The 9 Cleveland | |
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Former names |
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Alternative names |
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Hotel chain | Metropolitan at the 9 |
General information | |
Status | Completed |
Type | Skyscraper |
Architectural style | Modernism |
Classification | Mixed residential and commercial |
Location | Theater District |
Address | 900 Euclid Avenue |
Town or city | Cleveland, Ohio |
Country | United States |
Coordinates | 41°29′59.111″N 81°41′9.175″W / 41.49975306°N 81.68588194°W |
Construction started | 1968 |
Completed | 1971 |
Renovated | 2013 |
Cost | $30,000,000 |
Owner | Geis Companies |
Height | 390 feet (120 m) |
Technical details | |
Structural system | Composite |
Floor count | 28 |
Design and construction | |
Architect(s) | Marcel Breuer Hamilton Smith |
Architecture firm | Marcel Breuer & Associates Hamilton P. Smith |
Other information | |
Number of stores | 1 |
Number of rooms | 156 |
Number of restaurants | 2 |
Number of bars | 2 |
Facilities | 4 |
Website | |
www |
The 9 Cleveland is a residential and commercial complex located in Downtown Cleveland, Ohio, United States, at the corner of East Ninth Street and Euclid Avenue. It includes three buildings, the largest of which is a 29-story, 383 feet (117 m) tower commonly known by its previous name of Ameritrust Tower and formerly known as the Cleveland Trust Tower. The tower was completed in 1971 and is an example of brutalist architecture, the only high-rise building designed by Marcel Breuer and Hamilton Smith. The complex also includes the adjacent Cleveland Trust Company Building, completed in 1908, and the Swetland Building.
Although plans called for a second mirror-image tower, the second building was never constructed. The Breuer tower initially served as headquarters for Ameritrust Bank before its merger with Society Bank. Society Bank has since merged with KeyBank. The tower was vacant from 1996 until September 2014, before it was converted to apartments and a hotel as part of a larger project involving the other buildings in the complex. The space also includes a wine cellar and restaurant. The rotunda was renovated and reopened as a Heinen's Fine Foods grocery store in 2015 and the Swetland Building was restored for residential use.[1][2][3]