Crain's Cleveland Business

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REAL ESTATE A Columbus developer has bought 20 acres for an apartment development at Geauga Lake.

TECH: Remote work, telehealth and more — what leaders expect in 2022. PAGE 10

PAGE 6 CRAINSCLEVELAND.COM I JANUARY 31, 2022

Bedrock sees small businesses as key

MICHELLE JARBOE/CRAIN’S CLEVELAND BUSINESS

BY MICHELLE JARBOE

Last week, Beth Azor was on the road, crisscrossing Greater Cleveland to sell retailers on space at Tower City. “I want food, food and food,” she said, noting that the NBA AllStar Game festivities are only three weeks away. “We want to bring as much food as we can possibly fit.” Azor, a Florida-based real estate consultant and investor, is part of a team trying to breathe new life into the moribund Cleveland mall. She and Bedrock, the property’s Detroit-based owner, are racing to fill empty storefronts before the All-Star weekend, which is expected to draw more than 100,000 people downtown from Feb. 18-20. But Bedrock’s recent leasing push is about more than pop-up shops. Most of the mall’s new tenants, a heavily local crop of businesses, plan to stick around.

TOWER CITY’S REVIVAL After 25 years, Cohen & Co. names new CEO BY JEREMY NOBILE

Randy Myeroff says when he was tapped as CEO for Cohen & Co. in 1997 at 34 years old following 12 years in the firm, he was not ready. “What I was ready for was to embrace the fact that there are no right answers,” he said. “You have to stay grounded in foundational principles and just embrace the journey. That’s probably what I’ve learned more than anything.”

NEWSPAPER

VOL. 43, NO. 4 l COPYRIGHT 2022 CRAIN COMMUNICATIONS INC. l ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

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 Listen to Ivy Greaner at crainscleveland.com/Landscape A patron steps onto an escalator at Tower City, where a half-court basketball installation recently popped up near the food court.

Hospitality industry ready for NBA All-Star Weekend

Long-term issues from COVID-19 pandemic remain

If Myeroff wasn’t ready to lead the business, he certainly grew into the role pretty well. In the time since Myeroff became the Cleveland-based national accounting and advisory firm’s chief executive, Cohen has exploded into one the industry’s largest independent businesses — and don’t expect that independence to change anytime soon. See COHEN & CO. on Page 17

See TOWER CITY on Page 16

BY JOE SCALZO

Chris Bellamy is set to become Cohen & Co.’s CEO effective June 1. | CONTRIBUTED

THE

LAND SCAPE

David Gilbert is confident Cleveland will be a hospitable environment for next month’s NBA All-Star Weekend. Indoors, anyway. The COVID-19 pandemic has wreaked havoc with the city’s hospitality industry over the past two years, but the president and CEO of Destination Cleveland and the Greater Cleveland Sports Com-

mission believes the city’s hotels and restaurants will be adequately staffed for All-Star Weekend Feb. 18-20. “There are some things we can and cannot control, but I feel good about where we are,” Gilbert said. “We’ve been working with a number of partners on this for many, many months and we’ve made an outsized effort helping See HOSPITALITY on Page 16

A CRAIN’S CLEVELAND PODCAST

1/28/2022 1:10:37 PM


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