flexiblefullpage -
billboard - default
interstitial1 - interstitial
catfish1 - bottom
Currently Reading

Work, park, live: Inside Cincinnati’s parking garage turned lifestyle hotel

Adaptive Reuse

Work, park, live: Inside Cincinnati’s parking garage turned lifestyle hotel

The Summit hotel and conference center is a converted parking garage that was once a factory.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | July 9, 2018
Work, park, live: Inside Cincinnati’s parking garage turned lifestyle hotel

The Summit, a 426,000-sf hotel in Cincinnati, is the first to be designed from scratch by its owner-operator, Dolce Hotel and Resorts by Wyndham. Its nine-story atrium, surrounded by glass elevators, allowed the Building Team to redistribute the building’s weight loads and give the hotel more height. Photo: Mike Howard Photography

It doesn’t look like much from the outside. But as they say, you can’t always judge a book by its cover. 

And more interesting design flashes take over inside The Summit, A Dolce Hotel, featuring a 5,743-sf art gallery and an 11,600-sf rooftop terrace and garden space, which leads into a 4,750-sf ballroom that’s one of 19 meeting and banquet areas. 

This 426,000-sf, 239-key lifestyle hotel and conference center, which opened adjacent to downtown Cincinnati on April 17, is the first hotel that Dolce Hotel and Resorts by Wyndham designed from scratch. On top of that, it’s an adaptive reuse of a parking garage that itself was once a warehouse-distribution facility.

“I think it is easily the top hotel/conference center combination in southwest Ohio,” says Chris Hopper, Executive Vice President and General Manager for Skanska Ohio, the project’s GC. RBM Development was the developer, Samach + Seo Architecture the design architect, CR Architecture & Design the AOR, and Hirsch Bednar Associates the interior designer.

Transforming a 50-plus-year-old structure into an $80 million hospitality venue, however, was not a foregone conclusion. The warehouse portion, once a NuTone factory, had been built in two stages, 1959 and 1976, and the city had no structural drawings for the 1959 work, which required the hotel’s Building Team to spend more than $100,000 on soil and load tests. Holes had to be drilled into the building’s columns to see how much steel they contained. 

 

The hotel’s restaurant, bar, and conference and meeting rooms are all located on its roof terrace, which includes 19 meeting spaces with 34,000 sf. Photo: Mike Howard Photography

 

Seth Barnhard, Principal and program manager for Sitement, the owner’s rep, says there were “prolonged discussions” about whether just to tear down the parking garage and build new. “It took months of VE [value engineering] to get the cost down to where [reconstruction] made sense.” 

On the plus side, the existing building offered an 85,000-sf floorplate. And the parking garage had already been stripped of its cladding to the concrete, so the Building Team pretty much knew what it was working with.

The demolition part of this job took around four months, during which Skanska cut through the structure to create the hotel’s atrium space, which was probably the most important design decision on this project.

The nine-story atrium—a first for a Dolce-branded hotel—was one of three design options that Samach + Seo presented for this project, says Raphael Samach, AIA, Partner with the New York-based firm. The atrium was selected, he explains, because it allowed the structural loads to be redistributed while giving the hotel its greatest height.

Dolce is marketing The Summit as a “lifestyle” hotel, and Barnhard says its design is meant to convey an “ongoing sense of surprise” for guests who enter through a porte cochere that leads into an art-adorned lobby—whose grey palette is flecked with color accents—and portal to the atrium with four glass elevators. 

 

Photo: Mike Howard Photography

 

The terrace on the roof of the hotel’s 200-slot, two-level parking deck is programmed as a destination and “oasis” for guests and visitors, says Samach. The hotel’s restaurant, bar, conference and meeting rooms are all located on the roof.  Servicing the meeting rooms are nourishment “hubs,” which offer a variety of snacks and refreshments during most of the day. (The hotel has two beehives on the roof to make its own honey, and this spring intended to plant its own herb garden.)

However, Skanska still needed to install micro piles in the basement to fortify the existing building that’s supported by an unusual mixture of spread piles and piers, says Jon Budde, Skanska’s project manager.

RMB is an acronym for Red Bank Madison, a development company owned by August Troendle, CEO and Founder of Medpace, a clinical research organization. Next to The Summit, Medpace just started construction on a 250,000-sf headquarters building. The entire complex, which sites on 30 acres, will include 250 multifamily residential units, a walking path, and possibly a Food Hall.

 

Photo: Mike Howard Photography

 

Photo: Mike Howard Photography

 

Related Stories

Adaptive Reuse | Mar 7, 2024

3 key considerations when converting a warehouse to a laboratory

Does your warehouse facility fit the profile for a successful laboratory conversion that can demand higher rents and lower vacancy rates? Here are three important considerations to factor before proceeding. 

Urban Planning | Feb 5, 2024

Lessons learned from 70 years of building cities

As Sasaki looks back on 70 years of practice, we’re also looking to the future of cities. While we can’t predict what will be, we do know the needs of cities are as diverse as their scale, climate, economy, governance, and culture.

Adaptive Reuse | Feb 4, 2024

Corporate modernist buildings increasingly popular fodder for adaptive reuse projects

Beginning in the 1970s adaptive reuse projects transformed 19th and early 20th Century buildings into distinctive retail destinations. Increasingly, developers of adaptive reuse projects are targeting outmoded corporate buildings of the 1950s to 1980s.

Luxury Residential | Jan 30, 2024

Lumen Fox Valley mall-to-apartments conversion completes interiors

Architecture and interior design firm Morgante Wilson Architects (MWA) today released photos of its completed interiors work at Lumen Fox Valley, a 304-unit luxury rental community and mall-to-apartments conversion.

Senior Living Design | Jan 24, 2024

Former Walgreens becomes affordable senior living community

Evergreen Real Estate Group has announced the completion of Bellwood Senior Apartments. The 80-unit senior living community at 542 25th Ave. in Bellwood, Ill., provides independent living options for low-income seniors.

Adaptive Reuse | Jan 23, 2024

Adaptive reuse report shows 55K impact of office-to-residential conversions

The latest RentCafe annual Adaptive Reuse report shows that there are 55,300 office-to-residential units in the pipeline as of 2024—four times as much compared to 2021.

Adaptive Reuse | Jan 18, 2024

Coca-Cola packaging warehouse transformed into mixed-use complex

The 250,000-sf structure is located along a now defunct railroad line that forms the footprint for the city’s multi-phase Beltline pedestrian/bike path that will eventually loop around the city.

Adaptive Reuse | Jan 12, 2024

Office-to-residential conversions put pressure on curbside management and parking

With many office and commercial buildings being converted to residential use, two important issues—curbside management and parking—are sometimes not given their due attention. Cities need to assess how vehicle storage, bike and bus lanes, and drop-off zones in front of buildings may need to change because of office-to-residential conversions.

K-12 Schools | Jan 8, 2024

Video: Learn how DLR Group converted two big-box stores into an early education center

Learn how the North Kansas City (Mo.) School District and DLR Group adapted two big-box stores into a 115,000-sf early education center offering services for children with special needs. 

Affordable Housing | Dec 14, 2023

What's next for affordable housing in 2024?

As 2023 draws to a close, GBBN’s Mary Jo Minerich and Amanda Markovic, AIA sat down to talk about the future. What’s next in terms of trends, technology, and construction of affordable housing?

boombox1 - default
boombox2 -
native1 -

More In Category



Mixed-Use

A surging master-planned community in Utah gets its own entertainment district

Since its construction began two decades ago, Daybreak, the 4,100-acre master-planned community in South Jordan, Utah, has been a catalyst and model for regional growth. The latest addition is a 200-acre mixed-use entertainment district that will serve as a walkable and bikeable neighborhood within the community, anchored by a minor-league baseball park and a cinema/entertainment complex.


halfpage1 -

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021