(reposted from Cleveland Plain Dealer article, 7/10/10 by Kaye Spector)
CLEVELAND, Ohio — The four-story, 44,000-square-foot retreat house on the former St. Joseph Christian Life Center property soon will be no more. But parts of it will live on.
"Deconstruction" of the building, now owned by its neighbor Hospice of the Western Reserve, begins today. Building materials from the 1927 structure will be reused, resold or recycled.
Some of the reused materials will stay right on the 12-acre property, which the hospice purchased last year from the Cleveland Catholic Diocese.
More than 10,000 cubic feet of brick will be salvaged, with some of it to be crushed for use as a base for path pavers or use in the hospice gardens along the lake, said David Simpson, the hospice’s chief executive.
Other bricks will be saved for fundraising — sold to people who share a history with the property, he said.
"I’d like to make a connection to some of those people," Simpson said. "A lot of those people are sad to see the building go down. They wouldn’t if they knew the condition of the buildings."
Marble bathroom dividers, vanity mirrors, wrought-iron doors and rails, lighting fixtures and wood casings all will get a second life through the deconstruction.
The nonprofit agency decided to tear down the building after a study showed it would cost $11 million to renovate it.
The building had structural problems, a leaking roof, extensive water damage, black mold, asbestos, an antiquated electrical system and internal and external vandalism. It had been unoccupied since 2007, when the diocese closed the retreat.
Hospice officials met several times with neighbors to talk about the property’s future.
"The building was in deep trouble," Ward 11 Councilman Mike Polensek said. "We came to the conclusion that there was no other choice."
After the building is demolished, the site will become a green space that community members, patients from the neighboring Hospice House and their families can use for reflection and healing, Simpson said.
The hospice plans to expand its memorial Vista Walk and gardens to connect the two properties.
A carriage house and former priest house will remain; no plans have been made for these buildings.
Historical markers are planned to recognize the history of the property, which was used as a sanitarium, hospital, Catholic Youth Organization headquarters and orphanage before becoming the St. Joseph Christian Life Center.
Those who want to share their stories and photos about the site can do so on the hospice’s website, hospicewr.org/clc.
To reach this Plain Dealer reporter: kspector@plaind.com, 216-999-3904