Drone Cam Fly-By of Carlisle Project
A cutting-edge, high-tech drone cam was used to capture aerial views of the Carlisle construction project. This video gives a cool and unique perspective of the iconic Carlisle Building in Chillicothe, Ohio as it undergoes a complete $10 million renovation.
Significant visual changes since rehabilitation work started in June are showcased in great detail. The Carlisle shell and core has been completely stabilized and the non-historic storefronts and rear additions have been surgically demolished. Interior framing and masonry restoration are underway. In the upcoming months the mansard roof and decorative dormer will be restored and the 75 foot tower will be stabilized and tuck-pointed.
Stay tuned – more to come in our Fall newsletter!!
Congressman Joyce Visits ASM
The Chesler Group hosted a tour of the ASM Complex for US Representative David Joyce this past Friday, September 5, 2014. The Congressman was joined by Mariangela Pfister, (Dept. Head & Deputy SHPO for Technical Preservation Services, State Historic Preservation Office); Amanda Terrell (Director of Ohio’s State Historic Preservation Office at the Ohio History) and Joyce Barrett (Executive Director at Heritage Ohio). The visit highlighted the importance of both the Federal and State Historic tax credit program for historic rehabilitation projects. Michael Chesler emphasized that without the ability to syndicate historic tax credits, the renovation of the ASM Headquarters would not have been financially feasible. ASM had planned to sell the unique Mid-Century masterpiece and move its offices to Chicago – a loss of over 150 jobs for the Ohio region. Therefore, the continued support by Congress of the Federal Historic Tax Credits is critical to preserving America’s history. Recent IRS provisions and rulings have paralyzed the tax credit industry and greatly limited the financial resources needed to complete historic projects.
Carlisle Restoration Kickoff Event
Earlier this week, the much anticipated construction kickoff event was held for the renovation of the Carlisle Building in Chillicothe, Ohio. The Chesler Group is restoring the building for the Adena Health System and will house offices on the first floor with residences on the upper floors to support their new medical education program. The event, hosted by the president and CEO of the Adena Health System, Mark Shuter, brought business and community members together to celebrate the already drastic transformations that are taking place on the corner of Main Street and Paint Street in the city’s downtown. The afternoon began with Adena Health System board members touring the construction site and finished at the Cross Keys/17 Restaurant, where the many people who helped bring the project to fruition were recognized. JobsOhio, the Ohio Development Services Agency, The City of Chillicothe, Cortland Banks, The Chillicothe-Ross Community Foundation, and the Appalachian Partnership for Economic Growth have all lent invaluable support to the project. Shuter described the project as being the “biggest show of community involvement” in his career.
Chillicothe Gazette: Interior demolition kicks off Carlisle work
Matthew Kent, Chillicothe Gazette Staff Writer – June 18th, 2014
Work on the renovation of the historic Carlisle Building is underway with some interior demolition and the installation of utilities at the structure.
Jeff Klecka, construction foreman with the Chesler Group, said Wednesday that crews were performing demolition inside in addition to putting in electrical and water lines at the site.
“Within a month, they’re going to start tearing down the back,” Klecka said.
Scaffolding work is expected to begin next week at the building as part of renovations being led by the Cleveland-based Chesler Group, with a target reopening date in fall 2015.
Adena Health System will be the main tenant, using the space for offices and living space for medical students.
The developer of the building, Michael Chesler, closed on the building last month and signed a 15-year lease with Adena in February. The downtown landmark has stood unoccupied since a 2003 fire damaged it.
Several efforts have been launched to renovate the structure in the years since the fire, but none gained any traction until the partnership between Adena and Chesler was formed.
Sidewalks surrounding the Carlisle are blocked off because of the ongoing work, which could cause minor delays for motorists because of construction vehicles in the area.
Chesler previously told The Gazette that stabilization efforts involving the Carlisle were estimated to take four to six months.
The Chesler Group begins construction on the Carlisle Building
Residents and visitors in Chillicothe, Ohio, may have noticed changes downtown over the past week. The Chesler Group. Inc, has begun erecting scaffolding along the historic Carlisle Building, the start of a $8 million preservation and rehabilitation project. This prominent Chillicothe landmark was condemned after a 2003 fire. The Chesler Group will restore the building to preserve Chillicothe’s history, provide new residential and office space, and support the rejuvenation of downtown Chillicothe.
The Carlisle was built in 1885, a Romanesque Victorian with four stories of office and retail space and a distinctive round tower overlooking the corner of Main and Paint Streets. The Chesler Group will renovate the Carlisle into space for the Adena Health System, the major provider of health care in south-central Ohio. The first floor will house Adena offices, and the upper three floors will be converted into 32 residential units for graduate residents and medical students. These new residents will support the many local retail businesses just steps away from the Carlisle along Paint Street and Main Street.
The Carlisle Building is an important component of the historic Chillicothe Business District, and The Chesler Group will use Federal and State historic preservation tax credits as well as a JobsOhio grant and subsidised loan to finance the project. These incentives place exacting standards on the quality of the renovation, and guarantee that The Chesler Group will preserve and restore all of the historic interior and exterior features which make the Carlisle such a distinctive building.
The Carlisle Building is expected to be ready for occupancy in fall 2015.
Chillicothe Gazette: It’s Official: Carlisle Building sold
Chillicothe Gazette Staff – May 30th, 2014
In the more than 11 years since the Carlisle Building was severely damaged in a deliberately set fire, Chillicothe residents have endured multiple visions for the structure’s renovation.
This week, the dreams of renovation drew closer to reality as building officially changed hands.
The Chesler Group officially closed on a purchase of the building and renovations will soon begin with a target date of reopening by next year. Adena Health System will be the main tenant, using the space to house offices and living space for residents.
The Chillicothe-Ross Chamber of Commerce announced the sale Friday, in its weekly newsletter.
“It is with great anticipation that we look forward to the renovation of the Carlisle Building and the revitalization of our entire downtown,” said Tom White, chairman of the city’s Downtown Development Commission.
Chesler has maintained that work would begin on the famed structure as soon as the closing was finished.
The renovation of the building has long been held as the main catalyst to downtown revitalization and was named as such in a outside downtown study conducted by Hyett Palma in 2007.
Chillicothe Gazette: Carlisle plan set to start next month
Matthew Kent, Chillicothe Gazette – April 29, 2014:
Preparations for the upcoming renovation of the historic Carlisle Building in downtown Chillicothe appear to be taking shape.
The developer of the iconic structure, Michael Chesler, said Tuesday that he plans to begin work in May that will first involve putting up scaffolding once technical and financial details are finalized.
Chesler, who leads the Cleveland-based Chesler Group, signed a 15-year lease in February with Adena Health System, which plans to fully occupy the building late next year.
The $7 million renovation project will have 32 apartments for medical residents and other office space for Adena employees once it is completed. The downtown landmark has stood unoccupied since a 2003 fire damaged the building.
Several efforts have been launched to renovate the structure in the years since the fire, but none gained any traction until the partnership between Adena and Chesler was formed. Chesler said he plans to scaffold the building beginning on the Paint Street side as one of the first steps in the renovation process.
“There are some structural defects, flaws and some structural problems on the Howson Building that are pretty evident for even a layperson to see, and we need to repair those structural defects probably first,” Chesler said. “So we’re going to have a lot of the debris coming off the front of the building and there’s no room yet in the rear, and so we may demolish some of those outstructures.
“And so that’s the plan.”
He said that will mean “stabilizing parts of the building that are distressed and doing the demolition of the exterior outbuildings from the rear, and that phase will probably take four to six months of stabilization.”
Once that is completed, Chesler said, crews will go inside and begin the interior restoration process. He confirmed that the completion date of October 2015 is still on track and that the overall project is ready to move forward.
“We’re all ready to go, and we just have to finalize, get all the parties happy to go to work,” Chesler said.
Preliminary construction estimates were being performed on the structure on Tuesday, said Todd Wallace, senior project manager with Cleveland-based American Preservation Builders.
Kelly Kight, the city’s chief building official, also was among those gathered outside the building.
Kight said the city has issued a permit for the project to allow for temporary electric service in the back of the structure.
Chesler said residents of Chillicothe can thank the president and CEO of Adena Health System, Mark Shuter, for his efforts concerning the Carlisle Building.
“It’s a gift to the community, and in addition to getting health care from that organization … they really need to recognize that it was all about Mark Shuter and the board at Adena that made it happen,” he said.
Mayor Jack Everson said the renovation work will provide an economic boost to Chillicothe and Ross County once things get started, as Chesler has indicated he intends to use local contractors as much as possible.
Everson added that the upcoming project is a step in the right direction for Chillicothe.
“I think it’s the catalyst to the rebirth of downtown,” he said.
Plain Dealer: Spaces is close to signing a long-term lease in Ohio City’s burgeoning arts district
Steven Litt, The Plainer Dealer – April 22, 2014
A burgeoning cultural node in Ohio City on Cleveland’s near West Side could soon get a serious boost if the nonprofit art gallery Spaces can raise enough cash to move into the neighborhood.
After months of quiet negotiations, Spaces is close to signing a lease with developer Michael Chesler, owner of the 14,000-square-foot brick industrial building at the southeast corner of West 29th Street and Detroit Avenue.
Moving into the area, dubbed Hingetown by local developers Graham Veysey and Marika Shioiri-Clark, would bring Spaces cheek by jowl with the new Transformer Station gallery, and with Veysey and Shioiri Clark’s Ohio City Firehouse and Striebinger Building.
Also located nearby are ICA Art Conservation; the Van Roy Building, owned by Chesler; and the former Bop Stop jazz club, recently donated to University Circle’s Music Settlement.
Chesler and John Farina, president of the Spaces board, see the opportunity for a strong fit with a neighborhood that is quickly becoming a West Side cultural mecca.
“This is an opportunity to graduate to the next phase of what Spaces does in terms of serving artists and the community overall,” Farina said. “It’s the next part of our evolution.”
Chesler, who said he is offering Spaces a below-market lease, said he’s equally pleased to have the chance to add to the dynamism of the area.
“We’re going to do something cool that will benefit the neighborhood forever,” Chesler said Monday during a tour of his building. “This [the potential Spaces move] would change the whole deal for this part of Ohio City forever.”
Spaces, established in 1978, is devoted to showing experimental works by emerging and mid-career artists.
In November 2013, the organization signed a deal to sell its three-story, 19th-century vintage loft building at 2220 Superior Viaduct for $418,000.
The organization decided to sell the building, which it had owned since 1990, because the location came to feel isolated and unrelated to surrounding developments, including the StoneBridge Apartments, built in 2007.
Spaces recently signed a “hold agreement” with Chesler, which gives the gallery six months to sign a lease for the Ohio City building.
Farina said that Spaces has launched a $3 million capital campaign, of which it needs to raise roughly half, or $1.5 million, in order to sign the lease. So far, the organization has gathered $500,000 in cash and pledges, so it is pushing to raise the remaining $1 million by October.
Farina said his confidence about getting the job done is “high, very high. We’re getting an excellent response. Nobody is coming back to us and saying, ‘You guys are out of your minds.’ ”
Architect John Williams of Cleveland’s Process Studio, a former president of the Spaces board, is designing a minimal renovation of the Ohio City building intended to preserve its rugged industrial look.
The interior would feature about 5,000 square feet of gallery space, about what Spaces has now in its Superior Viaduct building.
Built in the 1950s, the Ohio City building features a structure of steel columns and trusses with 20-foot ceilings and facades of brick and concrete block. Its most notable feature is a large window spanning most of its long west façade with windowpanes or opaque panels in varying hues that create a checkerboard look.
Farina and Chesler said they both feel the windows are essential to the building’s identity, and that they intend to preserve their patchy appearance.
Chesler, who bought the building in 2011 for $270,000, said it was previously used as a fabricating facility for large steel water purification tanks.
Among its special features are a series of ceiling cranes that will be preserved and may be used by artists who need to move around heavy objects.
Christina Vassallo, who was appointed as the new executive director of Spaces in December, said she’s thrilled to join the organization at what is shaping up to be a pivotal moment in its history.
She moved to Cleveland recently after having spent three years as executive director and curator of Flux Factory NYC, which organizes exhibitions, artist residencies and collaborative projects.
About the potential move for Spaces, Vassallo said: “We are still going to be Spaces, but with a very long future ahead of us.”
Lease Signing for Historic Carlisle Building
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
February 14, 2014
Chillicothe, OH – a Lease Signing Ceremony, held yesterday, kicked off the long-awaited collaborative efforts to restore and preserve a beloved landmark in Chillicothe, Ohio. Adena Health System, the largest healthcare provider in the south central Ohio region, signed a 15-year lease to occupy 100% of the historic Carlisle building, using the first floor for community-focused business operations and the upper floors as housing for physician residents and medical students.
The prominent Carlisle Building, located at the corner of Paint and Main Streets, in the heart of Chillicothe’s downtown, will undergo an extensive $7 million renovation. The Chesler Group, Inc. (TCG) will restore the circa 1885 Romanesque, four-story building to its former glory. The facility will include approximately 32 apartments for Adena’s medical residents and students who will occupy three floors of living space. The first floor will include offices for some Adena staff, and a community conference space.
“With the solid support of the Adena Board of Trustees, we have taken on this project as a way to meet the housing needs of the young doctors we are bringing to Chillicothe for training; and to give back to the community that supports us by helping to spur economic growth in our downtown,” said Adena President and CEO Mark Shuter. “Adena is proud to be able to make this commitment to Chillicothe, our longtime hometown.”
Adena’s growing Graduate Medical Education (GME) program has made it necessary for Adena to invest in housing for dozens of physician residents and medical students who are training at the local hospital. Shuter added, “By locating dozens of young professionals in downtown apartments, and employees in first-floor offices, Adena can help generate future economic development, bringing in dollars and creating jobs.”
Over the past decade, the 35,100 square-foot condemned structure has suffered severe damages and was partially destroyed by arson in 2003 and has been vacant ever since. “This building represents the spine of traditional Chillicothe,” Michael Chesler, President of TCG, said. “You tear these buildings down, you lose your sense of history, you lose your sense of place. … When you restore these buildings, it gives everyone a sense of time a hundred years ago.” TCG is an award winning, vertically integrated redeveloper of commercial buildings with a special emphasis on the adaptive reuse of historic structures. With over 20 years experience in the restoration construction business, TCG understands the unique challenges facing historic buildings.
The importance of this community revitalization effort has been recognized by JobsOhio, the City of Chillicothe, and the Chillicothe Ross Community Foundation, all of which have played pivotal roles in making this project possible. TCG will also utilize Federal and State Historic Tax Credits for the project, which is expected to begin in this spring and conclude in late 2015.
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Photo: Chesler Group
The Chesler Group is proud to be part of Docomomo US’s Tour Day 2013 for a tour of ASM World Headquarters.
The seventh annual national Tour Day brings together Docomomo US membership, chapters, friend organizations, architecture and preservation organizations, students, architects, historians, designers, and enthusiasts to celebrate the modern movement across the US.
Docomomo is short for International committee for the documentation and conservation of buildings, sites, and neighborhood of the modern movement.
Docomomo US is the United States chapter of Docomomo International, a non-profit organization dedicated to the documentation and conservation of buildings, sites and neighborhoods of the modern movement for nearly 25 years.
This year, The Chesler Group, Inc. was contacted to partner in the Docomomo US’s Tour Day 2013 on October 5, 2013 to lead an architectural tour of ASM World Headquarters. We are proud to be one of 50 modern buildings and sites nationwide to offer a tour as a part of Tour Day 2013.
ASM World Headquarters epitomizes the optimistic vision of one of America’s greatest eras – and yet it is as beautiful, functional and inspiring today as it was the day it opened in 1959. After two years of demolition and complex renovation, we have restored the headquarters of ASM International to its original historic grandeur. The recent restoration received numerous international, national and regional awards. It is an incredibly unique structure and one-of-a-kind in our country. If you’re an aficionado of mid-century modern architecture, you really owe it to yourself to experience the building for yourself. A geodesic-domed gem of American Modern architecture near Cleveland is proudly proving that the great buildings of the nation’s mid-20th century can be futuristic and historic at the same time.
Tour will be conducted on October 5, 2013 at 10am. Cost is free but advance registration is required via email at caizu@cheslergroup.com by September 30, 2013.