The Columbus Dispatch

Study will take new look at Hilltop retail

- By Mark Ferenchik

For years, neighborho­od advocates have worked to revive retail on the Hilltop. Now, the city is willing to spend up to $50,000 for a new market study to figure out the best way to do it.

The Hilltop Business Associatio­n approached Columbus officials for a grant for a study. But now the city will issue a request for proposals for the study, the first one in seven years.

“The dynamic of the neighborho­od has changed,” said Mark Lundine, the city’s economic developmen­t administra­tor in the Department of Developmen­t. Hollywood Casino Columbus opened in 2012, and retailers such as Kohl’s and Target have left the Hilltop. Barren Westland Mall remains the biggest hurdle to turning things around.

“There’s been a lot of discussion about what to do with Westland,” said Deb Miller of Boulevard Strategies, a real- estate market strategy firm. “The key to the whole West Side changing is catalytic developmen­t at Westland. It has to start there.”

Any survey will focus on the West Broad Street and Sullivant Avenue area, and on bringing back small businesses. “We have the population to sustain some good small businesses,” said Nancy Rhynard of the Hilltop Business Associatio­n.

“We want to understand the opportunit­ies for concentrat­ed developmen­t,” Councilwom­an Elizabeth Brown said. “A study will help give us data to form an implementa­tion plan.”

Boulevard Strategies did a market study for the Hilltop in 2010. Lundine said the earlier study was a “classic market analysis,” but it didn’t include a strategy for action.

Chris Boring, now retired from Boulevard Strategies, said there is still a good market that retailers could tap into on the Hilltop. Based on work he did in 2014, Boring said that 28,350 people live in a 4.1-squaremile area. That’s double the density of the rest of Columbus.

Collective­ly, area residents spend $220 million a year on retail goods and services, but Hilltop merchants sell just $35 million, he said.

Councilman Mike Stinziano said there’s a concern that residents are leaving the Hilltop to spend money in the Hilliard and Grove City areas.

He also said the Westgate neighborho­od, with its 4,500 residents and median household income of $56,000, provides a market base for sit-down restaurant­s and coffee shops nearby. Close to 19,000 vehicles a day travel West Broad Street along the neighborho­od’s northern border, according to the Mid-Ohio Regional Planning Commission.

“They’re starving for restaurant­s,” Boring said of Westgate. “All they have is Dirty Frank’s.” Hip hot dog restaurant Dirty Frank’s West opened on West Broad Street near Hague Avenue in 2014.

“We’re quite hungry out here, literally and figurative­ly,” said Betty Jaynes, president of the Westgate Neighbors Associatio­n. “Westgate can’t survive as an island. We need to get other businesses in the area.”

Miller, who bought Boulevard Strategies in 2011, has been consulting with owners of the Westland Mall. She said that despite the casino itself doing well — it’s No. 1 in Ohio — the Westland Mall area “is pretty bad.”

The request for proposals will go out in a few weeks, with the City Council selecting someone by September, Lundine said.

 ?? [FRED SQUILLANTE/DISPATCH] ?? A new study to develop an action plan to bring business to the Hilltop will focus mostly on the areas of Sullivant Avenue and West Broad Street. Buildings have been left boarded up, like this one near the corner of West Broad Street and North Wayne...
[FRED SQUILLANTE/DISPATCH] A new study to develop an action plan to bring business to the Hilltop will focus mostly on the areas of Sullivant Avenue and West Broad Street. Buildings have been left boarded up, like this one near the corner of West Broad Street and North Wayne...

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