205 Dryden Road (Dryden South) Construction Update, 12/2015

9 12 2015

As with 327 Eddy a couple of blocks away, Pat Kraft’s 6-story building underway at 205 Dryden, called “Dryden South”, has yet to reach street level, but it’s close to going vertical. It was a little difficult to get to this site due to traffic, but the last photo shows what appear to be columns rising from a shallow mat slab foundation. Unlike the low-lying parts of Ithaca, the soil on East Hill is amenable to shallow foundations for a medium-sized building like this; all the better for the developer, since shallow foundations are cheaper than deep foundations. The steel rods at the top of the concrete columns will tie-in to the structural steel – the weight of the upper floors will be channeled down into the columns, which will then transfer the weight to the rebar mesh and concrete slab at the base (basement bottom) of the new building. The rebar mesh helps to distribute the weight of the building evenly across the slab. The thicker the mat slab is, the more weight it can support.

On a side note, it doesn’t look like John Novarr’s project at 209-215 Dryden is underway just yet, though it was originally slated to start last month. But given that Cornell has already signed up to occupy the whole building, Novarr’s project has a very good chance of moving forward, it’s just a matter of time.

Dryden South will bring 10 4-bedroom apartments to market when it opens in August 2016. The ground floor will hold 2,400 SF of retail space for Kraftee’s book and apparel store. The $6.4 million project is being built by LeChase Construction, and the design is by local architect Jagat Sharma.

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327 Eddy Street Construction Update, 12/2015

8 12 2015

327 Eddy is almost ready to rise from the ground. The mat slab foundation for the upper tier has been poured onto the rebar mesh, with more rebar sticking out of the concrete, ready to tie-in the walls as they’re built up. On the lower tier, it looks like some forms are still in-place for further concrete pours (which sounds right, based off the elevation drawing below). No doubt the work crews have appreciated winter’s delayed arrival this year.

Plans call for a new 5-story building split into “steps” on the steeply-sloped site. The mixed-use building will bring 1,800 SF of retail space and 22 new apartment units with 53 bedrooms to the market in August 2016. Longtime Collegetown landlord Steve Fontana of the Fontana’s Shoes family is the developer, Jagat Sharma is the architect, and GM Crisalli & Associates of Syracuse will be overseeing construction. A construction loan of $4,824,000 is being provided by Tompkins Trust Company. A 2-story mixed-use building and the one-story Pixel Lounge building  were demolished to make way for the project.

Note in the elevation drawing below, the building is six stories. It was reduced to five, and the decorative crown was reworked after approval was granted. It also looks like the latest render was stretched to compensate the loss in height.

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804 East State Street Construction Update, 12/2015

7 12 2015

Modular projects tend to move quickly. Such is the case over at 804 East State Street. The modular units have been assembled and fitted – since the interiors comes partially finished and the windows and doors come already fitted, the builder/assembler saves on not only time, but labor costs. For further reading, Ithaca Builds provides a great discussion of how modular units are assembled, including a tour of modular manufacturer Simplex Homes’ factory here.

Perhaps the big surprise during this visit is that there are three duplexes underway – a third duplex is being built at 810 East State Street, which previously held a mid-century 3-bedroom bungalow. The three existing duplexes on the parcel are being spruced up as well, with the addition of small porches at their front entries. Each duplex houses 2 3-bedroom units, about 1150 SF per unit.

It appears that some exterior siding/trimming and  interior finishing remains to be completed, and then landscaping once construction wraps up. Although the duplexes themselves are rather bland (some residents in the East Hill Historic District can see the site from their windows, and were opposed to construction), the developer met with residents and oriented the new units to minimize visual impact on Orchard Place, with heavy landscaping to better conceal the State Street properties. The neighbors also pushed for stick-built houses, but the owner/developer ruled it out due to costs.

A building loan agreement filed November 10th states that Tompkins Trust Company is lending the Nestopoulos family (operating under the name “Demosjohnny LLC”) $560,000 for the project. The units should be ready for their first renters by mid-January.

Schickel Architecture is the architect, and Costas Nestopoulos is the general contractor.

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News Tidbits 12/5/15: Stamp of Approval

5 12 2015

 

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1. Over in downtown, The Journal’s Nick Reynolds attended a rather quiet CIITAP meeting for the revised Hotel Ithaca project. There were only five attendees outside of those who had to be there, and it doesn’t seem like any big issues arose during the hearing. A quibble was raised about the lack of parking on site, but city officials it’s across the street from the Cayuga Street parking garage, and downtown workers don’t usually overlap with the hours that hotel guests will be using the garage (a 9-5 crowd vs. a 5-9 crowd).

To be fair, this wasn’t expected to be a big news-maker, since a previous iteration of the project received CIITAP approvals in 2013 (since it wasn’t built, the abatement was never applied). It’s also not a big impact on the city – the 5-story, 90-room addition mostly replaces an existing two-story wing of hotel rooms currently on that part of the site. In fact, it’s a decrease in the total number of rooms at the Hotel Ithaca, from 180 to 170. An earlier write-up on the project can be found on the Voice here, the CIITAP application here.

Developer Hart Hotels of Buffalo hopes the $11.5 million project will receive the new abatement at the county IDA’s December meeting, after which construction is expected to run either from January 2016 to May 2017 (presumably in time for the graduation crowds), or March 2016 to March 2017 per Josh Brokaw at the Ithaca Times.

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2. Speaking of Josh Brokaw, he provides a nice rundown of last Tuesday’s Planning Board meeting in the city of Ithaca. Salient details are as follows:

– DeWitt House (the Travis Hyde proposal for the Old Library site) still looks the same, but now has a little more covered parking on site, 55 spaces. The 60 units are still shooting for middle-market, 55+ individuals. Much of the library foundation will be reused.
– There’s a few more details about the Chapter House and Simeon’s both of which have shown up on the Voice in recent weeks. Simeon’s is shooting for an April opening, with the apartments sometime later.
– 215-221 West Spencer Street was approved. Expect a Q1-Q3 2016 construction timeframe.
– The debate about the Printing Press Lounge continues. With all due sympathy towards the one speaker’s early bedtime, there might be a double-standard here, as she’s had spirited meetings with the Town of Ithaca’s ZBA about a new house and other investments at her lakefront property, angering her future neighbors in the process.


3. The town of Ithaca will have an interesting development discussion next week. The South Hill Business Campus (SHBC) at 950 Danby Road is looking to “broaden and clarify” the legal uses in its Planned Development PDZ, which was established in 2005. the PDZ establishes strict guidelines on site uses, but gives the SHBC greater autonomy from the zoning code, useful when you have a variety of commercial and industrial tenants. Along with adding the capacity for greenhouses and outdoor event gatherings, there are some minor occupational clarifications, like adding wellness centers to the definition of medical facilities. But most importantly, the owners want to legalize residential uses in the PDZ.

To provide a quick background on SHBC, the complex as a manufacturing center for National Cash Register in 1957, with the addition of a new wing for offices in 1975. At one point, NCR employed over 1,000 people at the site. However, in 1991, NCR was acquired by AT&T, who sold the Ithaca facility to French company Axiohm three years later.  Workforce reductions and outsourcing had emptied most of the building, and Axiohm accepted an offer to sell the facility to a group of local investors headed by businessman Andy Sciarabba. The complex was renovated in the 2000s into a multi-tenant business center – SHBC. Axiohm, now Cognitive TPG, continues to occupy space as a tenant.

Before the late 2000s recession, SHBC, with 90% occupancy, presented sketch plans to the town to construct several new commercial and industrial buildings and create a business park, but those plans were discontinued as tenants closed or moved out during those hard economic times. There has been some “rebound”, but not enough to justify new work spaces as of yet. They would still be an option even if residential options are approved.

The current building isn’t permitted for residential – 40 years of manufacturing left the building environmentally compromised. It’s been re-mediated enough for business use, but not residential use. Any residential on the 56.6 acre site would have to be in new buildings.

There are certainly some favorable factors to an Emerson/Chain Works-type of redevelopment to complement SHBC. It’s close to major employers downtown, across the street from Ithaca College, there’s room for parking and amenities, and the town has had an eye towards encouraging development along that section of 96B and South Hill, by engaging with Form Ithaca to come up with ideas, and through the Route 96B pedestrian corridor study.

There’s nothing firm on the table, but the revisions in the PDZ language would certainly open the door wide for future development. We’ll see what the town board thinks of the idea next Tuesday.

4. Out in the town of Lansing, it looks like the town of Lansing will soon be looking at plans for a 9,100 SF retail store at the intersection of East Shore Drive and Cayuga Vista Drive. Although details haven’t been given (only that a plan was submitted in November, according to the 11/23 minutes), we might be able to guess what’s on it’s way. Both corner lots of the T-inersection are currently undeveloped fields – the southeastern parcel is owned by Freeville-based Fingerlakes Tire & Auto (purchased 1994), the northeastern parcel is owned by a local dentist and her husband and was purchased in 2010. Retail being retail, it seems most likely to be a tire or auto supply store.

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5. House of the week. A duplex being built at 214 Pennsylvania Avenue, just a couple blocks from Ithaca’ front entrance. These photos are a few weeks old now, so there might be more than a concrete foundation wall with rough window openings by this time. No need to guess on how it will look, though – the Iacovelli family is building the duplex, and they’ve reused the same basic design for at least 15 years, seen in the second image of a house further up the street. Each unit will have 2 bedrooms and about 1100 SF. The building permit was issued in late September.