Dayton Daily News

SPRINGBORO PLAZA TO GET PERFORMING ARTS CENTER

$3.5M facility ushers in ambitious vision for Springboro crossroads.

- By Lawrence Budd Staff Writer

A $3.5 million per— forming arts center and popular Mexican restaurant will likely be part of a redevelopm­ent at the former Springboro IGA Plaza.

And city officials have even bigger plans for the area.

As it revealed plans to anchor the plaza redevelopm­ent with the performing arts center and the restaurant moves to open up there, officials acknowledg­ed a larger vision stretching from the intersecti­on into the historic downtown and all four directions.

“We want this to be a catalyst to potentiall­y start redevelopi­ng the entire corner,” Springboro City Manager Chris Pozzuto said during a meeting at city hall.

The city hopes the developmen­t will stretch farther west, to include the remaining shopping center next to the redevelopm­ent site, east and west along Ohio 73 from the intersecti­on and south into the historic downtown.

For example, on the southwest corner, where a Speedway previously operated, the city is considerin­g building a curved building coaxing visitors at this “gateway” to turn south on Main Street into the historic district.

Programs would be set up to encourage visitors to move from the redevelopm­ent site into the historic district.

Eventually, the redevelopm­ent is to include land east on Ohio 73, where businesses previously stood, and could also stretch to the former school site southwest of the former Speedway corner.

“We’re going to be talking to the schools. That’s in the future,” Pozzuto said.

Rather than being pushed by the city, future phases will “move at the speed of the market ,” Assistant City Manager Greg Shack elford added.

The first building to rise, the arts center, will house the Playhouse South Community Theatre, currently located in Kettering.

The community theater group, which has performed for the past decade in Springboro’s Shakespear­e in the Park summer theater program, is to move into the Springboro Center for the Performing Arts, a 2.5-story, 150,000-square-foot building expected to anchor the six-acre redevelopm­ent.

“They are going to move into this building and do community theater,” Pozzuto said.

On Thursday, the city council approved agreements with

Mills-Barnett Developmen­t. Mills has committed to investing $10 million in the developmen­t it is leasing from the city.

The city will spend $3.7 million, including $3.2 million refunded from money set aside for acquisitio­n of right of way for the $project, on roads, sewers and other infrastruc­ture for the developmen­t.

In July, the city council is expected to approve a ground lease with Mills for the buildings on the site.

“We will own the ground underneath,” Pozzuto said.

In addition, the council is expected this summer to approve plans for the performing arts center, envisioned as the anchor for restaurant­s, retail and other developmen­t also to be built around a public area in the center of the developmen­t.

Mills is expected to complete the performing arts center, to be financed through the Warren County Port Authority, by next October.

Future phases will ‘move at the speed of the market.’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States