Miamisburg to see new renovations, household expansion this year
The renovated building at 24-32 S. Key St. is only aspect of downtown Miamisburg’s economic resurgence. Thrive at Market Sq., a recently introduced tiny enterprise incubator, is expected to help more entrepreneurs to open up for enterprise in the course of this 12 months, becoming a member of numerous new storefronts that have opened in the city’s downtown location or not too long ago introduced plans to do so.
Established to launch building this 12 months are two new housing programs that will incorporate more than 250 properties blended in the city’s southern finish, a little something Collins explained would be the most new homes designed in Miamisburg in about 20 decades.
Website planning already can be viewed at the Aberdeen subdivision, which will provide new homes by Fischer Households to a 42-acre website off Miamisburg Springboro Road next to Pipestone Golfing Training course and in the vicinity of the Austin Boulevard interchange.
Also starting construction this yr is the initial phase of the Deer Valley subdivision, an Oberer Development and Ryan Households challenge on 86.6 acres off Benner Road around the Mound Enterprise Park.
Development of the new houses will enable the city keep current people and entice new house owners from outside the metropolis who might otherwise choose to stay in neighboring communities, Collins reported. The final property development was at Sydney’s Bend, which was built in the early 2000s and is “a compact subdivision as opposed to what’s staying planned now,” she said.
Also slated for Miamisburg in 2021 are improvements to the Ninth Road bridge, a 60-foot span constructed in 1930 and reconstructed in 1970. City officials earlier reported the bridge is structurally deficient. Miamisburg will address $700,000 of development expenses, with the federal government supplying a $546,000 grant.
Design and style get the job done the Ninth Road bridge undertaking will be done this 12 months with the bids likely out in November and a 3-to-6 month development period soon after that, in accordance to Town Manager Keith Johnson.
This calendar year also will see the reopening of the city’s Sycamore Trails Aquatic Center in Miamisburg, which did not open up in 2020 simply because of the coronavirus pandemic. Throughout the closure, the city introduced different structural and aesthetic advancements, like “deep maintenance” to its approximately two-ten years-aged pool and the addition of more recent water characteristics, these kinds of as sprayers, Collins mentioned.
“It’s like nearly anything else: it has to be taken care of and it has to be stored present,” she explained. “It’s likely to only really increase the location and continue to keep it up to day with the way it should really be.”