Dayton Daily News

Clark, developer working on revitalizi­ng ailing mall

- By Matt Sanctis Staff Writer

Clark County officials remain in negotiatio­ns with a private developer under a plan that could provide new investment at the Upper Valley Mall site.

Earlier this month, the Clark County Land Reutilizat­ion Corp. bought 40 acres at the Upper Val- ley Mall for slightly more than $3 million, an early step in a plan to breathe fresh life into the property, according to county officials. Local officials declined to provide many details about the mall’s future until a deal is finalized, but Tom Hale, executive director for the Clark County Land

Reutilizat­ion Corp., said the land bank is working with a private developer and could transfer the property within 60 to 90 days once a tentative agreement is reached.

“We have not signed an agreement, but we are in negotiatio­ns,” said Hale.

He said county officials were initially working with the developer for a separate project. The developer was aware the county had previously bought the vacant property at the mall previously owned by Macy’s, and a potential agreement evolved from there.

“This has been going on for 10 or 11 months,” Hale said of discussion­s with the unnamed developer.

The mall has been the center of retail in Clark County for much of its history after it first opened in 1971. But the site has faced a challengin­g retail landscape and watched as longtime anchors like J.C. Penney and Macy’s have closed their doors in recent years. Other longtime tenants like MC Sports and the Upper Valley Mall Cinema 5 location also have shuttered their businesses.

Officials at the Chamber of Greater Springfiel­d had previously suggested the property could eventually be an ideal site for a youth sports complex. But Hale said the idea to use the mall for that proposed project was never set in stone.

Hale said ongoing negotiatio­ns are focused on issues such as a potential sale price and what any future plans for the property might look like. Clark County commission­ers voted last month to guarantee a $3.5 million loan to allow the land bank to purchase the property. The land bank could transfer the property within 60 to 90 days once a tentative agreement is reached.

“There’s been a concern for quite some time, certainly from the local government side, on what’s going to go on out there,” Hale said of the future of the mall property. “We’re moving in the right direction; we just need to keep moving that way.”

George Degenhart, planning and zoning director for German Township, also said he could provide few details about the property’s future at this point. But he said any plan to revitalize the roughly 40-acre property is good news for the township.

The mall has struggled, but he said Clark County may be a step ahead of other communitie­s that are facing similar issues in a challengin­g retail market. That’s in part because the county has worked to find possible solutions, he said.

“I firmly believe we’ve hit the bottom, and this is an example of we’re on our way up,” Degenhart said.

Degenhart said the county stepped up at a time when few other options were available.

“Certainly here at the township level we do not have the resources to pull that off,” Degenhart said of the property purchase. “Between everybody at the county level, this is, I think, a very good thing. Only time will tell how good it’s going to be, but they stepped up, and we are appreciati­ve of that.”

 ?? JEFF GUERINI / STAFF ?? The Upper Valley Mall, a central part of Clark County retail since it opened in 1971, has faced a challengin­g market landscape in recent years, with major anchor outlets closing.
JEFF GUERINI / STAFF The Upper Valley Mall, a central part of Clark County retail since it opened in 1971, has faced a challengin­g market landscape in recent years, with major anchor outlets closing.

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