Dayton Daily News

Northwest Dayton to grain $13m boost

Senior project part of investment package for reeling part of town.

- By Cornelius Frolik Staff Writer

A senior housing project of more than $13 million is just some of the new investment in the works for a part of northwest Dayton still reeling from the closure of Good Samaritan Hospital.

Omega Community Developmen­t Corp. and MVHA Partners are teaming up to construct a four-story apartment building offering 81 units for people 55 and older.

The building will go up on the former United Theologica­l Seminary campus, which is owned by Omega Baptist Church. Omega Baptist also is on track to welcome a new, $9 million Hope Center for Families in the nottoo-distant future.

Dayton has a shortage of affordable housing for seniors, a fact illustrate­d by the waiting lists for some of the existing senior living developmen­ts, said Pete Schwiegera­ht, MVHA Partners’ senior vice president of developmen­t for the Midwest region.

“A market study showed a strong need for senior housing in the market area,” he said. “The senior population is the fastest-growing population.”

The project is good news for an area whose residents felt frustrated and overlooked after Good Sam closed its doors.

But the even better news is that there are millions of more dollars worth of projects planned for the old seminary campus, which officials say will be an economic catalyst in northwest Dayton.

West Chester-based MVHA Partners and Omega Community Developmen­t Corp. (CDC) have received more than $12.3 million in housing developmen­t tax credits to help build the new senior housing along Cornell Drive near the intersecti­on of Catalpa Drive.

The site is on the old 32-acre United Theologica­l Seminary

campus in the Dayton View Triangle Neighborho­od. The project is part of Omega C DC’s master plan to revitalize the campus.

“We want to make sure our seniors in the city have a good living option,” said William Allen, business manager of Omega Baptist Church. “This campus is serene and is an oasis in the middle of the city.”

T he campus has four buildings remaining, after the library and Bonebrake administra­tive building were demolished in 2014. The plan is to demolish the vacant Roberts Hall and Fout Hall buildings.

The new building, called Omega Senior Lofts, will offer independen­t living options for older residents. The units, a mix of one and two bed- rooms, will have income restrictio­ns: 80 percent of adjusted median income for Montgomery County.

The project applied for state funding in February 2018. The Ohio Housing Finance Agency awarded the project tax credits in June.

Constructi­on on the housing is expected to begin later this year or possibly in early 2019. The units should be completed in spring 2020, officials said.

Omega Senior Lofts is just part of the multi-phase mas- ter plan for the United Theologica­l Seminary site, which Omega Baptist Church pur- chased in 2005.

Omega CDC is less than $1 million away from its $4 million fundraisin­g goal to build the Hope Center for Families.

The roughly $9 million center will offer high-qual- ity early learning program for infants up to 5-year-old children, said Vanessa Ward, president of Omega CDC.

Mini University will run the program. Mini U has centers at Miami University, Miami Valley Hospital, Montgomery County, Sinclair Community College and Wright State University.

Sinclair also will offer a “service learning hub” that provides training opportunit­ies and certificat­e programmin­g for students, said Ward, who is also the co-pastor of Omega Baptist Church.

The 31,400-square-foot center will have a ready-to- work program that’s in partnershi­p with Montgomery County Job and Family Services. Dayton Children’s is planning to put a pediatric clinic in the center, along with some mental health support services, Ward said.

The plan is to start con- struction on the Hope Center in 2019. The project is expected to take about 12 months to complete, with an opening targeted for some- time by early 2020.

“It will be an important anchor for this community, especially in light of losing the presence of the hospi- tal,” Ward said.

Future plans for the campus include constructi­ng a new amphitheat­er near the center of the campus, south of the existing chapel, Ward said. The plan preserves large amounts of green space, maintainin­g a parklike atmosphere, she said. The athletic fields will receive some upgrades.

 ?? TY GREENLEES / STAFF ?? A senior housing project is part of a planned investment in northwest Dayton, an area reeling from the closure of Good Samaritan Hospital. Omega Community Developmen­t Corp. and MVHA Partners are teaming up to construct a four-story building.
TY GREENLEES / STAFF A senior housing project is part of a planned investment in northwest Dayton, an area reeling from the closure of Good Samaritan Hospital. Omega Community Developmen­t Corp. and MVHA Partners are teaming up to construct a four-story building.

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