Dayton Daily News

South Park housing project lacks support

Developer given chance to revise plans to satisfy concerns.

- By Cornelius Frolik Staff Writer

A proposal for a $35 million apartment building in South Park failed to win the support of Dayton’s planning board Tuesday night after its members and neighbors raised concerns about parking, traffic and overall design.

The developer wanted to build 109 new apartments in the first phase of a project at 258 Wyoming St., which is the former site of the Patterson-Kennedy school.

A planned second phase would have doubled the number of units, increasing the total bed count to 606.

But neighbors and members of the Dayton Plan Board said the buildings are incompatib­le with the surroundin­g area, which includes some historic single-family homes and low-rise commercial buildings.

The Plan Board continued the case to give the developer an opportunit­y to revise the plans to try to satisfy their concerns and those of the neighborho­od.

But Robert Fiorita, the developer and property owner, said the project adheres with zoning and city code and should not be rejected just because people do not like the design style.

“At some point, the person who

continued from B1 is sponsoring this should have a pretty large voice especially when the laws that were written by the city, approved and have been on the books a long time are being complied with,” he said.

RE NVC Dayton II LLC wanted to build 109 new apartments on the former school property, which is a vacant field east of the Taco Bell on Brown Street.

Fiorita, who owns the company, proposed constructi­ng a new five-story apartment building on the eastern edge of the property that would offer fully furnished apartments with bal- conies. He planned to construct another building in a second phase.

Fiorita said he expected the units would be most popular among University of Dayton students, but also may attract young profession- als, including staff and residents at the nearby Miami Valley Hospital.

The apartment complex, called the Flight at Dayton, would have a clubhouse, game room, fitness center, pool, outdoor grilling areas and other possible ameni- ties like a WiFi cafe, tanning beds and yoga room.

The buildi n gs would have enclosed inner courtyards, and units would offer between one and four bed- rooms.

Fiorita said his company bought the former school property because it is zoned for large, institutio­nal uses like multi-family housing.

But South Park residents said they are worried about the impact on the neighbor- hood, including increased traffic, noise and parking hassles.

The Greater Downtown Land Use Board and Historic South Park Inc. both opposed the project.

The South Park commu- nity is pro-developmen­t, but the developer did not even try to engage the neighbor- hood to get feedback and figure out a project that is consistent with the character of the area, said Jeff Peterson, a South Park resident.

“Candidly, the neighbor- hood and land use board feel that this project is being jammed down our throats and it’s a take-it or leave-it propositio­n,” he said.

Some neighbors criticized the modern and urban design of the buildings, which would have brick and “upscale” hardieplan­k siding.

Fiorita said the designs are consistent with the modern trends in multi-family hous- ing. He said there are multiple apartment buildings with similar designs at the edge of the Ohio State University campus.

But Dayton Plan Board member Greg Scott said that doesn’t make the project appropriat­e for this specific location.

“Maybe it’s the state of multi - family housing at Columbus at the Ohio State University campus — doesn’t mean it’s the state of multi-family housing at the edge of a historic neighbor- hood in Dayton, Ohio,” he said. “We’re not the same city.”

South Park residents and Plan Board members said they were impressed by the design of the Miami Preserve, which is another project by New Village Communitie­s, the parent company of RE NVC Dayton II.

The student housing developmen­t at Miami University in Oxford has a Georgian architectu­ral style, popu- lar at many colleges.

Peterson said the neighborho­od would like to work with the developer to try to figure out a more suitable project for this site.

Fiorita expressed frustra- tion with how his plan was being evaluated because he said it complied with code and is entirely appropriat­e for the zoning district. He said the project meets all of the five criteria for general developmen­t plans, and the biggest complaint seemed to be about the modern style.

He said the zoning district does not require Georgian-style architectu­re.

He said, “To get more blunt, we’re not interested in building anything like Oxford. It doesn’t comport to how much we paid for the property. It doesn’t work.”

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