Dayton Daily News

Grind House Coffee to open in West Dayton

- By Mark Fisher Staff Writer Contact this reporter at 937225-7355 or email Mark. Fisher@coxinc.com.

Bill Miller grew up in West Dayton, and he doesn’t think residents there should have to drive several miles to get a cup of good coffee. Now, he intends to do something about it.

Miller, president and CEO of Grind House Coffee & Tea Co., announced on his company’s Facebook page that he will be opening a coffee shop in the Wright Dunbar neighborho­od that will offer coffee, pastries, tea, bagged coffee and ice cream.

The new shop is coming to 1000 W. Third St., and it could open as early as September, Miller said. The 2,000-square-foot space will eventually, after coronaviru­s social-distancing restrictio­ns are lifted, seat 30 inside and about 15 outside, or about half those capacities under the current restrictio­ns. The new shop is expected to create 12 to 15 new part-time and full-time jobs, Miller said.

“Growing up in West Dayton, I’ve always wanted to open a coffee shop here,” Miller told this news outlet. “The community has been wanting a quality coffee shop for a long time. The fact is, there is a coffee drought in West Dayton, and it spoke volumes to me. We shouldn’t have to drive 10 or 15 miles for a quality cup of coffee.”

Miller currently operates a Grind House Coffee Shop inside the Meijer store in Huber Heights, and his company sells bagged coffee and tea online.

“I saw the opportunit­y for this space, and we decided to move forward with our Miami Valley expansion plans starting with this location,” Miller said.

The next Grind House Coffee shop may be in downtown Dayton. Miller said he is “close to closing on” space for a downtown coffee shop.

The building at 1000 W. Third St., known as the Allaman building, was once used as doctor’s offices, apartments and retail space, but it has been vacant for years. The Main Street Program, which later became Wright Dunbar Inc., acquired the Allaman property in 2002.

In the mid- to late-2000s, Wright Dunbar Inc. gutted and renovated the building, adding new windows, an elevator and rear stairwell. It sold the property six months ago to a developer, Urbannovat­ion Developmen­t Group LLC, according to Montgomery County property records.

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