North Market development on track with 31-story tower
Delayed by pandemic, plan will now be bigger
After being delayed by the pandemic, a plan to develop the North Market parking lot is back, and bigger.
A 31-story tower anchors the new design for the mixed-use project to be located on a one-acre lot just east of the Downtown food market. The 700,000square-foot tower would be the tallest built in Columbus since 1990, edging out the 28-story Hilton hotel being built a stone’s throw away.
The North Market tower – five stories higher than the one announced two years ago – is the most dramatic element of a project that has grown in other ways, including cost, from an estimated $192 million to about $300 million.
“As a company we look long-term
and we try to do projects that we think are generational,” said Jim Merkel, the co-founder and chief executive officer of Rockbridge, the Columbus firm leading the development. “This particular
project is just that, a transformational project, well located and as significant to a community as any project we’ve
done in our history.”
Rockbridge, which has been involved in developing hundreds of hotels nationwide, added Jeff Edwards, CEO and president of the Columbus development firm The Edwards Companies, as a partner in the project.
Developers hope to begin construction next summer and finish within 30 to 36 months.
“We’ve been spending the last year refining the details of the project and making sure all these different uses work successfully in the building,” Merkel said.
The building will house several components in three connected sections, including:
h 170 apartments, including some lower-cost workforce housing
h A 212-room independent hotel “that celebrates the spirit of the North Market,” according to a news release announcing the details
h 60,000 square feet of offices, down slightly from 90,000 originally planned
h A 350-space parking garage
h Rooftop decks on at least two lower levels that will feature a “speakeasy,” a pool and a dog park.
Other amenities include a fitness center, restaurant, coffee shop, spa, billiards room and a main-floor hub called the Trade Room, a gathering spot with indoor and outdoor space.
“Rather than think of hotel lobbies as just transactional places, we think of them as the heart of the house,” Merkel said. “It will function as the center and heart of the project. We put a lot of attention into the details of creating these spaces.”
In addition, the project involves adding 11,000 square feet onto the east side of the North Market, expanding the market’s space by about 50%. The space would be split into 3,900 square feet for merchants, 4,400 square feet of event and public space, and 3,200 square feet of outdoor space.
“North Market must evolve to stay
relevant and prosperous – especially at a time when so many small businesses need creative plans for recovery,” Rick Harrison Wolfe, North Market’s executive director, said in a news release.
The North Market is designed to benefit financially as well from the plan. Under the proposal, the city would transfer the parking lot to the developers. In exchange, the developers will commit funds to the North Market to compensate for lost parking revenue in addition to hotel bed-tax revenue from the project.
“It’s exciting to see this transformational vision progressing at such a critical time in Columbus, as this proposed plan for the project not only secures the preservation and expansion of the North Market – it also creates construction and permanent jobs for residents,” said Mayor Andrew J. Ginther in the news release.
Ginther said the partnership between public and private entities “addresses the region’s need for housing Columbus residents can afford and adds important
hotel accommodations that help us compete for convention business and events.”
The development, designed by the NBBJ architectural firm, “will have a refined industrial design inspired by the North Market and Union Station, which once ran through the site,” according to the news release.
The developers plan to present plans for the as-yet-unnamed project to the Downtown Commission shortly. Merkel said developers also plan to apply for tax credits allowed under Ohio House Bill 39 for “transformational mixed use development projects.”
“This project meets every definition of what the state’s trying to do,” Merkel said. “A big part of this is collaboration with the North Market and the city to really enhance this iconic destination in the heart of the city, adjacent to the Short North, Downtown, the Arena District. It hits on all fronts.” jweiker@dispatch.com @Jimweiker