Ellicott Development Co. is an American
property management, leasing and development
real estate firm based in
Buffalo, New York and led by CEO William Paladino. The company's asset base includes residential, commercial, hotels, parking garages, and convenience stores. Ellicott Development Co.’s services include legal, administrative, financial, management, accounting, development, site selection, site assemblage, architectural design and drafting services, construction, leasing, maintenance, janitorial and security services.
Ellicott Development Co. was founded by lawyer and real estate developer
Carl Paladino in 1973.[1] The company is named after the
Ellicott Square Building, Paladino's first and largest real estate acquisition to date. The
Ellicott Square Building was named after
Joseph Ellicott, the planner and surveyor who laid out the then-village of Buffalo.
The company buys properties, builds stores, and leases them to national retail outlets and government agencies.[2] The company has operations in
Western New York,
Central New York and portions of
Pennsylvania. Ellicott Development Co. describes itself as "a multi-faceted, fully integrated Property Management, Leasing and Development Firm with the "In-House" capacity to provide legal, administrative, financial, management, accounting, development, site selection, site assemblage, architectural design and drafting services, construction, leasing, maintenance, janitorial and security services."[1][3]
Ellicott Development Co. has properties throughout the Buffalo/Niagara region, Upstate New York and into Western Pennsylvania.[1] In 2010, the company managed more than 5,000,000 square feet (460,000 m2) of office, retail, hotel and residential space. In downtown Buffalo, the company manages over 1,500,000 square feet (140,000 m2) of office space (making Ellicott the largest private landlord in downtown Buffalo[4][5]), over 1,000,000 square feet (93,000 m2) of retail space throughout New York and Western Pennsylvania, eight major hotels in the Western New York, as well as more than 550,000 square feet (51,000 m2) of residential apartments, condominiums and townhomes in the Buffalo/Niagara region.[3]
As of 2010, the Company had built 160 drugstores for
Rite Aid, eventually becoming the Rite Aid's preferred developer across
Upstate New York and western
Pennsylvania, 80 of which Ellicott still owned.[4]
11 Chicago Street, Buffalo – a former
Brownfield site; there are tentative plans for a 100,000 square feet (9,300 m2) office building[15]
905 Elmwood Avenue, Buffalo – L-shaped building, designed by
Kideney Architects and anchored by a 5,000 square feet (460 m2) restaurant, as well as 21 apartments with additional street-level retail (approximately $10 million)[16][17]
201 Ganson Street, Buffalo – a 54,000 square feet (5,000 m2) structure on a 13-acre property near
Buffalo RiverWorks that has over a quarter mile of
Buffalo River frontage. It will purportedly be used for commercial and industrial use.[18]
310 Niagara Street, Niagara Falls – now used as the offices of The
Niagara Gazette. The Niagara Gazette will be moving into space owned by Ellicott at 473 Third St., Niagara Falls. Plans for renovation are unknown at the current time.[19]
399 Ohio Street, Buffalo – 5-story
mixed-use development with 30 apartments on the upper three floors, with commercial space and ground-level restaurant (approximately $6 million). The site faces the
Buffalo River and is across from Father Conway Park in the Old First Ward.[15]
Waterfront Village, Buffalo – nine townhouses on Ojibawa Circle adjacent to the existing Ellicott Development, Pasquale Towers (approximately $4.5 million)[15][20]New Ujima Theatre Logo
722 West Delavan formerly Frederick Law Olmsted School - School 56, Buffalo – a 76,000 square feet (7,100 m2) four-story building on Elmwood and West Delevan that will be converted to a
mixed-use project with 33 apartments, approved on 28 July 2015 by the Buffalo Planning Board.[16][21] Due to public outcry regarding
Carl Paladino's racist remarks about three local officials and resulting denial by the IDA of tax breaks to the developer,[22] he has decided to convert 722 West Delavan- the old P.S. 56- into a theater and performing arts center. The Ujima Theatre Co. will occupy the space; it plans to produce works that are rooted in traditional African-American theater.
207 West Huron, Buffalo – renovation of a 26,000 square feet (2,400 m2) a lower West Side building, constructed in 1955[23]
960 Busti Avenue, Buffalo – a 56,000 square feet (5,200 m2) warehouse on the West Side built in 1930, north of the
Peace Bridge that overlooks the
Niagara River; it will be converted into a
mixed-use project with 18-20 apartments (approximately $7–10 million)[15][24]