ADVERTISEMENT

    Timeline: A Look Back at the Events That Led to Today’s Scioto Peninsula Groundbreaking

    Today’s groundbreaking on the Scioto Peninsula is being celebrated as a milestone for Downtown Columbus, but it was a long time in the making.

    ADVERTISEMENT

    The seven-acre first phase of the project is expected to be completed by the fall of 2022, with the full 26-acre site perhaps being built-out in about a decade’s time.

    Here’s a timeline of events that have led up to the first dirt being moved on the site:

    1908: The Plan for the City of Columbus is released, in which a rectangular greenspace framed by monumental public buildings is envisioned for the peninsula. Many other proposals are floated for the site over the course of the next hundred years.

    2010: The 2010 Downtown Strategic Plan lays out a vision for development on the peninsula that includes a large mixed-use neighborhood.

    2011: On the east side of the river, Civic Center Drive is reduced from five to three lanes and a walkway with fountains, colonnades and swings is built. More improvements are made to the public spaces along the river Downtown, an area that is rebranded as the Scioto Mile.

    2012: The CDDC officially begins a public planning process for the site.

    August, 2013: The first renderings are released of the new plan for the peninsula. Included in this vision is a new veterans museum and a park built over an underground parking garage in front of COSI.

    November, 2013: The Main Street dam is demolished, creating a narrower, deeper Scioto River and freeing up 33 acres of land, which over the course of the next two years is developed into the Scioto Greenways.

    June, 2014: The Columbus Zoo abandons a plan to build an attraction called Downtown Adventure on a three-acre triangle of land across West Town Street from COSI. That piece of land will remain empty for the immediate future, as it is not a part of the first phase of the development.

    September, 2016: COSI announces a partnership with the American Museum of Natural History that will result in a new, permanent dinosaur exhibit at the museum.

    February, 2017: The first iteration of the plan that is now being built is released. Although the overall scale of the mixed-use development has not changed dramatically, some of the elements that were envisioned – like two large residential towers, each over 30 stories – have been eliminated.

    April, 2017: Four finalists to develop the site were announced, each with a different vision for the development.

    November, 2017: The 6.5-acre Dorrian Green opens, immediately to the west of COSI. It sits on top of a 600-space parking garage.

    December, 2017: Indianapolis-based Buckingham Companies was selected to be the master developer of the site.

    February, 2018: Money for a “COSI Connection Corridor” is included in the state budget. Guy Worley of the CDDC told CU last week that his group is “not focusing on that right now; we are in a global pandemic and our cultural amenities are struggling…our focus is on the mixed-use portion of the peninsula site.”

    June, 2018: Buckingham Companies is dropped as the master developer of the site. The CDDC assumes that role and lines up different developers for each distinct portion of the project.

    October, 2018: The National Veterans Memorial and Museum opens on the site of the former Franklin County Veterans Memorial building, which was demolished in 2015.

    August, 2019: A detailed plan for the first phase of the development is unveiled.

    October 2019: The plan is presented to the Downtown Commission for the first time.

    May 2020: The commission approves the first phase in a virtual meeting, the first held since all public meetings were shut down in March due to the coronavirus pandemic.

    June 2020: Other elements of the plan are approved by the commission in subsequent meetings, like the two parking garages and a pedestrian-friendly street that will run down the middle of the new development.

    September 2020: A groundbreaking ceremony is held, with work on the first phase of buildings scheduled to be completed in about two years.

    ADVERTISEMENT

    Subscribe

    More to Explore:

    Plain City’s Planned Public Square Project Marries Past and Present

    Back in the 1880s, the Plain City community wanted a village public square. Little did they know that more than 140 years later, a future generation would have the same idea.

    Land Trust Celebrates Completion of 100th Home

    A collection of neighborhood residents, elected officials, and business...

    Heath Town Center Buildings Expected to Open in 2026

    In the heart of Heath, something big is taking shape: a new downtown center.
    Brent Warren
    Brent Warrenhttps://columbusunderground.com/author/brent-warren
    Brent Warren is a staff reporter for Columbus Underground covering urban development, transportation, city planning, neighborhoods, and other related topics. He grew up in Grandview Heights, lives in the University District and studied City and Regional Planning at OSU.
    ADVERTISEMENT