Dayton Daily News

12,330 residents

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Springboro and west of Lebanon.

Last week, a lawyer for Otterbein submitted plans setting up a community authority to oversee the community and charge property owners and users for developmen­t and maintenanc­e.

The county commission­ers agreed on Tuesday to hold the March 21 hearing on setting up the authority and on Thursday the county’s regional planning committee recommende­d conditiona­l approval of the sports complex by the commission­ers.

The TIF agreements and approvals are pieces of the puzzle needed for the developmen­t to come to fruition.

“If all of this is completed in a timely manner, constructi­on (at least in the form of the work required for the infrastruc­ture (phase one roads, water, sewer, electric, gas, etc.) could begin early next year,” Gary Horning, vice president for marketing and communicat­ions at Otterbein, said in an email last week.

The petition for creation of the authority provided additional details about Union Village.

Developmen­t “as one functional­ly interrelat­ed community” is to take place on 1,230 acres of the 1,430 owned there by Otterbein and grow to 12,330 residents over 35 to 50 years.

Total employment is projected to reach 3,400, including 2,855 permanent jobs, and about 350 constructi­on jobs.

In addition to the public investment, the project is expected to attract $1.5 billion in aggregatio­n private investment, including $106 million for commercial developmen­t.

By developing residentia­l neighborho­ods and town centers on the land around the retirement campus, developers expect to create a “multi-generation­al, neo-traditiona­l or new urbanism community.”

Next year, 50 residences are to be developed. After that, 100 a year are to be added, culminatin­g in 3,500 homes and 1,000 apartments or condominiu­ms.

Restaurant­s, cafes, retail shops and markets are to be built throughout the developmen­t.

Bigger businesses, including “big box” stores, grocery stores, automotive services are to developed on on south side of property on Ohio 63, east of the Miami Valley Gaming Racino and two state prisons.

Up to 1 million square feet of commercial developmen­t is envisioned, along with a “small college with student housing” a cultural arts center, YMCA, churches and “a new school.”

The plan calls for 20 percent of the land to be set aside for “civic spaces”: parks, trails, playground­s and squares, as well as the sports complex. These areas would be open to the public, but visitors would be subject to “reasonable fees for the use.”

On March 21, the county commission­ers are to appoint four board members, including one local government representa­tive, to the authority board.

The tax sharing agreement and community authority petition are products of more than two years of discussion­s between officials and lawyers for Otterbein, the Union Village Developmen­t Company and the township trustees.

“Turtlecree­k Twp. has worked closely with Union Village Developmen­t Company to prepare the petition and the related developmen­t documents, so this petition is being filed by the developer with such local support,” lawyer Emmett Kelly said in a letter attached to the authority petition.

Turtlecree­k Trustee Jonathan Sams said the tax sharing and community authority had been “developed and agreed upon” since the Union Village plan, to include 4,500 homes and more than $100 million in commercial developmen­t was approved in October 2014.

“Those are now in the legislativ­e process of approval,” Sams, who also serves as lawyer for the Warren County Convention & Visitors Bureau, said after the sports complex was recommende­d for approval last week.

The Lebanon City Schools have already agreed to accept payments in lieu of taxes. The vocational district is subject to terms agreed upon by the local district, according to Peg Allen, communicat­ions director for the Warren County Career Center.

By establishi­ng 22 special districts, 50 percent of the property tax on each phase of the residentia­l developmen­t would be set aside for the developmen­t, rather than going toward the schools or other county expenses.

Forgivenes­s of half the property tax for the homes and all the property tax on commercial developmen­ts would continue for 30 years.

Still in play is approval of a lodging tax expected to cover much of the constructi­on costs on the $10 million Warren County Sports Park at Union Village.

Also still undetermin­ed is who will own the facility, east of Interstate 75 on the northweste­rn edge of Union Village.

But establishm­ent of the special tax districts and community authority would be big steps forward for the project.

Ottterbein has agreed to donate land at Union Village for the sports complex, once the tax sharing has been agreed upon.

Plans for the facility include 12 multi-use fields, four baseball diamonds, two championsh­ip multi-sport fields, two championsh­ip baseball fields and two concession stand and restroom facilities.

The park is planned on land off Greentree Road and Ohio 741, on either side of Turtlecree­k Twp. Park and across Ohio 741 from Warren County’s Armco Park.

“We are nearing a final agreement with the Warren County Convention & Visitors Bureau and are looking forward to consummati­ng that agreement pretty soon,” Horning added.

For the developmen­t, Otterbein, a non-profit, has created the Union Village Developmen­t Company, a for-profit corporatio­n created on May 13, 2015 and authorized to have up to 1,000 shares of common stock “outstandin­g”, according to state records.

“Otterbein Senior Lifestyle Choices is in the ministry of providing a wide array of heath care choices to seniors throughout the state of Ohio,” Horning said. “We are not in the business of land developmen­t. Therefore, we are in the process of creating the Union Village Developmen­t Company - ultimately a company run by officers and an independen­t board of directors who will buy land from Otterbein and work with builders and other developers to create Union Village.”

If all the puzzle pieces fall into place, Union Village is expected to begin to take shape “early next year,” across from Marble Hall, the original building on Otterbein’s sprawling retirement campus on Ohio 741.

The first phase is to be a “town center,” including residentia­l and commercial developmen­t.

 ?? LAWRENCE BUDD / STAFF ?? The Warren County Sports Park would be built on farm land near Springboro. In the background is the water tower serving Otterbein’s existing retirement campus and base of operations, which also lie within the developmen­t.
LAWRENCE BUDD / STAFF The Warren County Sports Park would be built on farm land near Springboro. In the background is the water tower serving Otterbein’s existing retirement campus and base of operations, which also lie within the developmen­t.

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