Medina seeks grant to study accessibility issues with City Hall

By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 28 August 2025 at 9:47 am

Board hopes a formal study can lead to bigger grants for elevator, building upgrades

Photo by Tom Rivers: City Hall on Main Street in Medina is underutilized by the Village of Medina mainly due to a lack of handicapped accessibility. The Village Board is seeking a grant for an elevator and other improvements so the building can be better used by the public.

MEDINA – The Village Board wants to see the City Hall better utilized by the village government, but it will take an elevator and other improvements to make the site handicapped accessible.

The board is seeking a grant through the state’s Community Development Block Grant program to determine what is needed to make the building more accessible and the estimated costs.

Once the village has that report, it can pursue other grants to pay for the upgrades.

The building is underutilized by the village. Medina moved its village offices out of the site in 1999, going to a one-story bank building next door with a drive-in window.

The Village Board doesn’t meet there either. It currently primarily uses the Ridgeway Town Hall and sometimes the Senior Center. For several years it used the Shelby Town Hall.

The Village Planning Board and Zoning Board of Appeals continues to use the City Hall meeting room for their sessions.

The Medina Sandstone Society uses the main meeting room at City Hall for the Medina Sandstone Hall of Fame. This photo shows the induction ceremony on Oct. 17, 2024. The Sandstone Society has inducted 43 sites since the debut class in 2013.

The City Hall “Council Chambers” has been the Medina Sandstone Hall of Fame since 2013. The Medina Sandstone Society the third Thursday in October each year inducts sites into the Hall of Fame which is now up to 43 sites.

While the village clerk’s staff is out of city hall, the code enforcement officer remains on the third floor.

Mayor Marguerite Sherman would like to see the building be better used, especially for the Village Board meetings.

Medina will be pursuing a $40,000 accessibility grant to show how City Hall could become ADA compliant. The grant doesn’t require any local match, said Jay Grasso, Medina’s grant writer.

This study should lead to larger grants to address the accessibility shortcomings with the building, which was constructed in 1908 out of local sandstone.

“There should be significant money to make repairs,” Grasso said.

But first Medina needs a formal study assessing the conditions of the site.

Dave Miller of the Sandstone Society speaks during the Oct. 17, 2024 induction. Medina moved its village offices out of the building in 1999 to a former bank building next door on Park Avenue. The Village Board also doesn’t use the main room for its meetings, instead typically using at the Ridgeway Town Hall or Senior Center.