hillside stabilization stays on track this fall and winter, groundbreaking for the actual park build could start in 2025.

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    Mark Oprea

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  • Greens Salad Co. to Bring Fresh Salads and Wraps to Intro in Ohio City

    Greens Salad Co. to Bring Fresh Salads and Wraps to Intro in Ohio City

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    Courtesy photo

    Southwestern salad from Greens Salad Co.

    Rob Bromund and Ben Buckley met while working in restaurant management. After moving to Cleveland, they noticed a “shocking absence” of quick, healthy food options. Not only did they observe a gap in that area, they also discovered a substantial demand for it as well.

    “Even though Cleveland has a numerous amount of phenomenal restaurants, they don’t really cater to the health aspect of anything,” says Bromund. “What we’re going for is a fast-casual, healthy restaurant to try and promote more of a healthy living lifestyle in Cleveland. It’s a liveable, walkable, bikeable city.”

    Come spring, Ohio City will welcome the first location of Greens Salad Co., the result of the partners’ endeavors. The fast-casual eatery will be located at Intro (2051 W. 25th St.) in Ohio City, next to the entrance to Truss Event Venue.

    “If you’ve been to Chopt in the Northeast, it will be very similar to that,” says Buckley.

    Guests will work their way down the line, selecting ingredients like greens, toppings, proteins and salad dressings. Or, customers can choose one of nearly a dozen signature creations. The Southwestern, for example, features romaine, pickled red onions, black beans, tomatoes, corn, avocado, tortilla strips, roasted chicken and chipotle-ranch dressing. There’s also a Caesar, Cobb, vegan Black Bean Burger Bowl and Tahini, with greens, toppings and baked falafel. There will be seasonal salads and soups come wintertime.

    Salad choppers will be on hand to chop and toss the salads, and everything can be ordered as a wrap as well.

    The 1,200-square-foot space will blend industrial features such as exposed concrete floors with warm woods and live greenery. There will be some seating, but the operation will be largely carry-out. The goal is to be quick, efficient and affordable. Mobile ordering will further speed the process along.

    If all goes well in Ohio City, it’s likely that more locations of Greens Salad Co. will sprout throughout the city.

    “Our plan is, year one, try and streamline everything and make it replicable, profitable. And by year two we want to be opening second and subsequent locations,” says Buckley.

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    Douglas Trattner

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  • West 29th in Hingetown to See Trial Run Phase as Open Street

    West 29th in Hingetown to See Trial Run Phase as Open Street

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    Mark Oprea

    West 29th St. in Hingetown is the city’s latest target for an open street, one free of car traffic.

    Cleveland has officially gotten its third open street—a street shut down to car traffic—albeit on a temporary basis.

    Over the weekend, City Hall announced that West 29th St. in Hingetown, from Church to Clinton avenues, will be refashioned as pedestrian-only for two weeks, until at least September 8. No automobiles, just like with East 4th and Market Ave., will be allowed.

    Instead, as has been the intention of the City Planning Commission for at least two years, that roughly 8,000 square feet of space will be transformed into somewhat of an outdoor living room, complete with a pad of green turf, a parklet in front of Rising Star complete with place games, tables and chairs, and bookended by two fixed concrete barriers.

    What will be a test pilot for a more permanent closure of the street comes after months of gathering feedback from the public.

    The overall idea, which has fueled a closure campaign by the city since 2022, follows the spirit of conviviality seen in larger cities like New York and Montreal, where streets dedicated to pedestrians lead to increased property values, more lucrative retail and even a mark as a fresh tourist destination.

    “The goal is for West 29th Street to become a Street for People—a street that is open for public use free of car traffic,” CPC director Joyce Huang said in a statement.

    “Already, there are residents and small businesses organizing family days and community meetups,” she added. “This temporary, two-week open street allows people to test the space and inform how [it] should look and feel.”

    Huang’s pitch to the city at large—that no cars is better than some—includes a series of grassroots-y events, from casual picnics to a Larder Family Friendly Happy Hour and a NASA Glenn show-and-tell. The annual Hingetown Jazz Fest this Saturday will be a good chance to see the space in action.

    These are ideas that may work in favor of the consensus.

    An online survey of 142 mostly Ohio City residents said they generally favored West 29th’s closure, due to its potential for “strong community energy” and Hingetown’s viability already as a “place to bump into friends.”

    Seventy percent of those surveyed went the produce angle, finding a farmers market the best possible usage of that 8,000 square feet. (The West Side Market is about a mile away.) Some wanted games or a movies on the lawn. Thirty-eight percent went for live music.

    Live music best exemplified by the Cleveland Museum of Art’s City Stages, the summer trifecta of outdoor world music concerts that wrapped up in late July. All four blocks were shut down—not just Clinton to Church. Thousands packed Hingetown for nights of dancing, taco trucks, beers in plastic cups — a scene more resemblant of a plaza in Europe.

    But City Stages, some businesses argue, is only three evenings in July. Rarely do other events of scale operate outside of it.

    “Even if the street were shut down, like, six days a week, that’s not 365 days a year,” Dean Rufus, the owner of Dean Rufus’ House of Fun on West 29th, told Scene in a phone call in February, when City Hall first announced its closure. “I’m annoyed by the whole thing.”

    That strip of retail north of Church, which includes the Jukebox, Verbena, Saucy Brew Works and others, is likely why City Hall opted not to shut down the street in front of it. Although many at their feedback session at Larder in April seemed to want both blocks shut down regardless. (The concern: parking spots eliminated.)

    Even in winter, which Jukebox owner Alex Budin balked at on principle.

    “That’s seven to eight month!” he told Scene in February. “I mean, I don’t know if there’s infrastructure to make West 29th hospitable for half that time.”

    All the more reason, City Hall’s pitch goes, for a West 29th trial run.

    Those interested in pitching ideas for activation or for community events, the city said, can email Britany Pabon at [email protected].

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  • ‘It’s Just Sad’: Drug Store Closures Could Make Some Cleveland Neighborhoods Pharmacy Deserts

    ‘It’s Just Sad’: Drug Store Closures Could Make Some Cleveland Neighborhoods Pharmacy Deserts

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    Mark Oprea

    Rite Aid’s closure on West 65th, like other pharmacies throughout Cleveland, have rippling effects on nearby residents.

    When the Rite Aid off West 65th St. and Franklin Boulevard announced earlier this summer it would be closing, a small wave of disappointment fell over Christina Keim and Mark Galit.

    Filing and picking up prescriptions would be a bit harder. Grabbing a few pantry items or cleaning supplies would require a 10-minute drive or a 20-minute ride on the 71 bus.

    Not, as it’d been for years, a quick dash down the block.

    “I mean, I can’t tell you the times I walked over there just to grab something like milk, you know,” Keim, 46, a dental hygienist, told Scene from Galit’s porch off West 65th. “Just anything that we needed at that specific time, you know, that you can’t get from Amazon.”

    But reality is soon to set in. That Rite Aid, like two others in Cleveland and others across Northeast Ohio, will close by the end of September, leaving a void and vacant building where thousands of customers once shopped on the regular.

    “It’s just sad in general,” Keim said.

    This is the result, on the ground level, of Pharmaggeddon. Since last fall, big name drug stores—Rite Aid, CVS and Walgreens—have opted to deal with so-called underperforming stores, or bankruptcy in Rite Aid’s case, by pulling out of neighborhoods that apparently couldn’t make profits. Stores mostly in low-income communities.

    In Cleveland, where 20% of residents don’t own a car, the implications of corporate slashing have rippling effects on residents who’ve long relied on them for medications, toiletries or a weekend snack run. Especially for seniors and the disabled.

    “It’s a huge equity issue,” Ward 15 Councilwoman Jenny Spencer, whose ward includes the Franklin Rite Aid, wrote in a statement. “It signals that we’re no longer a fully walkable neighborhood—in a community where many households don’t have access to cars.”

    click to enlarge José Miranda, who's lived in Detroit-Shoreway for the better part of the past 30 years, said Rite Aid's departure will throw off his usual errand running. - Mark Oprea

    Mark Oprea

    José Miranda, who’s lived in Detroit-Shoreway for the better part of the past 30 years, said Rite Aid’s departure will throw off his usual errand running.

    And the probability that another chain will come in to scoop up the empty drug store buildings isn’t very high — the closed CVS on Madison, for example, has sat vacant for years. More are about to join the market.

    “It’s hard, because Cleveland’s not really a growth market,” Ryan Fisher, senior vice president of CRESCO, told Scene. Fisher chalked the exodus up to plain capitalist decisions. Pharmacies are “simply saying, this location doesn’t work for me. I’m either going to not continue on or I’m going to go dark, finish off my lease, and then that will be it.”

    With six-figure rents at most locations, it would take financial help from the city or some kind of landlord subsidy to get a replacement in most cases.

    “Finding somebody else to replace place that rent at that number in Cleveland,” Fisher said, “has been difficult.”

    But the constraints and cold truths of big business mean little to neighbors in the blocks surrounding the Franklin Blvd. Rite Aid, which, as of Thursday, was covered in yellow signs announcing its eminent closure.

    The consensus was apparent: certain items purchased after a walk could be bought elsewhere, via prescription delivery services, via Amazon, via other stores. But for many, there’s the issue of transportation and access. The nearest pharmacies lie either miles away on Clark or on 117th.

    “It’s not as convenient anymore,” David Heil, 70, said from his front door several houses west of Rite Aid. They have lingering questions: What do we do in a minor emergency? Will there be problems with my medical insurance? “TKTK,” he said.

    In statements to Scene, the big three pharmacies pointed to economic conditions stemming from the pandemic as reasons for pulling out of selected blocks over the past three, four years.

    The three CVS closures in Cuyahoga County this year were, a spokesperson said, due to a reassessment of store needs, of “population shifts, consumer buying patterns, a community’s store density.” A spokesperson for Walgreens said that a quarter of its 6,500 stores nationwide will close in the next three years because they are “not contributing to our long-term strategy.”

    And Rite Aid, which confirmed its three recent closures—Clark Ave.’s on August 3, Franklin’s on September 8 and Chester Ave.’s on September 15—blamed the same macro issues.

    “While we have had to make difficult business decisions over the past several months to improve our business and optimize our retail footprint,” a statement to Scene read, “we are committed to becoming financially and operationally healthy.”

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    Mark Oprea

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