City to discuss Scientology’s role in Clearwater’s “urban renaissance”

For the first time in recent memory, it’s hard to keep up with all the development activity in downtown Clearwater.

Why it matters: City officials have dubbed this moment an “urban renaissance,” but questions about the Church of Scientology’s role in the momentum prompted City Council members to schedule a special meeting next week, according to recent news reports.

  • The church and companies tied to it own around 200 downtown properties that have sat vacant for years, per a 2019 Tampa Bay Times investigation.
  • Downtown is also the site of the church’s international spiritual headquarters.

State of play: Construction is underway on The Bluffs, a 28-story, 400-unit apartment tower with 10,000 square feet of retail space going up on the site of the old City Hall on South Osceola Avenue.

  • Down the street, the 158-room Ballad Hotel is rising on the site of the former Harborview Center, with plans for a rooftop bar and restaurant and retail space.
  • A 397-space parking garage with ground-floor retail space and a new Pinellas Suncoast Transit Authority transit center are also underway.
  • And Pinellas County officials will soon be on the hunt for a partner to redevelop 17 county-owned properties scattered across downtown.

Meantime, a development group affiliated with Scientology recently announced plans for a $50 million, 83,000-square-foot entertainment center in the heart of downtown.

  • The Cleveland Street Alliance is also behind the restoration of several historic properties and the renovation of numerous storefronts along Cleveland Street.
  • The plan is to bring in restaurants, retail and entertainment tenants that are independent from the church, manager Scott Dobbins told Tampa Bay 28.

What they’re saying: “I’m very excited about … these abandoned buildings being renovated and occupied,” City Council member Lina Teixeira told the TV station.

  • “But I’m actually waiting for the actual occupation, right? So I’m looking for activation, long-term leases that bring high traffic and commerce to downtown.”

Between the lines: The announcement of the entertainment center caught City Council members by surprise and led to confusion in the community, the Tampa Bay Times reported…

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