The Columbus Dispatch

The high life

New Downtown condos offer luxury, with a price tag to match

- By Jim Weiker |

iconic building of the same name, and Parks Edge, a pair of Arena District condo towers.

The two projects add 151 condominiu­ms Downtown, with prices starting at $450,000 and climbing to $4.4 million for a custom condominiu­m that occupies the entire top floor — almost 14,000 square feet — of the first Parks Edge building. That condo takes up space originally intended for six homes.

While similar in price, finishes and amenities, the LeVeque and Parks Edge condos are dramatical­ly different in style.

Parks Edge units are sleek, modern, wall- of- glass contempora­ries, while the LeVeque condos reflect the traditions of the building. Each LeVeque home has a different layout, plus hints of the building's past such as brass mail chutes ( now decorative) and double-hung windows that open.

One of the eight LeVeque condos has been sold, even though work on the project was just finished, said Jim Meyer of the Cutler Real Estate firm Meyer & Dial, which is listing the homes.

He sees the LeVeque's heritage as a huge draw.

"It's the most iconic building in central Ohio," he said. "When you say, ' I live at the LeVeque,' people know what you're talking about."

He also thinks the condos benefit from being on floors 34 through 37 of a building that includes a boutique hotel, apartments, a restaurant, a bar and a gym.

Condo owners will have access to hotel amenities such as room service from the restaurant, dry cleaning, a day spa and valet services for guests. Eventually, managers hope to add housekeepi­ng.

Meyer says the individual layouts, some of which have 180- degree views, will draw those looking for something different.

"These are not a bunch of boxes next to one another," he said.

At Parks Edge, 54 of the 61 units in the first tower are sold and 12 occupants have moved in, according to the developer, Nationwide Realty Investors. The second tower, which will include 82 homes, is expected to be ready for occupancy in June.

Although the interior finishes at Parks Edge are top- end, that's not what buyers first notice, said Nationwide Realty President Brian Ellis.

"The one pre-eminent thing is the picture- postcard views of the skyline and the riverfront and riverfront park; that’s a primary driver," he said.

"Next is being in an urban neighborho­od that’s pedestrian­friendly with great access to amenities."

The Parks Edge homes are essays in modern luxury: floor- to- ceiling windows, large pantries and walkin closets, 10- foot- high ceilings, spalike baths and balconies, including some that wrap around corners. Although most Parks Edge homes are single- story, the two buildings include 13 townhomes total.

Guests have access to a large rooftop pool, a fitness center, a guest suite in the building and a community room that includes sliding glass walls that open onto a terrace.

"For the first time in the Arena District, we’ve added a pool, a resort- style pool on the garage roof, that’s been a new amenity, and I think it’s been a big driver," Ellis said.

Meyer and Ellis are pleased by the response to their respective developmen­ts. But considerin­g that 38 condos sold above $500,000 in all of Downtown in the past 18 months, how much of a market is there for 150 new high-end condos?

“That’s a good question,” said Lee Ritchie, a RE/MAX agent who deals extensivel­y in Downtown properties and represente­d the buyer of the $ 4.4 million Parks Edge condominiu­m.

Most of the demand for such homes comes from empty nesters, she said.

“They’re moving out of the suburbs and their big homes into town. They want to have fun, walk to things, enjoy a more vibrant lifestyle, and they want to downsize,” she said.

Downtown's mostsought-after condos share three features, Ritchie said: proximity to restaurant­s and entertainm­ent; a property- tax abatement; and views. The LeVeque and Parks Edge projects have all three.

"There's more people in this market than you would anticipate," Meyer said.

But for both Parks Edge and the LeVeque, representa­tives know they are catering to an exclusive audience.

"This isn't a building for penny pinchers," noted Meyer as he showed visitors through the LeVeque. "It's for people who want a lifestyle they can't get elsewhere."

 ?? [KYLE ROBERTSON/DISPATCH] ?? The view from the kitchen in a Parks Edge condominiu­m in the Arena District
[KYLE ROBERTSON/DISPATCH] The view from the kitchen in a Parks Edge condominiu­m in the Arena District
 ?? [TOM DODGE/DISPATCH] ?? A 35th-floor condo’s kitchen in the LeVeque Tower
[TOM DODGE/DISPATCH] A 35th-floor condo’s kitchen in the LeVeque Tower
 ?? [ERIC ALBRECHT/DISPATCH] ?? A Parks Edge condo with a wrap-around balcony
[ERIC ALBRECHT/DISPATCH] A Parks Edge condo with a wrap-around balcony
 ?? [ERIC ALBRECHT/DISPATCH] ?? Parks Edge, which will be a pair of Arena District condo towers when completed
[ERIC ALBRECHT/DISPATCH] Parks Edge, which will be a pair of Arena District condo towers when completed
 ?? [TOM DODGE/DISPATCH] ?? The master bath inside a LeVeque Tower condominiu­m
[TOM DODGE/DISPATCH] The master bath inside a LeVeque Tower condominiu­m

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