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  • Circle Square at University Circle Adds Another Skyscraper to One of the Hottest Rental Markets in Cleveland – Cleveland Scene

    Housing demand remains high in University Circle, and Circle Square is ready to meet it. The neighborhood’s newest skyscraper, the 24-story East Stokes building, could break ground as soon as spring of next year, according to a presentation at a recent Cleveland Planning Commission meeting. Rents in the new building are expected to go for about $3.50 to $4 per square foot, or about $2,000 per month for a 500-square-foot, one bedroom apartment. 

    It’s all part of the larger Circle Square project, which opened with the 24-story Artisan building in 2023 and was later followed by the nine-story Library Lofts in 2024. The entire complex will ultimately include some 1,000 apartments. Circle Square aims to create a walkable urban center on upper Chester Avenue, an area roughly bounded by Chester to the north, Euclid to the south, Stokes to the east and E. 105th St. to the west. 

    “It’s amazing how much you guys have done so fast,” said Lillian Kuri, chair of the Cleveland Planning Commission, at a recent meeting where the final design was approved. “And how all the vision and hopes for it, you’re delivering on. It’s extraordinary what’s changed in such a short span of time.”

    Elise Yablonsky, Chief Place Management Officer with University Circle Inc., said the new skyscraper helps achieve goals for the area, which now has about 6,500 residents. “For decades, we have been working to increase the vitality of University Circle through increasing residential density,” she said in an email. “Within the planning process, we’ve heard calls for increased housing options, additional retail, and more walkable environments, all of which this development is advancing.” 

    Yablonsky noted that the project is across the street from an affordable senior housing complex, and that the density of the project will also support new retail as well as transit-oriented lifestyles.  

    The glass-walled Stokes East building will occupy about half a block on Chester between Stokes Blvd. and MLK Jr. Dr. It will feature 281 apartments, and there will also be 17,000 square feet of retail space on the ground floor as well as a 300-space parking garage. The units will range from about 600 square feet to about 2,400 square feet, slightly larger than the nearby Artisan building. 

    Pricing has not yet been released, but if similar to the Artisan, it will be about $3.50 to $4 per square foot. This is slightly higher than other newer University Circle buildings, which are priced more like $3 per square foot, including Innova and Skyline on Stokes. However, it’s comparable to One University Circle, the luxury apartment building across the street. The Artisan building is 90 percent occupied, according to a leasing agent who recently gave Scene an in-person tour. 

    Amenities that are slated for the Stokes East building include a rooftop space with a hot tub, cold plunge pool, swimming pool, patios, grills and firepits. The nearby Artisan building also features a golf simulator, dog wash, package delivery area, coworking space, workout room, entertainment room, and more, and it’s expected that the amenities at the Stokes East building will be similar. 

    It hasn’t yet been determined what type of retail will be built there. “The type of retail we’ve always advocated for at this location is a combination of food and amenity retail,” said developer Steve Rubin with Midwest Development Partners. “A bank branch, a dry cleaner, day to day errands that you want to do, along with at least one bistro type restaurant and some ethnic foods.” 

    With the new Meijer grocery store located nearby, plans to add a grocery store have been scuttled, and the developers are looking for a new anchor tenant for the project. 

    Rubin told the planning commission that the intention with the Stokes East project is to make the units slightly larger than those at the Artisan and the nearby Library Lofts, so that the products don’t compete with each other. “This is a passion project for us,” Rubin said. “We’re looking forward to when all the connective tissue is in place and people cannot just walk but sit and have a cup of coffee with someone.” 

    The developers are shooting for a spring 2026 or 2027 start date, contingent on financing for the project. 

    According to an April 2025 report from Rent Cafe, Cleveland is the 40th hottest rental market in the U.S. right now., with an average 93.1% occupancy rate, up from 92.9% in 2024. The average rent in Cleveland is $1,543, a 2.37% increase from a year ago. While Tremont, Ohio City and downtown are all considered relatively expensive neighborhoods. University Circle is definitely the priciest, with an average rent of $2,189 per month compared with Tremont’s $2,010 per month. 

    According to Rent Cafe, Cleveland is the most expensive urban rental housing market in Ohio, with an average monthly rent of $1,543 compared with $1,340 in Columbus and $1,452 in Cincy. 

    Chuck Schulman, president of Carlyle Management, a third party property management company that manages some 14,000 units across Northeast Ohio, said University Circle’s success shows there’s demand for luxury housing in this area – and it’s not quite done yet.

    “It’s keeping people in the area,” he said of the Circle Square project. “People working at the university or at the hospitals aren’t going outside the geographic area because there are nicer places to live in.” As far as the higher prices go, Schulman said people are willing to pay top dollar to live in University Circle. “It’s pulling people in from the inner ring or secondary suburbs, because there’s new products available in the city where they want to live. They have alternatives. You don’t have to leave the area to go shopping or get a cup of coffee.” 

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    Lee Chilcote

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  • Cleveland Institute of Music Faculty Vote Overwhelmingly to Unionize

    Cleveland Institute of Music Faculty Vote Overwhelmingly to Unionize

    Warren LeMay / flickrcc

    A year and a half of “crisis” at CIM reached a head this week, after dozens of faculty voted to unionize.

    Following a controversial past year and a half, faculty at the Cleveland Institute of Music voted—overwhelmingly—this week to unionize.

    Votes casted on the second floor of The Coffee House in University Circle Wednesday and Thursday showed 56 in favor and just 25 opposing it. Roughly 130 faculty at CIM will be joining the Local 4 branch of the American Federation of Musicians, the national union body that backs orchestras and academics.

    Union backers, led by oboist Frank Rosenwein, are fighting to leverage higher salaries and semblance of job security, according to letters written by the faction.

    That decision comes after what may be one of the most trying eras in CIM’s 124-year-old history as a legacy institution on the city’s east side. A hurricane of complaints, staff departures, lawsuits and ongoing unease amongst students and staff have dominated headlines.

    Both sides suggested a bargaining contract will be drafted up before the end of the year.

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    Mark Oprea

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  • Case Western Students Host ‘Die In’ Protest During University’s Annual Open House

    Case Western Students Host ‘Die In’ Protest During University’s Annual Open House

    click to enlarge

    Maria Elena Scott

    Students for Justice for Palestine spearheading a protest at Case Western in November.

    About 80 or so Case Western students dropped “dead” in the middle of the university’s bustling Tinkham Veale University Center on Friday morning, as prospective students and their parents were scheduled to attend an open house ceremony nearby.

    The protest, led by the campus’ Students for Justice for Palestine chapter, was a signal to university admins, the organization told Scene, for their lack of transparency regarding possible financial ties to Israeli arms manufacturers. As they called for Friday, SJP has repeatedly pressured Case Western to pass a Resolution 31-15, which would lay bare the university’s dealings with foreign entities like Israel.

    The so-called “die-in” is also a prodding move by SJP to protest its suspension as an official student organization. In early March, the Palestinian supporters group was suspended by the university due to allegedly glueing flyers to the campus’ Spirit Wall, which its Office of Student Conduct claims violates its posting policy.

    From their ban to Friday’s open house protest, SJP and Case admins haven’t come any closer to reaching agreement, activists told Scene before the “die-in.” Partly because SJP members believe their apparent flyer-glue charge was made in error in the first place. (Members interviewed denied there was “hard evidence” the Spirit Wall was debased by SJP.)

    “[Case President Eric] Kaler and the administration are pretty clearly silencing pro-Palestinian advocacy and any relevant discourse about the genocide going on,” Hannah Morris, a Case junior and SJP member, said on Thursday. “I think they’re uncomfortable, and I think that [the suspension] was totally a move to try and stamp out SJP.”

    She clarified: “I don’t think there’s been much, like, positive progress towards reinstating SJP, to my knowledge.”

    After more than a half year into fighting between Israel forces and Hamas in the Gaza Strip, conflict that’s taken the lives of 34,000 Palestinians, pro-Palestinian protests are close to reaching a zenith in both scope and legal backlash in the month of April.

    Protestors blocked traffic for hours on San Francisco’s Golden Gate Bridge; others shut down a major freeway in Oakland. And in Cleveland, activists calling for sympathy for Gaza have blocked airport traffic, shut down City Council meetings and covered Euclid Avenue and Public Square repeatedly with chants and flag-waving.

    Case Western isn’t an island in rising tensions between student and faculty.

    click to enlarge Gaza protests have filled City Council meetings, shutting them down at one point earlier this year. - Mark Oprea

    Mark Oprea

    Gaza protests have filled City Council meetings, shutting them down at one point earlier this year.

    Just on Thursday, dozens of pro-Palestinian protestors encamped at Columbia University in New York were arrested and cuffed in zip ties, many of them SJP members frustrated with their own six-month suspension. Crackdowns on unauthorized protests—which, in some cases, led to students being kicked out of campus housing—ran in tandem with Columbia President Nemat Shafik’s testifying to Congress about apparent anti-semitism on campus.

    On February 26, after months of back-and-forth tension, George O’Connell, the director of Case’s Office of Student Conduct, issued an “interim loss of recognition” on SJP, stripping it as a legal club. O’Connell’s office demanded the names of all SJP members and engagement “in continued participation” with his office to “resolve” the effects of the alleged glue-posting.

    “Failure to adhere to this notice or any form of retaliation will be considered an additional code of conduct violation and may result in further conduct charges and sanctions,” O’Connell’s letter demanded.

    Another SJP member, who commented anonymously fearing retaliation from the university, told Scene that Friday’s “die-in” echoed the sentiment of SJP’s response to its ban, posted on Instagram on March 4. (“You can try to shut our organizations down, but you can’t stop the movement from growing,” the post read.)

    “Our goal at the end of the day, in everything that we do, is to make sure that we foster a safe, equitable, and just not only university community,” the student told Scene, “but broader society and fight systems of oppression and colonialism that have completely ravaged the lives of many of us.”

    “So we will not stop, and we will not let more people die quietly,” they added. “So the university can try all of its tactics in full rank as much as it wants. But at the end of the day, what we have and what they don’t is people power.”

    In a statement to Scene, a Case spokesperson did not acknowledged any progress, if any at all, in bringing SJP back as an official student organization.

    “Due to the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act, the university doesn’t comment on student conduct issues,” they wrote. “As with all student organizations, the university follows its student judicial policies and procedures.”

    Update: Around noon on Friday, after the protestors cleared Tinkham Veale, Rachael Collyer, the director of the Ohio Student Association, told Scene that members of SJP were not directly involved in the “die-in.”

    “SJP did not participate in the planning of the demonstration or in the demonstration itself due to concerns about their safety and about receiving further backlash to their student org from the university,” Collyer wrote in a text message. “The intention of the protest was to lift up the voices of the broader CWRU community, who are voicing their support for SJP to be reinstated.”

    “Additionally,” she added, the two students interviewed for this article “are not SJP members.”

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    Mark Oprea

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  • University Circle to Become a ‘Special Improvement District’ in Effort to Bolster Security

    University Circle to Become a ‘Special Improvement District’ in Effort to Bolster Security

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    Mark Oprea

    UCI Chief Place Management Officer Elise Yablonsky, UCPD Chief Tom Wetzel, and UCI President Kate Borders at Monday’s Council meeting.

    In a move to bolster safety efforts in University Circle, Cleveland City Council approved legislation on Monday that will form a special improvement district inside the East Side neighborhood.

    Such a district would be used to evenly raise money—some $4.3 million—to better financially back police patrolling and transportation in about a 1.2-square-mile area, Kate Borders, the director of University Circle, Inc. hired last summer, told Council’s Finance, Diversity, Equity & Inclusion Committee.

    Framed as the most pressing issue, Borders and team explained that their police force, made up of five dispatchers and seven frontline cruisers, are mostly funded by Wade Oval legacy institutions—think CMA and the Natural History Museum—ordered by property size and employee count.

    The issue with bolstering a busy police force, one that trekked 56,000 miles of patrol coverage in 2023, in a kind of a lá carte method carries issues: yearly inflation, vagaries based on worker turnover, of museum expansion costs.

    Making the Circle a special improvement district, or SID, would, Borders told Council, level the playing field, in a way.

    That money was originally “coming partially from voluntary payments, but there was a substantial deficit in that,” Borders said. “But this [district] is really necessary to maintain and support our safety services in the Circle, and fund them sustainably.”

    Pushed by Cuyahoga County as a communal way for a neighborhood to fund collective services— bike lanes, police staffing—a SID, like the one coming to the Circle, will require most, if not all, properties in that district to pay into a set-up fund. Money could be used to make improvements along Euclid Ave. or to add seasonal staffing.

    Public safety remains a priority for those living and working in the neighborhood.

    On April 2, a vehicle explosion in front of the Museum of Natural History led to Cleveland’s bomb squad being called in, and the road closed, Fox 8 reported. A week later, on April 8, four teenagers attempted to steal a Kia Forte at the nearby Centric Apartments, a theft that ended with two UCI officers chasing the teenagers down the tracks of the Red Line. (And breaking a hand and a knee.)

    Though Wetzel said that the SID will help the department fund a crisis intervention specialist, and lead to “bias-free police training,” that four million dollar fund isn’t built without some notion of controversy. In 2020, ProPublica found that 90 percent of all drivers ticketed in that area, since 2015, were Black.

    Borders and Wetzel, both less than a year into their position, repeatedly framed the SID creation as a move to relieve pressure on Cleveland Police and nearby officers and security at Case Western Reserve University and the Cleveland Clinic.

    Council President Blaine Griffin saw Borders’ pitch as necessary to keep locals and visitors’ perceiving Uptown as a safe area to be.

    “Ladies and gentlemen, we have approximately 50,000 people that come into this area every single day to come to work and play,” Griffin said. “That’s why we need that support. I just want to make sure that everybody understands why this is a critical piece of legislation.”

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    Mark Oprea

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  • When will cherry blossoms, magnolias reach peak bloom in University Circle?

    When will cherry blossoms, magnolias reach peak bloom in University Circle?

    ***Watch previous coverage from Brookside Reservation.***

    CLEVELAND (WJW) – Spring is officially here and thanks to warmer average temperatures over the past couple months, the cherry blossoms and magnolias in University Circle could see an early bloom.

    Last spring, Wade Lagoon was popping with soft pink and white flowers as the trees reached peak bloom around April 12.

    This year, University Circle‘s Spring Bloom Tracker is expecting peak blooms in late March, saying Wednesday, the cherry blossoms and magnolias are “at different stages.”

    “Over half the trees have a decent amount of blooms on them, while others are still budding,” the blog post reads.

    The Yoshino Cherry blossoms already peaked in Washington, D.C. on March 17. The National Park Service defines “peak bloom” as the day when at least 70% of the blossoms are open.

    The Spring Bloom Tracker says 60% have opened so far in University Circle.

    FOX 8 meteorologist Dontae Jones says a large portion of the eastern half of the country is seeing leaf blooms much earlier than normal.

    Although temperatures have been colder this week, Northeast Ohio had a very warm February, followed by an abnormally warm start to March. Both months were running temperatures normally seen in April and May.

    “It’s no wonder the plants think that it’s time to bloom,” Jones said.

    With this week’s wintry conditions, the Spring Bloom Tracker says they’re hoping the bloom will slow down a bit.

    Find out when the cherry blossoms and magnolias reach peak bloom by following along here.

    Jordan Unger

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