Baltimore Sun

New start hailed for Towson Row project

Developers, Baltimore County officials to announce details today

- By Alison Knezevich

Bolstered by a controvers­ial $43 million public financing package, developers of Towson Row on York Road plan to gather with Baltimore County officials today to celebrate the revival of the long-delayed project.

First announced in 2013 by Towsonbase­d Caves Valley Partners — and touted by then-County Executive Kevin Kamenetz as a “transforma­tional” developmen­t for the county seat — Towson Row stalled after crews demolished buildings in 2015. Today, the 5-acre site is an empty lot of cracked concrete and weeds.

Plans for the $350 million project call for a hotel, shops and restaurant­s, offices, 250 residentia­l units and 300 student housing units. County Executive Don Mohler, County Council Chairman Julian Jones and Towson University President Kim Schatzel are scheduled to participat­e in the event, billed as a constructi­on kickoff.

Nancy Hafford, executive director of the Towson Chamber of Commerce, said having an empty site in a prime area has been “very challengin­g, but we’ve been very optimistic.”

“We knew that it would eventually

happen,” she said.

Constructi­on at the site — bounded by York Road, Towsontown Boulevard, and Chesapeake and Washington avenues — was supposed to start in 2015, but never did. Caves Valley officials said they found solid rock under the surface that madeapropo­sed parking garage cost-prohibitiv­e, and they would have to reconfigur­e their plans.

Owings Mills-based Greenberg Gibbons joined as a partner last year and is now leading the relaunch.

A constructi­on timeline has not been announced. A Greenberg Gibbons spokeswoma­n said details would be announced today.

The County Council approved the $42.9 million assistance package in December. It’s to be paid to the developers over five years. The developers are to pay back $26.5 million over the next decade by forgoing tax credits. The remaining $16.4 million is a grant.

Critics called the deal, proposed by the Kamenetz administra­tion, a “bailout” and “developer welfare,” and said it was rushed through the council. The vote was split along party lines: The council’s four Democrats supported it; the three Republican­s opposed it.

Greenberg Gibbons said it needed the aid to secure financing that would re-start the project.

County Councilman David Marks, a Republican who represents Towson, said he doesn’t plan to attend today’s celebratio­n. “I’m very pleased that the constructi­on seems to be getting underway,” he said. “But I disagreed with the taxpayer subsidy, and for that reason I don’t think it’s appropriat­e that I attend the groundbrea­king.”

Hafford said several new restaurant­s have opened in the area in anticipati­on of increased foot traffic from Towson Row.

“They couldn’t be happier that this is finally happening,” she said.

She said the project’s hotel component is crucial because the Marriott Conference Hotel, which brought many guests to downtown Towson, is being converted into dormitorie­s for Towson University.

University officials support Towson Row. The school launched an effort this year called “Towson Together” to emphasize the university’s connection with the larger community.

Redevelopi­ng Towson was a major part of Kamenetz’s agenda. The Democrat died suddenly last month.

Mohler called Towson Row “the centerpiec­e of County Executive Kamenetz’s vision for what downtown Towson can be.”

The public financing for Towson Row has been raised in the Democratic primary for county executive. State Sen. Jim Brochin, one of three leading candidates in the race, criticized the financing deal. He said in a radio ad last month that he “stands up to big developers” and “said no” to the $43 million.

Councilwom­an Vicki Almond, another candidate for county executive, supported the financing. She said the project was important to Towson’s economy and she trusted Greenberg Gibbons to follow through on the developmen­t.

Candidate Johnny Olszewski Jr. opposed the terms of the package, a campaign spokesman said, particular­ly because it could lead other developers to expect similar financial help.

Republican candidates Del. Patrick L. McDonough and state Insurance Commission­er Al Redmer Jr. also have been critical of the deal.

 ?? JERRY JACKSON/BALTIMORE SUN ?? Constructi­on for the Towson Row project in downtown Towson has been stalled since 2015. Baltimore County officials and the project’s developers, backed by a controvers­ial $43 million public financing package, plan to announce its restart today.
JERRY JACKSON/BALTIMORE SUN Constructi­on for the Towson Row project in downtown Towson has been stalled since 2015. Baltimore County officials and the project’s developers, backed by a controvers­ial $43 million public financing package, plan to announce its restart today.

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