The City of Buffalo has narrowed the number of proposals for redeveloping the Mohawk Ramp site from six to three. According to a Selection Committee, the three proposals that best met the evaluation criteria were:
- BFC Partners and CB Emmanuel Realty
- Douglas Development
- SAA EVI, McGuire Development and Passero Associates
Dropped from consideration were:
- Gold Wynn and Colby Development
- Savarino and 34 Group
- Uniland Development
The 629-space parking ramp, which was built in 1959, occupies a 1.1-acre site along Mohawk Street between Ellicott and Washington Streets.
The Finalists:
BFC Partners and CB Emmanuel Realty (entry image and below)
Components:
- 203 affordable units
- 23,113 sq.ft. of commercial space
- Mix of restaurant, fitness center, flagship retail or co-working space
- 285 parking spots
- Visual activation of Mohawk Street
- GO bike long term parking facilities
- Partnering with GO Buffalo Niagara/Go Bike Buffalo
Douglas Development
Components:
- 600 residential units total on multiple sites
- 200 new apartments and 300 new parking spaces above the existing parking garage with 10 percent dedicated to affordable housing
- 1,500 sq.ft. café along Mohawk Street
- 1,500 sq.ft. R&D Lab on the ground floor that will on-cover the future of mobility in Buffalo
- 1,500 sq.ft. floor retail along Washington Street
- Over 800 parking spaces total on the site
- Redevelopment and adaptive reuse of the Simon properties near the Mohawk Ramp site providing 400 new apartments with 10 percent dedicated to affordable housing and additional ground floor retail
SAA EVI, McGuire Development and Passero Associates
Components:
- 233 apartments; 168 will be income-restricted
- Existing parking structure removed
- 268 new parking spaces on three levels
- 6,500 sq.ft. ground floor retail
- Mohawk Commons Incubation Hub to focus on M/WBE start-ups
- 2,300 sq.ft. 13th floor restaurant
- Mobility Alley along the northern property line create an east-west mobility spine to promote foot traffic through the site
- Interior courtyard located at the center of the building
Proposal evaluation criteria includes:
A. Quality of Plan
- Must incorporate transportation and justify use choices that reflect high demand for transit access to downtown and downtown living
- Preference for proposal that incorporate housing, including affordable housing
- Diversity and inclusion must be incorporated and must demonstrate a plan for meaningful participate from certified MWBE, workforce participation, or mentor protégé opportunities at all project levels (financing, management, design and construction
B. Experience and Qualifications
- Experience in working with and partnering with communities, neighbors and business stakeholders
- Neighborhood economic development & job creation
- Diversity within the development team
C. Financial Considerations
- Complete budget, sources and uses and a reasonable development budget
- Financial feasibility based on reasonable development and operating proforma
- Demonstrated financial capacity to complete the project
D. Competitive Preferences
- Preference given to mixed-use developments that incorporate affordable housing
- Proposals that envision creative and cost-effective solutions for structured parking transportation centers will be favorable
- Submissions with strong community engagement plans and that meet or exceed MWBE goals will be more favorable
- Submissions that consider an activation of the street level and increase urban vibrancy while facilitating pedestrian and bicycle friendly streetscape will be more favorable
- Submissions that consider overall improvement to the public realm will be more favorable