Business & Tech
Hunt Valley MVP Entertainment 'Still a Possibility'
The restaurant and entertainment center was first proposed in 2009 by Baltimore Ravens linebacker Ray Lewis and his business partner.

Construction activity at the planned MVP Entertainment has been scarce over the past several months, but a property owner said the project isn't dead yet.
"It is still a possibility," said Tom Fitzpatrick, chief operating officer of Greenberg Gibbons Commercial. "[The developers] are still completing work on it."
Attempts to contact the main developer, Peake Contracting Inc., were unsuccessful. A phone number listed on the company's website for its Hunt Valley headquarters is out of service.
Find out what's happening in Hunt Valley-Cockeysvillefor free with the latest updates from Patch.
The project was in September 2009 by Baltimore Ravens linebacker Ray Lewis and his business partner Marc Rosen. In December 2010, The Baltimore Sun reported that MVP Entertainment, slated to include a restaurant, arcade, pool tables and sushi bar, was sued by four subcontractors who claimed they weren't paid for $600,000 worth of work.
MVP Entertainment is being built in a space formerly occupied by a Walmart at the .
Find out what's happening in Hunt Valley-Cockeysvillefor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.