Demolition began Monday at Irishtown Bend, the Cuyahoga River overlook in Ohio City targeted for stabilization to protect the river鈥檚 shipping channel and create a new park.
Two now-vacant Cuyahoga Metropolitan Housing Authority (CMHA) properties along West 25th Street are the first slated for demolition, the former administration building and a housing complex known as 鈥淏ig 8.鈥
鈥淒emolition of these buildings will open access to the potential of the Cuyahoga River valley and reveal dramatic views of the downtown skyline, which have been obstructed for decades,鈥 according to a press release from LAND Studio, which is administering $1.4 million of the project鈥檚 grant funding through the Ohio Public Works Commission鈥檚 Clean Ohio Conservation Fund.
Cleveland Metroparks is leading the demolition project and plans for the site to eventually include a boardwalk and a trail connecting the new 23-acre park to Cuyahoga Valley National Park. The project also will stabilize the hillside, which has been slowly sliding into the Cuyahoga River for more than a decade, threatening shipping traffic.
鈥淭o me, it鈥檚 this hillside of opportunity,鈥 said Sean McDermott, Metroparks鈥 chief planning and design officer Monday. 鈥淲hat we鈥檙e doing will help support jobs and economic activity, but then we鈥檒l also have a world class park. I don鈥檛 expect it鈥檒l be anything less than fantastic.鈥
More than $27 million has been raised so far from federal, state and local government sources to stabilize and transform the hillside. Efforts include the installation of 2,600 feet of steel bulkheads shoring up the hillside near Columbus Road and Riverbend Street to prevent a potential landslide.
The Irishtown Bend project, in the works since 2017, is a collaboration of public and private partnerships. Working with LAND studio and Cleveland Metroparks are also Ohio City, Inc., West Creek Conservancy, CMHA, the Port of Cleveland, the City of Cleveland, NOACA, NEORSD, ODOT, Cuyahoga County and the Northeast Ohio Coalition for the Homeless.
This phase of the project is estimated to take about a month, though McDermott said he expects the park will open in 2024 or 2025. The partners still need to acquire several parcels for the planned park, though McDermott said there is 鈥済ood, positive momentum鈥 in negotiations with landowners.
鈥淲hat鈥檚 happening right now is an exciting step, but it鈥檚 a preliminary step that will be one of many,鈥 he said. 鈥淪o although this marks a visual beginning, there will be some time between this step and the next.鈥
ideastream Digital Editor Gayle S. Putrich contributed to this report.