Dayton Daily News

Otterbein

Plans worked out for right-of-way needed for turn lanes.

- By Lawrence Budd Staff Writer

TURTLECREE­K TWP. — Next year, a $13 million face lift of the building at the center of Otterbein Senior Lifestyle Choices’ main campus in Warren County and constructi­on on the first phase of Otterbein’s Union Village planned community are to begin.

On the west side of Ohio 741, Otterbein is expected to begin renovation of the campus center building, a two-phase project expected to leave it with a new facade and entrance, landscapin­g and signs, as well as new, private assisted-living homes.

“Because we are renovating an entire building, the plan is to move office personnel and some residents as we renovate half, then move residents into the new rooms as we renovate the other half,” said Gary Horning, Otterbein’s vice president for marketing and communicat­ions.

On the east side of Ohio 741, across from the main campus, work is to commence on the roads and infrastruc­ture for the downtown center and first residentia­l phase of Union Village, planned to grow to a 4,500-home community.

The Ohio Department of Transporta­tion and the Union Village developer, hired by Otterbein, have worked out plans for rightof-way needed for turn lanes into the planned community, according to state transporta­tion officials.

Work on the roads and infrastruc­ture should begin early next year, constructi­on on Otterbein’s new headquarte­rs on the square of Union Village’s downtown center in September.

“We’re working on financing right now,” J. Christophe­r Green,

Otterbein

vice president of finance and chief financial officer for Otterbein, said during a Dec. 19 public hearing in Lebanon. “It’s really a separate project from our main mission.”

After the public hearing, the Warren County Board of Commission­ers approved issuance of up to $16 million in bonds on behalf of Otterbein to finance the campus center project, west of Lebanon in Turtlecree­k Twp., and constructi­on of 16 patio homes for independen­t seniors already under constructi­on in St. Marys, Auglaize County, Ohio.

Otterbein, a non-profit corporatio­n, and a limited liability corporatio­n set up for the St. Marys project, are obligated to repay over 30 years those holding the Ohio Healthcare Facilities Revenue Bonds issued to finance the projects.

The Warren County portion financed through the bonds would include “the renovation and repurposin­g of the Campus Center Building, including the skilled nursing facility,” according to a resolution authorizin­g the bonds’ issuance.

The project is to happen in two phases in 2018 and 2019.

It is part of a multi-year plan through which Otterbein also plans to move the entrance to King Street on the north end of the campus. It has already added a life enrichment center, fitness center, media center, cafe, wood shop, salon, art studio, 114 apartments and 27 ranch homes.

Still ahead are improvemen­ts to the rehabilita­tion center and other facilities on the 200-acre retirement campus.

The developmen­t of Union Village, on more than 1,200 acres next to the campus and across Ohio 741, is expected to take 20 to 30 years.

In 2019, Otterbein hopes to move into its new headquarte­rs, anchoring Union Village’s downtown center, Green said during the public hearing.

Union Village’s first phase also includes 89 homes, four apartment buildings with up to 12 units each and seven town homes, as well as 12 multi-use lots for restaurant­s and retail on 30.3 acres.

In addition, the $16 million Warren County Sports Park at Union Village, a 109acre sports complex off Ohio 741 and Greentree Road, is expected to be built and possibly open next year.

The sports complex - and retirement campus - will be part of the 1,400-acre multigener­ational community known as Union Village.

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 ?? TY GREENLEES / STAFF ?? Land across from Otterbein Senior Lifestyles in Warren County will soon see the first phase of a 4,500 home developmen­t called Union Village.
TY GREENLEES / STAFF Land across from Otterbein Senior Lifestyles in Warren County will soon see the first phase of a 4,500 home developmen­t called Union Village.

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