Dec 16, 2025
Baltimore’s Remington neighborhood apparently will not be getting a full-service grocery store anytime soon. After seeking development proposals for a city-owned parcel at 2840 Sisson St. that’s currently used as a bulk-trash drop-off facility, the Baltimore Development Corporation (BDC) has decided not to award it to anyone, President and CEO Otis Rolley disclosed Monday. “We cancelled the RFP,” Rolley told members of Mayor Brandon Scott’s 13-member Sisson Street Task Force, referring to a Request for Proposals that his agency issued in January of 2024. “No one has been awarded the site,” he said. “There was in fact a public process. An RFP was done. Bids were received. But the brakes were pressed because there was a lot of public and councilmanic concerns with everything…No one won, because no one was awarded.” BDC officials have never said how many bids they received for the 5.6 acre parcel or who submitted them in time to meet the deadline of Feb. 9, 2024. One group that made a proposal was Seawall, a development company that has completed other projects in Remington. At meetings of the Greater Remington Improvement Association (GRIA), Seawall co-founder and partner Thibault Manekin has shared his vision for redeveloping the city-owned drop-off facility site with a grocery store-anchored commercial center, if the city will sell the land to his company. “We think we’re pretty close on a pretty cool grocery announcement,” Manekin told GRIA’s land use committee last spring. “There’s…an awesome grocery store that is super interested. We’re kind of at letter of intent right now. Hopefully we can get that across the finish line.” To make the Sisson Street property available for private development, city officials unveiled plans in August to move the drop-off facility to 2801 Falls Road, where the Potts Callahan construction company has a storage yard it’s willing to lease. When that plan drew opposition because the Falls Road property is in a floodplain and part of a picturesque stretch of the Jones Falls Valley, Scott formed the Sisson Street Task Force to recommend the best way for the city to dispose of bulk trash and hazardous waste if it relocates the Remington facility and sells the land to a developer. Scott has said he wants the task force to consider all options, including moving the drop-off facility; keeping it where it is or closing it and not replacing it. He initially asked for recommendations by December but now the task force is aiming to complete its work by early 2026. Rolley’s announcement means that the task force will be able to complete its work without feeling under pressure that a developer is waiting in the wings to take over the Sisson Street site by a certain date. At the same time, it means that Remington residents will still have to travel outside their neighborhood to shop for groceries unless they order home delivery. The BDC’s decision also complicates the task force’s work to some degree because city officials have said they were counting on the costs associated with relocating the drop off-facility to be covered by funds raised by selling the Sisson Street parcel to a developer. Without a developer to buy the land, officials say, the city would need to find another funding source to pay for relocation of the drop-off facility. Deputy Mayor for Operations Khalil Zaied warned during Monday’s meeting that the city at present does not have any funds available to relocate the Sisson Street facility or upgrade it. The estimated cost of upgrading the Sisson Street site is about $15 million. Rolley, who replaced Colin Tarbert as head of the BDC in June, did not say why the RFP was cancelled or when the decision was made to do so. He did tell the task force that his agency won’t make any decisions about disposition of the drop-off facility property until the panel forwards its recommendations to the mayor. He also apologized to the task force for not sending a representative to its meeting last week and said BDC was available to provide technical assistance in evaluating various land use scenarios. This the second time that a BDC-led RFP for the Sisson Street parcel has been cancelled without the selection of a developer. The land was offered in 2019, when Catherine Pugh was mayor, but she  resigned in disgrace and ended up going to prison without the city selling the land. Monday’s meeting was the sixth time the task force has met and the fourth virtual meeting. No public testimony was taken, but some invited guests made presentations. Chair Odette Ramos said one relocation candidate the group had been considering, a tract at 400 W. North Ave., must be taken off its list because it has been sold to Amtrak for use as a construction staging site. The task force’s next meeting will be on Jan. 12. ...read more read less
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