FOCUS LEGAL AFFAIRS
Chilling out?: Ohio companies examine drug policies in the workplace. PAGE 12 CRAINSCLEVELAND.COM I APRIL 5, 2021
The 195-acre former Ford Motor Co. plant property in Brook Park is slated to be redeveloped by a joint venture between Weston Inc., the DiGeronimo Cos. and Scannell Properties. MICHELLE JARBOE/CRAIN’S CLEVELAND BUSINESS
LONG HAUL REAL ESTATE
Makeovers of two former Ford plants could be a $500 million-plus undertaking
BY MICHELLE JARBOE A developer trio set to buy two former Ford Motor Co. plants in
Greater Cleveland says remaking the massive properties could be a $500 million-plus endeavor. Executives from Weston Inc., the DiGeronimo Cos. and Scannell Properties confirmed in interviews with Crain’s that they’re closing in on the automaker’s shuttered operations in Brook Park and Walton Hills. Through a joint venture, the developers recently firmed up the 195-acre Brook Park deal, which is set to close in mid-May. They’re still conducting due diligence on the 111acre Walton Hills property, with hopes of consummating that purchase later this year.
The buyers aim to revive the dormant manufacturing sites through a mix of demolition, renovation and new construction. They don’t have tenants in hand yet. But they’re hoping to selectively raze obsolete portions of the Brook Park engine plant, a 1.7 million-square-foot complex, this year — and to move swiftly toward construction of their first speculative building on the surrounding land. “We are not buying this asset to sit and let deals come to us,” said Kevin
DiGeronimo, a principal with the eponymous, family-owned group of companies based in Independence. Ford closed its Cleveland Engine Plant No. 2 in Brook Park in 2012. Production stopped in late 2014 at the 2.1 million-square-foot stamping plant in Walton Hills. The properties hit the market in 2018, with no published price for Brook Park and a $9 million price tag for Walton Hills. See FORD on Page 17
HEALTH CARE
Navigating the digital divide and vaccine access Health systems are assisting patients without access to email, internet BY LYDIA COUTRÉ
Shortly after University Hospitals opened online scheduling for the COVID-19 vaccine, hospital operators were fielding calls from patients without email or internet asking, “How am I supposed to schedule a vaccine?”
UH was able to quickly identify this gap thanks to the manager of hospital operators raising the alarm bell, as well as doctors hearing similar questions from their patients, said Dr. Robyn Strosaker, chief operating officer of
NEWSPAPER
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UH Cleveland Medical Center. “We were actually really grateful for those phone calls to the hospital operators, saying, ‘Hey, you forgot about (those of ) us who can’t access the internet and don’t have email,’ ” Strosaker said. “The last thing we wanted to do was create a barrier to access, so we were happy when somebody pointed out and said, ‘Hey, we can’t access the way you’ve designed; you need another way.’ ” Within 12 hours of launching the preregistration process on its website, UH developed a phone number for patients looking to schedule. See DIGITAL DIVIDE on Page 19
Mossie Harper is vaccinated on Monday, March 8, at Cleveland Clinic’s community-based vaccination clinic at the Langston Hughes Health and Education Center in Cleveland. | CLEVELAND CLINIC