Uniland still high on condo project
Business First
To paraphrase Mark Twain, reports and rumors that Uniland Development Co. is withdrawing its plans for a high-rise condominium project on the site of the former Park Lane Restaurant are not true.
For the past few weeks, Uniland officials have been fielding a number of calls about an urban legend that has the Amherst-based developer stepping away from the condo project that will overlook Gates Circle.
"The boring, unspectacular reality is that we are still hard at work on the design," Uniland said in a statement issued Thursday morning.
Uniland has already undertaken several steps to move the project forward. The company bought the Park Lane Restaurant property for $1.2 million last year. The Park Lane closed on New Year's Eve and its contents, including the furnishings and fixtures, were auctioned off on Jan. 10.
Uniland has retained the Buffalo architectural firm of Hamilton Houston & Lownie along with Diamond & Schmitt Associates of Toronto to design the complex, which may be as tall as 20 stories.
The entire project carries a $40 million price tag.
"It would be certainly be quicker and less expensive to release a rough version of the design, but it would likely change as we continue to explore the subtleties of the project," Uniland said in its statement. "We remain committed to bringing the community a fully resolved architectural design as soon as possible. That's the only fair way for objective evaluation."
The final design is expected later this winter.
The project has drawn both praise and criticism.
Supporters say it fills a growing need for upscale condominiums in Buffalo. Most of the criticism comes from residents in the neighboring Park Lane Condominiums, who feel the project may destroy the views from some of their units.
Before construction can begin, several hurdles have to be cleared including completing environmental impact statements and receiving approval from Buffalo officials.
"The current process is much like a Rubik's Cube," Uniland added in its statement. "As we talk to experts about issues such as optimum square footage, the architecture must change in response, which changes interior layout, which changes views, which changes where optimum square footage should go, and so on. The process is necessary and will lead to an endpoint, but we are not there yet. What looks like foot-dragging is actually a healthy, albeit sometimes strenuous exercise in delivering the best possible design."