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Historic Markley Hotel will be redeveloped as small business, retail hub with student housing next door

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Historic Markley Hotel will be redeveloped as small business, retail hub with student housing next door

People in Baltimore’s Lauraville and Beverly Hills neighborhoods have long known the sprawling brick building in the 4500 block of Harford Road as The Markley Hotel, though it’s not clear whether it ever hosted overnight guests.

A new chapter is starting for the former D. Markley Supply Co. seed and general store and warehouse as a community hub, with student housing for Morgan State University next door.

The historic Markley building, which sits on a three-acre, former industrial tract that Baltimore-based MCB Real Estate purchased in 2022, would become a hub where food and retail entrepreneurs run stalls and kiosks. The $7 million project also involves transforming a second-floor loft into a gathering and event space for entrepreneurs and young professionals, along with offices. Construction is expected to start this summer.

Hamilton-Lauraville Main Street, which works to revitalize the Harford Road commercial corridor, began planning the 24,000-square-foot center after MCB donated the Markley building to the nonprofit group.

On the site’s remaining land, MCB is building a 151-unit Class A apartment building to house students from Morgan State’s campus less than a mile away. The apartments are expected to open by summer 2025.

Revitalization of the 4500 block, which has long struggled with vacant and deteriorating buildings, was seen as a critical link to Harford Road’s redevelopment, including new stores and restaurants, that has occurred both north and south of the site, said Daniel Doty, executive director of the Main Street group.

“There was just this huge property that was very difficult to do anything with,” Doty said. The redevelopment “is helping to bring life to the entire area.”

The Main Street group is redeveloping the Markley with the help of MCB and The Cube Cowork, an existing Harford Road-based business that calls itself the the nation’s largest Black woman-run co-working space. The Cube will expand to the Markley and become the anchor tenant, leading the effort to attract and retain entrepreneurs. It will continue to run its current Harford Road location, where entrepreneurs lease its offices, co-working space, conference rooms and event space.

Daniel Doty with Hamilton-Lauraville Main Street and Tammira Lucas, CEO of The Cube Cowork, inside the historic and vacant Markley Hotel, which will be redeveloped into center for retailers and other entrepreneurs as part of larger revitalization effort for Harford Road. Developer MCB Real Estate acquired the building as part of a project with Morgan State to develop a 151-unit student apartment building under construction next door. MCB is donating the Markley building to Dory’s organization to redevelop with The Cube Cowork, the nation’s largest black-woman run co-working space. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)

“Because the demand has been so high, in the sense of other services that entrepreneurs need, when we saw this space we thought that this would be a great expansion,” said Tammira Lucas, The Cube’s leader and small business adviser. “This gives them a home. Something that they lack is a place where they can actually be stable but also not have the extreme overhead of a brick and mortar space.”

MCB, the development firm that purchased and is redeveloping Harborplace, decided to donate the Markley and work to repurpose it as part of its mission to foster overall neighborhood growth through its projects, said Amy Bonitz, MCB’s vice president of community development.

The idea for the new facility is to offer space for companies to grow and later potentially open their own stores or restaurants on Harford Road, Doty said. The vision includes offering affordable space for small retailers, food-based businesses, including a pop-up cafe, small media companies and other entrepreneurs.

“We aim to build something truly impactful here,” he said.

The group also is relying on help from the business and entrepreneurial programs at Morgan State’s Graves School of Business and Management.

The project was awarded a $2.5 million state historic tax credit as well as a $1 million grant from the Maryland Department of Housing and Community Development. Plans call for restoring the building’s signature two-story wraparound porch.

The property was initially used as a general store around the turn of the last century, selling farm seed and equipment to farmers on their way to markets in Baltimore, and a warehouse that supplied coal, said Reni Lawal, a development associate with MCB who researched the property’s history when applying for the historic tax credit. The Markley family once lived in upstairs quarters. Lawal said she believes the last member of the Markley family moved out in 1955.

The Markley was later used by a magazine, an adult day care program and a church. It has been vacant for about a decade.

Daniel Doty with Hamilton-Lauraville Main Street touring the second floor of the Markley building. Historic and vacant Markley Hotel will be redeveloped into center for retailers and other entrepreneurs as part of larger effort to revitalize Harford Road Main Street. Developer MCB Real Estate acquired building as part of larger redevelopment at Morgan State including a 151-unit student housing apartment building that is under construction. MCB is donating building to Main Streets to redevelop in partnership with Morgan State and The Cube Cowork the nation's largest black-woman run co-working space.(Lloyd Fox/Staff)
Daniel Doty with Hamilton-Lauraville Main Street touring the second floor of the the historic and vacant Markley Hotel, which will be redeveloped into center for retailers and other entrepreneurs as part of larger revitalization effort for Harford Road. Developer MCB Real Estate acquired the building as part of a project with Morgan State to develop a 151-unit student apartment building under construction next door. MCB is donating the Markley building to Dory’s organization to redevelop with The Cube Cowork, the nation’s largest black-woman run co-working space. (Lloyd Fox/Staff)
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