Syracuse’s most colorful car wash coming to large North Side location
Updated Dec 30, 2020;
Posted Dec 29, 2020
Provided image shows what the front of the Valet Auto Wash on Park Street in Syracuse will look like.Provide image
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Syracuse, N.Y. A New Jersey company that promotes its large, colorful and entertaining high-tech car washes is coming to Syracuse in 2021.
Valet Auto Wash bought the former Babies R Us store at 2027 Park St. for $3.8 million on Sept. 15 and recently began transforming it into a car wash that, at 30,100 square feet, will be twice as large as the Delta Sonic car washes in the Syracuse area.
Utility provides funds to help Metroplex market empty produce warehouse
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The Rotterdam warehouse is large enough to drive a train through, which is how Railex trains were unloaded. The building is 228,000 square feet, of which 100,000 is cold storage. (Courtesy of Schenectady County Metroplex Development Authority)Schenectady Metroplex Development AuthorityShow MoreShow Less
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The warehouse is in full production at Railex in Rotterdam, New York, in this photo from the Times Union archives. (Skip Dickstein / Times Union)SKIP DICKSTEINShow MoreShow Less
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4of5Workers at the Railex Company in Rotterdam, New York unload rail cars of their load of produce from the west coast today. (Times Union Archives)SKIP DICKSTEINShow MoreShow Less
OBSERVER file photo
Lakeshore Hospital closed its doors on Feb. 2.
IRVING What’s the future for a former health care facility in northern Chautauqua County? No one is quite sure, but the Brooks-TLC Hospital System has put the campus up for sale.
On Monday, the board of directors of Brooks-TLC announced it has engaged Pyramid Brokerage Co. of Buffalo, Inc. to act as broker for the sale of the former TLC campus and Lakeshore Hospital at 845 Main Road. Last December, the same board announced plans to close the facility, which eliminated some 200 jobs. The facility’s final day of operation was Feb. 2.
A proposal to redevelop the former Record Theatre complex on Main Street into apartments and retail is moving ahead after the Zoning Board of Appeals granted two variance requests for the planned Monroe Building project.
The development team behind the $6 million venture wants to revive what had once been an automobile showroom before it became a well-known music store for several decades under former owner Leonard Silver.
The group plans to convert the historic 33,000-square-foot facility into 20 apartments and 10,000 square feet of commercial space, along Main Street and Lafayette Avenue. Aside from the conversion of the existing structures â which date to the 1920s â no additions or new construction are planned.