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Procurement

In quiet corner of Collegetown, Novarr plans avant-garde infill

ITHACA, N.Y. — Architecture is always a matter of taste. Some prefer classically-inspired, more traditional motifs, others want something more contemporary, even cutting-edge. This is definitely a case of the latter.

The Ithaca Planning Board reviewed plans earlier this week for a new apartment building proposal at 109-11 Valentine Place, a dead-end street adjacent to the Collegetown Terrace housing complex. Currently, the property hosts a pair of apartment houses with eight bedrooms. The rental property was owned by the Nitsios family for about 36 years before being purchased for $1.25 million last September by an LLC with an address tied to local development firm Integrated Acquisition and Development (IAD), which is affiliated with the developers of Collegetown Terrace, Phil Proujansky and John Novarr. Novarr was confirmed as the developer at Tuesday night’s meeting.

Plans presented by local landscape architect Kathryn Wolf call for replacing the apartment homes with a four-story, 30-unit apartment building, hosting a total of 48 bedrooms, with units ranging from one-bedroom apartments to potentially a couple of four-bedroom units. A leasing office would be located on the ground level.

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