2022 Annual Comprehensive Financial Report
Many of the downtown developments are along Greensboro’s Downtown Greenway, a “linear park” that allows residents to walk or bike safely across the city, encompassing neighborhoods, restaurants, hotels, entertainment venues and historic sites. This greenway, a collaborative project of the City and Action Greensboro, is part of Greensboro’s Parks and Recreation master plan, Plan2Play. The four-mile downtown pedestrian and cycling loop, funded through a public-private partnership, connects over 100 miles of existing and 460 miles of planned greenways throughout the area, serving as the hub of the greenway system. Construction costs are estimated at $50 million, with approximately $13 million in private donations and $37 million in public funds from local bond referendums and state and federal funding. The final installation of the Downtown Greenway is underway with the City’s purchase from Norfolk Southern of rights to install greenway sections both within and extending beyond downtown. Construction is underway for the final mile and the full project is expected to be completed in 2023. The Greenway has been a top priority of the Greensboro Downtown Economic
Development Strategy with more than $502 million in private investment projects attributing the Greenway as a reason for their location and investment. Economic development studies related to greenway projects in North Carolina and other states have shown that property values in close proximity to a greenway or park were valued higher. The greenways have also contributed to increases in adjacent commercial investment and real estate absorption, which the Greensboro Greenway is already experiencing.
On the eastern edge of downtown near NC A&T University and Bennett College, plans for a new large-scale multi-unit residential development were announced in fall 2018 and the complex was completed in October 2022. Named “Bailey Village” , the development includes 172 luxury apartments and a 382-square-foot fitness center. United House of Prayer for All, a national Washington D.C. based church, has had the development in consideration since 2007 when it bought the 14-acre site on East Market Street. The local business community sees this as a much needed boost to the neighborhood, providing services and additional housing options to university students, staff, and local residents. Situated a block away from the Downtown Greenway, the development helps to more seamlessly integrate the neighborhood to the rest of downtown Greensboro. Also on the east side of Greensboro, the McConnell Center , a $14 million, 1,400,000 square-foot industrial park opened in 2016. The City of Greensboro extended a $600,000 loan as part of the City’s shovel-ready site program designed to encourage industrial and commercial development. Located one mile west of Interstate 40 and Insterstate-85 split, the building has been occupied by two tenants – Wayfair and R.J. Schreiner Co. In 2018, Coca-Cola Bottling Company became a third tenant, occupying a 135,000 square-foot space with an investment of $4 million into its operation. Additional occupants include, O’Reilly Auto Parts, General Dynamics, Vistar Foods, and Walmart. North of the City’s downtown area, a $100 million redevelopment project on the historic 45-acre Revolution Mill campus completed Phase I in 2019 and is moving forward with Phase II. Notable as the first flannel textile mill in the South and registered on the National Register of Historic Places, Phase I of the mixed-use site includes 150 loft apartment, more than 100 commercial tenants with 240,000 square-feet of office space, four restaurants, 40 artist studios and open outdoor spaces for live music and movies. Two event centers were also completed with accommodations for up to 475 guests. The $36 million, 167,000-square-foot Phase II plans
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