After 48 years in business, Geneva Cycle Shop demolition proceeds

US

Demolition begins on Sept. 23 at Geneva Cycle Shop, 12 E. State St., Geneva. Elis Giannini began his shop there in 1976 and sold to Wessel Court East LLC in April.
Sandy Bressner/Shaw Media

For 48 years, Elis Giannini sold regular and specialty bikes from his Geneva Cycle Shop at 12 E. State St., Geneva.

On Sept. 23, he watched as demolition began on the bike shop and a former resale shop at the southwest corner of routes 38 and 25.

“I was a jumble of contradictory feelings,” Giannini said. “I was uncertain of how I should feel.”

He had negative feelings about the building being torn down. He felt gratitude for being able to celebrate 48 years there and because the Shodeens let him stay until the end of August.

“The Shodeen guy was very good to me,” Giannini said about David Patzelt, president of the Shodeen Group.

Elis Giannini, left, shares a laugh with Dave Patzelt, president of the Shodeen Group as demolition begins on Sept. 23 at Geneva Cycle Shop, 12 E. State St. in Geneva.
Sandy Bressner/Shaw Media

“I was highly uncertain of how I should feel,” Giannini said. “These feelings were particularly strong in both directions.”

Another factor for Giannini is he is not a morning person. He said he did not sleep until after 6 a.m. that Monday and then he had to be on-site at 10:30 a.m.

“I stayed about five minutes and went home and went back to bed,” he said. “I’m a zombie in the … morning.”

Elis Giannini watches as demolition begins on Sept. 23 at Geneva Cycle Shop. Giannini opened his shop in 1976 and sold to Wessel Court East LLC in April.
Sandy Bressner/Shaw Media

The Shodeen Family Foundation — as 4 Estate State Street Holdings LLC — bought the 1.4-acre former Mill Race Inn property at 4 E. State St. in 2014 for $550,000, property records show.

The .39 of an acre that Giannini owned on the corner was just the piece to make Shodeen’s purchase and redevelopment plans complete.

In 2016, Shodeen sought to buy the property.

Back then, Giannini was holding out, hoping to stay until he was 81 before the sale would go through.

“They need that corner,” Giannini said at the time. “It’s like a stone in their throat.”

Now they have that corner. And Giannini stayed until he was 84.

The Shodeen Group LLC — through another business entity it created, Wessel Court East LLC — bought 12 E. State St. from Giannini on April 8 for $1 million, property records show.

As to what will go into the area where the cycle and resale shops were, Patzelt couldn’t say in 2016 and can’t say now.

“At this point, nothing until there is a resolution on the stone remnant structure,” Patzelt said.

The “remnant structure” is a circa 1843 former blacksmith shop at 4 E. State St. that has historic landmark status.

Shodeen sought permission to demolish it — allowed as a last resort — but the Historic Preservation Commission and the city council denied it.

The shop has been at the center of a series of public hearings in which the owners asserted it would be too expensive to repurpose it.

Preservationists allege the owners were not willing to try.

The city recently cited the owners for failing to maintain the exterior of the former blacksmith shop.

A hearing officer ordered the “building shall be made weather tight prior to next date” of Oct. 17, records show.

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