May, 2004
STREETVIBES Fort Washington Hotel To Be Replaced By Upscale Condos Story and photos by Jimmy Heath
Another option for lowincome housing may soon be lost in downtown Cincinnati. The Fort Washington Hotel on Main Street has about 100 rooms and nearly as many residents but it soon may be closing due to a development project that will transform the turn-of-the-century structure into 10 upscale condominiums. The rehab project is slated to begin in about 2 – 6 months. Financing of the project will depend mostly on the presale of the new condominium units. The project will begin as early as this spring and will develop 10 units at 1,600 square feet of living space with starting prices of around $250,000 each. There are plans for balconies and indoor parking. The building originally opened in 1888 as an office building but later was converted to a hotel. At the present time the Fort Washington Hotel offers lowcost affordable housing to the working poor and people on fixed incomes who want the flexibility of weekly rental rates. Advocates for affordable housing are worried that turning the historic building into market rate housing will further erode the stock of low income housing in the city of Cincinnati. For several decades the Fort Washington Hotel has served the working poor of Cincinnati, providing access to downtown
jobs, transportation, affordable housing and services. Many of the residents work during the Red’s baseball games or other downtown events in menial lowpaying jobs. Many others work in nearby restaurants, others get by on fixed incomes. “Most of the people will be able to find other housing downtown,” says Roger, the desk clerk at the Fort Washington Hotel who has lived in the building off and on for nearly ten years. “They will be able to go to the Dennison Hotel or the Metropole around the corner. A lot of these folks are on fixed incomes, so they will be able to get help.” The Hotel serves as an alternative to many people who could otherwise wind up on the street. The residents are mostly the working poor; folks who can’t afford market-rate apartments and can’t commit to long-term leases or pass stringent tenant screenings but who still need an affordable roof over their head. “An affordable rooming house is preferable to a homeless shelter, a park bench or an alley,” says Pat Clifford, general coordinator of the Drop Inn Center shelter. “We are losing a lot of places where residents can go when they manage to save a few dollars or are on their way to getting back on their feet. There seems to be less and less
alternatives for the clients. demolition of the Milner Hotel in Supposedly, other places will take 1994, which resulted in the loss of up the slack. But none of that has 115 affordable housing units in been formalized – there were no downtown Cincinnati. The discussions on the issue, no study Milner Hotel, once a low-income or concern for the impact this will rooming house, was torn down have on poor people. And there is for the construction of Greenwich a lot of money in this deal,” says Village, a market rate complex for Clifford. higher-income people. Many Earlier this At the present time the Fort agree that the decade, Main Hotel needs Street in OverWashington Hotel offers work beyond the-Rhine low-cost affordable housing just cosmetic experienced changes. The significant to the working poor and Hotel is in need renovations people on fixed incomes of major that gentrified a electrical and wellwho want the flexibility of plumbing work established weekly rental rates. as it stands community. In Advocates for affordable today. just a fiveBusinesses on block span housing are worried that Main Street are from l2th Street turning the historic building anxious to see to Liberty, over the property 200 units of into market rate housing developed – the low-income will further erode the stock aging building housing were is surrounded lost. The of low income housing in by new adjacent West the city of Cincinnati.... development End community including the has new Contemporary Arts Center experienced the demolition of two and the Aronoff complex. There housing projects; Laurel Homes are at least 200 new units of and Lincoln Court, as part of the upper-income market rate housing HUD Hope VI program which scheduled to open in the grants cities federal money to turn downtown area within the next aging “projects” into mixedtwo years. income units. Many advocates for lowWith a need for lowincome housing remember the income housing that already outstrips the supply, public redevelopment projects and private development continually contribute to the leading cause of homelessness - lack of affordable housing. Georgine Getty, Executive Director of the Greater Cincinnati Coalition for the Homeless stated, “lack of affordable housing is the number one reason that women become homeless in Cincinnati, which means it is also the number one reason that children become homeless in Cincinnati. We are talking about 8,000 children each year who experience the horror of homelessness simply because developers and businesses didn’t take them into account in the attempts at ‘progress.’” She concluded, “It really is a shame, because Cincinnati is big enough for us all if we would only make the effort to include There are plans to restore the turn-of-the-century facade everyone.”
Greater Cincinnati Coalition for the Homeless