Downtown Greenville City Hall building sold here's what's next.

It's time to modernize City Hall.

That's what Greenville Mayor Knox White said in response to the current City Hall which has been home to the city's offices for the past five decades being sold for redevelopment, according to a news release.

Greenville City Council granted Greenville City Manager John McDonough approval to move forward with the purchase sale agreement of City Hall, 206 S Main St., with M. Peters Group for $12.5 million, the release said.

Council also authorized McDonough to move forward with the purchase of two floors at 55 Camperdown Way. When finalized, the deal would move Greenville City Council Chambers and multiple city departments to the building on the edge of the Reedy River in Falls Park.

The exterior of the building at 206 South Main would be elevated and significant interior renovations to be completed. There is a catch with the deal: The city reserves the right to retain ownership of the first five floors of the building, in the event a deal cannot be finalized for 55 Camperdown Way, according to the release.

"The City of Greenville has made a multi-year commitment to upgrade facilities, so we can provide better service to our citizens," said White in the release. "We have rebuilt fire stations at Augusta Road and Verdae Boulevard, constructed a state-of-the-art Public Works facility on Fairforest Way and are remodeling a building at the corner of Halton and Mall Connect Road to serve as a new police station, municipal court, fire administration and one-stop service center for business licenses and building permits."

NAI Earle Furman and the city issued requests for proposals for 206 South Main in July 2022 and received...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT