

The building was designed for one owner occupancy with prestigious offices, posh conference rooms, luxcious lobby areas, a substainial upscale lunch room and converting the rear addition into a small car garage. Project renovation was a total gut and rehab of the building to include: roof replacement, restoration of skylights, masonry repairs on the structure at the building facade and parapets, removal of graffitti on exterior masonry walls, wood flooring replacement, construction of new offices, window replacement, new restrooms, new electrical, new HVAC and well-appointed finishes. All these requirements were the responsibility of Greater Cleveland Construction to carefully administer and document properly for GlobalX to obtain funding. The project utilized Historic Tax Credits, Historic Preservation Easement, City of Cleveland’s Vacant Property Initiative and Green standards to comply with the City of Cleveland’s program. The roof and upper floors were severly damaged with hazardous conditions so much so, we immediately installed a temporary support system to hold up the roof and third floor prior to starting construction. The biggest concern was the lack of maintenance of the building. The original building had been added to several times with oddly constructed additions.

The center of the building had been cut out to create a corridor of nature light from the roof to the first floor for tenants and a small passenger elevator was installed toward the front. The building consists of three floors and a basement and had undergone numerous transformations over the last 100 years, the latter being an office building with various tenant spaces. The owners wanted to renovate a historic building for their headquarters using tax credits promoting their successful business. building for their expanding tax credit consulting business. GlobalX (GBX Group) purchased the 12,000 sq.

This building is one of two surviving buildings. Joshua Hall developed four buildings on Prospect Avenue. The timestamp is only as accurate as the clock in the camera, and it may be completely wrong.The building, located at 1303 Prospect Avenue, was once known as the Edwin Hotel, built in the late 1800’s by developer Joshua E. If the file has been modified from its original state, some details such as the timestamp may not fully reflect those of the original file.
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