Less brick and mortar space is needed with more and more consumers turning to online purchases, fueled in part by the pandemic, Morrison said The market has changed dramatically since plans for Liberty Center were approved in 2008, said Eric Morrison, development director for Bayer Properties, the Birmingham-based company that took over managing the project. The change in plans from retail to apartments are needed to support existing businesses in the center as well as reduce retail space in the 110-acre Liberty Center, developers said. The other floor will house the firm’s research and development division. Optima Dermatology will operate a medical office on one floor of its two-story,15,500- square-foot building. It is expected to open in the spring of 2023. Shake Shack featuring burgers and milkshakes will be housed in a 3,200-square-foot building with a two-lane drive-thru and patio. The second building, 6,560 square feet, has space for three tenants.Ī courtyard separates those two buildings. Torchy’s Tacos will take up 4,000 square feet of a 7,200 square foot building with room for one additional tenant. In two separate cases, Liberty Township trustees approved a request to change plans that would permit the restaurants but denied one that would have demolished two retail buildings, replacing them with a four-story building with 273 luxury apartments.Ī gravel parking area on a 4.2-acre site north of Liberty Way on the east side of Wyle Street will be replaced with an Optima Dermatology office, a 3,200-square-foot Shake Shack, and two multi-tenant buildings. – Southwest Ohio’s first Shake Shack and the state’s first Torchy’s Tacos are coming to Liberty Center.īut an additional apartment building won’t be built at the mixed-use center off Liberty Way at the West Chester/Liberty Township border.
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