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Sally Handlon talks about the Bethlehem Food Co-Op finding a home with Kelly Allen, Board President and Carol Ritter, Board Member and Capital Campaign
Bethlehem Food Co-op looked for a ‘unicorn’ site to open a grocery store and found one
Updated Apr 11, 2021;
Posted Apr 11, 2021
The Bethlehem Food Co-Op will anchor this new four-story, mixed-use project by Peron Development and Boyle Construction.Sara K. Satullo | For lehighvalleylive.com
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The Bethlehem Food Co-op was looking for a “unicorn” site for its new grocery store: a place with great walkability, public transit access, parking and low-income residents to serve.
The nonprofit found all of that in 250 E. Broad St., where Peron Development plans a four-story building with 42 apartments that will be anchored by the grocery store on the ground floor.
116 apartments pitched in former Laros silk mill in Bethlehem
Updated 9:22 AM;
Today 7:30 AM
VM Development Group is proposing a mixed-use redevelopment of the former Laros silk mill, 601-699 E. Broad St. in Bethlehem, into 116 apartments and first-floor commercial space.Sara K. Satullo | For lehighvalleylive.com
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A developer wants to convert two floors of a former Bethlehem silk mill into 116 apartments.
Dubbed the Laros Lofts in submissions in to the city, VM Development Group is pitching a mixed-use redevelopment of the Laros Silk Mill, 601-699 E. Broad St., which currently houses Lehigh Valley Dual Language Charter School and other commercial tenants.
172 new apartments pitched for 3 Bethlehem properties
Updated 7:30 AM;
Today 7:30 AM
Skyline West, a 50-unit luxury apartment building proposed for 143 W. Broad St. in Bethlehem, is seen in an artist s rendering.Courtesy photo
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Three new projects proposed in Bethlehem’s two downtowns could bring a combined 172 apartments to the city.
The Bethlehem Planning Commission on Thursday is set to review three site plans for new developments on East Third Street on Southside and on West Broad and East Broad streets north of the Lehigh River.
Developers plan to demolish a historic house at 143 W. Broad St. and construct Skyline West, an upscale 50-unit apartment building on an urban island of steep land tucked between Route 378 and the Colonial Industrial Quarter. The project estimated in 2018 at $15 million has been stalled by murky title issues that developer Jeff Parks says are finally sorted out.