Dayton Daily News

UD, PREMIER PLAN MEDICAL FACILITY ON BROWN STREET

The space on Brown Street will open in summer 2022.

- By Eileen McClory Staff Writer

A new medical facility DAYTON — with services for both the University of Dayton community and the greater community will be coming in summer 2022 on South Brown Street.

UD, Premier Health, Woodard Developmen­t and Crawford Hoying are working together to create a new 30,000 square-foot, single-story medical facility, which would include medical offices for the community, a health clinic for UD employees and after-hours urgent care for UD students and employees.

“This is a first for us as an employer clinic,” said Lainie Dean, chief strategy and business developmen­t officer at Premier Health. “Our region’s employers are looking for opportunit­ies to provide convenient access to quality health-care options for their staff, and this clinic model achieves that goal.”

Premier Health will be the anchor tenant in the developmen­t, which will be located between Sawmill and Stonemill avenues on the west side of Brown Street near Patterson Homestead. There are no plans currently for any other tenants to occupy that space.

UD purchased and removed a funeral home and apartment building on that portion of Brown Street several years ago, according to a University of Dayton press release. Woodard Developmen­t and Crawford Hoying worked with

the owner of the remaining vacant properties, including the old South Park Methodist Church and a former dentist’s office, to bring those properties into the developmen­t. Developers said they planned to knock down the properties this spring.

“It’s very important to the university that any developmen­t — and this one fits the bill — on Brown Street compliment­s the character of the neighborho­od, residentia­l area and the small business district near campus,” said Andy Horner, University of Dayton executive vice president for business and administra­tive services.

Jason Woodard, principal at Woodard Developmen­t, said the developers were considerin­g the character of Brown Street in their designs.

Dean said Premier was thinking about consolidat­ion, convenient access and parking, as well as compliment­ing the services available at Miami Valley Hospital down the street, with this new developmen­t.

She said five primary care providers will be moving to the new space from an office on Stewart Street, which will allow the practice to grow.

According to the university, the building will house primary care and orthopedic physicians, imaging, lab and comprehens­ive rehabilita­tion services available to meet community needs and will also provide an employer clinic to UD’s nearly 2,700 full-time employees. This clinic will include evening and weekend urgent care for UD staff and students.

Premier Health already operates an after-hours urgent care clinic for students on campus that will move to this facility.

 ?? UD / CONTRIBUTE­D ?? A rendering of the proposed medical facility on Brown Street.
UD / CONTRIBUTE­D A rendering of the proposed medical facility on Brown Street.

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