Celeron Plaza Development
CDBG
30th Anniversary
Recognition of Excellence
Where Wheeling Creek meets the Ohio River, French explorer Celeron
de Bienville laid claim to all of the territory to the west of the
Ohio River for the King of France. This area directly south of the
Wheeling Civic Center is now known as Celeron Plaza.
Formerly a warehouse district, the Celeron Plaza area is the premier
development site in Wheeling. Located in the southern portion of
the City, Celeron Plaza offers prime views of the Ohio River and
a strategic geographic location providing access to Interstate 470,
the heavily used Wheeling Heritage Walking/Biking Trail and the
Wheeling Convention Center. The City of Wheeling has invested in
nine of 11 properties to facilitate the development of the area
while attempting to preserve its historic flavor.
The
City's investment in Celeron Plaza has fueled further development
interest from both the private and public sectors. The State of
West Virginia completed construction of a new bridge that will provide
greater access to Celeron Plaza from the Central Business District.
The Maxwell Partners, a private development group, recently invested
several million dollars into the award-winning rehabilitation of
a former YMCA building in the Celeron Plaza area. This building,
now known as Maxwell Center, houses Wheeling's largest law firm
and two large professional firms. The Maxwell Partners also completed
the renovation of the Wagner Building, an historic 1915 warehouse,
into Class A office space. Just Us, another local development group,
redeveloped the recently purchased Continental Bakery Building for
retail and office use. The Catholic Diocese of Wheeling/Charleston
is investing several million dollars into a West Virginia Catholic
Heritage Center located in another historic structure within Celeron
Plaza.
Neighborhoods
adjacent to Celeron Plaza are also experiencing significant redevelopment
interest. The Heritage Port Complex, a renovated port area and 6,000-seat
amphitheater located north of the Celeron Plaza area, was completed
last summer. Ogden Newspapers, Inc. has invested several million
dollars for the renovation of an abandoned warehouse for its printing
facilities to a site on the eastern side of Celeron Plaza.
The
Celeron Plaza project is within the City of Wheeling's established
Neighborhood Revitalization Strategy Area (NRSA), and as such, this
project has met specific goals for economic development within the
NRSA, including: Redeveloping underutilized properties; eliminating
blight; providing opportunities for new or expanding businesses;
providing meaningful and expanded employment opportunities; and,
advocating public/private partnerships.
Wheeling
has used a total of over $3.6 million (from CDBG, Section 108 and
Brownfields Economic Development Initiative resources) to finance
a $10 million revitalization project.
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