Boutique hotel for Short North gets conditional OKs
By Marla Matzer Rose
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH
A long-planned Short North boutique-hotel project from the Pizzuti Cos. has taken an important step forward.
The Italian Village Commission last week gave conditional approval to the conceptual plans for the hotel, called the Joseph. That followed a similar thumbs-up from the Victorian Village Commission a few weeks ago.
Final approvals will be sought later this year from the commissions and the city zoning office before Pizzuti can begin construction. If all goes well, the hotel could open in 2013.
The $50 million project is to produce a 135-room hotel on the east side of N. High Street and, across N. High, a building offering about 55,000 square feet of office space, plus retail space on the ground floor and a parking garage. The hotel project is planned for property just north of the Greater Columbus Convention Center.
Pizzuti originally announced plans for the hotel in early 2008. It faced neighborhood concerns about its size and parking issues; then it was shelved for a time as the recession made it unrealistic to move forward.
"We don't typically underwrite 31/2 years of development," said Joel Pizzuti. "To be fair," he said, "if the recession hadn't occurred, it wouldn't have taken this long."
He considers the project as it stands now - slightly scaled back from what originally was envisioned - as "better today than when we started."
The plan also preserves the majority of a limestone-faced United Commercial Travelers building that fronts Goodale Park; neighborhood preservationists had wanted it to remain. It will house a collection of art assembled by the Pizzuti family over the years.
Pizzuti said the Joseph, named after his late grandfather, is being designed for a clientele different from that of the publicly financed Hilton Columbus Downtown, which is being built directly across from the convention center. That hotel is expected to open in September 2012.
"We're not going after convention business," Pizzuti said. "We're targeting the individual business traveler, the leisure traveler, people coming to Columbus for work and pleasure."
Pizzuti said he's seen real-estate financing loosen up in 2011 compared with the clamp-down that occurred after the recession hit. He said his company is talking to "a number of capital providers" about financing the Joseph.
Another Downtown boutique hotel, this one across from the Statehouse, remains in the planning stages. Rob Willard of Indiana-based Midas Hospitality said he remains optimistic about striking a deal soon to renovate two historic Broad Street buildings into a Hotel Indigo-branded hotel with the aid of tax credits.
"Hotel financing is difficult in general, (but) Columbus' Downtown is a great hotel market, especially for the size and type of hotel we are building," Willard said.
Matt MacLaren, executive vice president of the Ohio Hotel and Lodging Association, agreed that financing for new hotel projects "remains difficult for the whole state of Ohio."
He, too, is hopeful that there is room for several new hotels Downtown.
"If the marketing is done right, we'll grow the market overall," MacLaren said. "If we're able to grow the number of visitors, even with a few new hotels coming, occupancy overall will go up."
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