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Date: 6/16/2003 8:00:00 AM PROFILE: WOW, WHAT A THESIS! IT'S WORTH $132 MILLION
UC's Matt Lones, 28, is a typical architecture graduate student in that he's over busy with classes, projects and most of all, his master's thesis. On the other hand, he's entirely atypical in that the redevelopment ideas that sparked his thesis are already being made real as part of a multi-million dollar deal Matt helped pull together.
Matt recalls standing amidst the derelict buildings along the lake shore one day. With him was UC College of Business Administration alumnus Mike Will, economic development specialist for the City of Sandusky, Ohio. Mike Will was giving Matt a tour. Recalls Matt, “Mike said they were selling one of the buildings, the Chesapeake Building of 235,000 square feet, for $1. I handed him a $5 and said, ‘Here’s $5.’ I said, ‘I can do it.’ He said, ‘You need to have the funds to redevelop it too.’ That slowed me down. I knew I could do a development plan...The funding was another matter.” But not for long. Matt, who had worked as an intern-architect in Columbus, Ohio, for four years before heading to UC’s prestigious architecture program, was talking to anyone he could about his dreams for redeveloping the site. One day, Matt happened to be chatting at a family wedding about his proposals. A local businessman was listening and offered to introduce Matt to a former Sandusky mayor who might have some contacts. “So, began my professional contacts for the project,” says Matt, a resident of Worthington, Ohio, near Columbus. “The former mayor put me in touch with city officials…They’d had difficulty in developing the site for years. Sometimes it was conflict over the vision for the site. Sometimes, it was money.”
Matt had started his thesis research and designs last August. He and Sandusky officials met with Davis that fall. Through his development corporation, Davis then agreed to fund the $132 million proposal – the Bayfront Urban Revitalization Plan – which had started as Matt’s pre-thesis project and was later refined by an architectural firm. Construction may begin as early as this year, according to Mike Will. The series of derelict buildings and docks will be transformed into:
Matt has found that the whole process, especially the business side, had its challenges and rewards. But one thing he’s grateful for is the fact that his partners in the City of Sandusky and entrepreneur Davis never looked down at him as “just a student.” Recalls Matt, “Bob Davis never looked down on me. We’ve visited lots of sites [in researching current water parks, marinas and developments], and he always asks me, ‘What can we do with this space?’ No one in Sandusky ever acted like I was too young. They gave me respect. Mike Will said he always listens because he never knows someone’s background. He said that if he’d looked at me differently, this project might never have happened.”
And when Matt looks ahead to when his student days in UC's College of Design, Arcitecture, Art, and Planning are over, he simply wants to stroll the Bayfront Revitalization’s boardwalk. He says, “The best part will be to see all this realized, to see people being helped by this, to see people using it. I’ll be thrilled to death to see the boardwalk. It’s giving Sandusky a destination.”
For more UC news, go to www.uc.edu/news/
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