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Mosaic Music Festival – GlobalNews Events

Mosaic Music Festival - GlobalNews Events

The Mosaic Music Festival of Arts and Culture is returning as in an in-person event this year! This family-friendly event is a celebration of diversity in Halifax.

Join in on September 3 as we showcase the heritage, customs, and talents that diverse communities bring to our city.
This one-day event is free for locals and newcomers to experience a variety of cultures first-hand. It starts with a parade through downtown and the festivities culminate on the Halifax waterfront with a spectacle of music and dance.

Stay tuned for the full festival schedule announcement!

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Conference Leeds partners with Mosaic Events

Conference Leeds partners with Mosaic Events

Conference Leeds, the conferencing bureau for the city of Leeds, has partnered with professional conference organisers and association management company, Mosaic Events.

The partnership aims to strengthen Leeds’ conferencing proposition and the city’s ability to offer support to organisers who want to host events in the city.

Conference wins

This partnership follows a number of conference wins for the city. This includes CHS Leeds which took place in May, The 8th International Conference on Concrete Repair, Concrete Technology and Durability which returns in June and the Pancreas Society of Great Britain and Ireland Conference in November. 

Commenting on the partnership, Sarah Bryne, director at Mosaic Events, said: “Working with the team at Conference Leeds, we are committed to helping organisers deliver events that are well attended, well received by delegates and are commercially successful.”

Claire Heap, head of Conference Leeds, added: “Mosaic Events’ services and skills in the areas of event management and association management, as well as its knowledge of Leeds and the wider Yorkshire region, means it is ideally placed to support event organisers choosing Leeds for their next conference.”

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Citing cost, Mosaic abandons plan for events space near Scott’s Addition – Richmond BizSense

Citing cost, Mosaic abandons plan for events space near Scott’s Addition - Richmond BizSense

The Art Deco-style building just off West Broad at 3013 Cutshaw Ave. in the Museum District is back on the market. (Mike Platania photo)

In late 2019, the owners of Mosaic Catering + Events began their due diligence on 3013 Cutshaw Ave. near West Broad Street.

Their plan was to convert the 9,500-square-foot Art Deco-style warehouse into an event space complete with a rooftop so that Mosaic could finally host its own events. The company, which also has a restaurant of the same name in the River Road Shopping Center, has only catered events at other venues since its founding in 1996.

In late 2020 Mosaic purchased the building for $2.1 million, giving it control of both that building and its headquarters across the street at 3001 Cutshaw Ave.

Steven Niketas, who co-owns Mosaic with Laurette Garlitz and Mike Holland, said the quotes they initially received on the building’s renovation were just shy of $1 million. After holding off on any construction, Niketas said these days they’re being quoted nearly three times that.

“And it’s the same set of plans, man. It’s the same (project),” he said.

Those increased construction costs have prompted the group to reconsider its plans. Earlier this month, Mosaic put the building back on the market for sale for an undisclosed amount. Thalhimer’s Connie Jordan Nielsen has the listing.

Niketas said the prospect of doing the same project for three times the cost that they initially forecasted made them feel like they needed to at least see what type of interest the building would get.

A rendering of Mosaic’s planned renovation of the building at 3013 Cutshaw Ave. The company abandoned that plan and put the building up for sale. (BizSense file images)

“I hate to say it, but at some point, (developing the event space) might be more than we want to do at our age. Two years ago I wasn’t so gun-shy, I was ready to do just about anything to grow the business. But I guess just like everybody else, I’m not sure I have the stamina I used to after the last two years,” Niketas said.

“What is the real expense of trying to expand? Do I really need another location?” he said. “I’m sure a lot of people are having the same conversations, not just the catering business.”

The building sits on a quarter of an acre and was most recently assessed by the city at $1.8 million. Prior to Mosaic acquiring it, the building was owned by Stony Point Design/Build, a Charlottesville development firm that intended to bring residential density to the site.

Niketas said his group is dead set on selling the building, and that Mosaic would be willing to go outside its comfort zone to see a project through on the site. Throughout its 26 years in business, Niketas said Mosaic never had any outside equity, management or business partners of any type, but now they’re open to the idea of working with an outside firm on the Cutshaw project.

“At this point, because of the way things have been the last couple years, I’m literally open to any conversations with anybody because it’s going to take a lot of creativity for people to grow their businesses effectively. It’s just gotten to such a crazy place, you have to be open to more things,” Niketas said.

“Just because I don’t want to build an apartment building, doesn’t mean that I can’t be a partner with an equity guy who wants a piece of prime real estate in a hot part of town,” he said.

Niketas is now based in Charleston, South Carolina, where he runs a location of the Giavos family restaurant group’s Stella’s concept. He said the heat of the Richmond real estate market was demonstrated to him with the recent sale of 5609 Patterson Ave., a 7,900-square-foot retail and office building he owned with Mary Kathryn Perkinson of MAK Financial Group.

Mosaic will continue operating its headquarters down the street, as well as its restaurant in the River Road Shopping Center near U of R.

The building in the Near West End sold last month for $2.8 million, nearly twice its most recent assessed value of $1.5 million.

“That was a big deal. It was a big light bulb,” Niketas said. “I’d never in a million years imagined that Patterson would trade at what it did.”

The Patterson building’s new owner is Stony Point Wealth Management, a local firm that’s unrelated to the Charlottesville development firm that previously owned the Cutshaw property.

This year, Niketas said, Mosaic has been swamped with catering requests and that the restaurant has been busier than ever. However, they’ve had issues filling out their staff.

That issue also contributed to their apprehension about taking on the Cutshaw project: Without a bigger staff, Niketas said hosting events at the new venue would require them to pull back on off-premise events and the revenue those bring.

“The replacement sales thing is the most dangerous part of developing the new venue. We don’t want to replace X number of sales off-site with X number on-site,” Niketas said.

“It has to be new money, it has to be new sales. Otherwise I’m $3 million down the road in development (costs) and in the same spot. This has been a really difficult box to figure my way out of,” he said.

As Mosaic mulls its options, many of the buildings adjacent to them are set to come down. Local developer Steve Leibovic is preparing to raze nearly all the buildings on the block bound by Cutshaw Avenue, Wayne, Sheppard and Grace streets to make way for a mixed-use project.