Redevelopment of Providence’s ‘Superman Building’ to Continue After Owner’s Death

High Rock Development announced that the Massachusetts-based company is still committed to the project

The Superman building in downtown Providence has sat empty since 2013. State legislation headed to the Rhode Island Senate Wednesday would allow the owner to qualify for a sales tax waiver on construction materials.
State leaders hoped revamping the vacant ‘Superman Building’ would spur other development in downtown Providence
David Lawlor
Share
The Superman building in downtown Providence has sat empty since 2013. State legislation headed to the Rhode Island Senate Wednesday would allow the owner to qualify for a sales tax waiver on construction materials.
State leaders hoped revamping the vacant ‘Superman Building’ would spur other development in downtown Providence
David Lawlor
Redevelopment of Providence’s ‘Superman Building’ to Continue After Owner’s Death
Copy

The company that owns the so-called “Superman Building” in downtown Providence said Friday that it remains committed to redeveloping the property, even after the recent death of the company’s president.

In a statement, High Rock Development announced that the Massachusetts-based company will now be led by its legal counsel, Michael Crossen, and that he will oversee projects, including the future of the building at 111 Westminster Street near Kennedy Plaza.

Following the death of company head David Sweetser in July at age 70, Crossen says High Rock still plans to make the iconic Superman structure into a residential building, with efforts accelerating in 2026.

The most recent plan for reusing the “Superman Building,” which has been vacant since 2013, was presented in 2022. Meant to serve as a cornerstone to development in downtown Providence, the redevelopment received a pledge of about $60 million in tax credits, loans and forms of public financing. The original plan scheduled the project to be completed this year.

High Rock provided few new details on Friday, but Crossen said the company is “fully committed” to the project.

“All of the pieces remain in place and nothing has changed with the financing plan,” Crossen said in the statement. “This complex project will get off the ground and provide hundreds of jobs, housing opportunities and a long-term economic benefit for Rhode Island’s economy.”

The Public’s Radio’s Jeremy Bernfeld contributed to this story.

Roller coaster may continue for NIH-funded program that supports students in the biomedicine or engineering fields
The $510,000 package will fund on-demand transit in five communities, expand commuter vanpool subsidies, and offer free bus passes to visitors, as part of Rhode Island’s climate strategy
Trinity Rep presents the world premiere of a new play by Brown MFA playwright Ro Reddick, directed by Aileen Wen McGroddy
At a packed Westerly hearing, residents, activists, and property owners clashed over whether a historic right-of-way guarantees public access to a pristine stretch of coastline long treated as private
McKee leads slightly over Democratic rivals in 2026 governor’s race but still dogged by low approval ratings