Ground Floor Growth Program

Ground Floor Growth envisions a downtown in which small, local, minority- and women-owned businesses are rooted into a commercial corridor, leading a vibrant, diverse retail hub for those who both live and work in the neighborhood.

About the Ground Floor Growth Program

This is a major opportunity for newly emerging small businesses, a response to the issue of vacant ground floor retail space, and an effort to further the work to transform downtown into a diverse marketplace. Ground Floor Growth was designed to accomplish a number of goals through a comprehensive approach to business development and support.

With 2,000 residents in the Gay Street District, and another 1,000 joining in the next 18 months through new residential product under construction right now, the Gay Street District is the ideal launching place for this program. New emerging businesses will complement long-established retail anchors in the area

Key Components

There are three key components to the program:

Graduated Rent Support and Risk Mitigation Fund: Participating businesses will receive rent support for the first three years of their lease. That support will gradually wind down until the business is independent after three years.

Rent Prepayment: The City of Columbus committed funds toward the prepayment of rent to lower the annual rent throughout the five-year lease.

Technical Assistance: The City established a contract with the Columbus Empowerment Corporation to provide advising services to support businesses navigating challenges as they enter into new brick-and-mortar locations. CEC will also be available to businesses neighboring program locations in the corridor, ensuring that businesses thrive collectively.

Explore New Businesses

Ground Floor Growth is taking action in Downtown Columbus. Check out the business that are a part of the project now!

Opening Soon

Stay tuned for more businesses coming to Downtown Columbus as part of the Ground Floor Growth project.

"Downtown is everyone’s neighborhood, and its success depends on it being reflective of the diversity of the Columbus Community. That’s why removing barriers to success for our minority- and women-owned businesses is key to strengthening the diversity of Downtown’s retail." - Councilmember Nick Bankston