Bateman Partners

Mountain View project looks to bring affordable housing option to Fairfield

The Mountain View affordable housing project moves closer to developer's plan to build 28 one- and two-bedroom apartments at a building that previously served as a sanatorium in Fairfield.

By Kaitlin Budion Morning Sentinel

A possible site for housing is in disrepair Wednesday on Mountain Avenue in Fairfield. Michael G. Seamans/Morning Sentinel

FAIRFIELD — Recent action by the Town Council to approve an updated tax break means the Mountain View affordable housing project is on track for people to move in a renovated building by the fall of 2022. (Click HERE for original article in Central Maine Morning Sentinel.)

The project, run by Portland-based developers Bateman Partners LLC, would convert the existing brick building on the property into an apartment building with 28 units — 14 one-bed, one-bath apartments and 14 two-bed, one-bath apartments.

“It’s a great use of this property and fills a great need that we have here the community,” Fairfield Town Manager Michelle Flewelling said at a recent council meeting.

All of the units will require that the head of the household be at least 55 years old, and will be restricted to those who make 60% or less than the median income for Somerset County. The median household income for 2015-2019 for Somerset County was $44,256, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

The building will also feature a community space, community garden, laundry room and 56 onsite parking spots. There is no anticipated commercial or non-residential use for the building.

The building itself was originally constructed in 1954 and previously functioned as a sanatorium. The developers are working to get the building added to the historic registry, Flewelling said, and has been approved at the state level, and is waiting on federal approval.

“It has great bones and it just needs somebody to come in and give it a facelift and an update it, and all of that. And it would make a great location,” Flewelling said.

The Fairfield Town Council met June 23, and approved a change to the TIF district surrounding the property, the latest step forward for the project.

Back in 2007 there had been a different developer interested in building housing at the location, Flewelling said. So the council created a TIF district with the 50 Mountain Ave. property and a nearby property that was meant for a Waterville Housing Authority project.

Neither project materialized, and when Bateman Partners LLC took over, the council wanted to create a new district that would last the full 30-year term. The previous district would have expired in fiscal year 2036-37.

The new district only includes the property for this project and the funds the town collects from the district will go into a fund designated for future housing projects.

The district still needs to be approved by the Maine State Housing Authority, Flewelling said, but she does not anticipate any difficulties with that process.

Flewelling said that developers plan to start construction as soon as all of the logistics have been approved, and hope to move people into the building around the fall of 2022.

Also discussed at the Town Council meeting was the process with the Department of Environmental Protection for a possible privately owned transfer station in Fairfield.

The transfer station is still in the very early stages of the process, Flewelling said, and would need to first get permits from the department, and be permitted through the town.

The station would be owned by Gregory’s Disposal, and the proposed location is in the industrial park in Fairfield.

The idea was brought up at the meeting, Flewelling said, because once the DEP begins its process there is a specific window of time that the town can submit written comment and request a public hearing. The council did confirm that they would like a public hearing once the department reaches that point in the process.

More than a quarter billion of high quality value

Construction starts soon!

Construction starts soon!

We’ve been very busy building new taxable value in Maine cities and towns, and now comes this news --- the largest building in the last 25 years on Portland’s peninsula has been approved by the Portland planning board. It’s a 170,000 square foot facility that will serve as national headquarters for Vets First Choice, a company formed in 2010 that is now one of the country’s fastest-growing provider of pharmacy services for animal care. We are developing this facility on Mountfort Street, along with our partners AlliedCook Construction, architect David Lloyd and CBRE/The Boulos Co.

We absolutely must give a special tip of the cap to the planning board, and especially to Lucas Anthony with Gorrill Palmer, the civil engineers on the project who prepared this extremely complex proposal for planning board review. This is by far one of the largest mixed-use real estate projects to be built in Portland, Maine for several decades. The level of detail and professionalism those folks brought to the preparation and review process is impossible to over-state. No doubt the taxpayers of Portland are very pleased that such distinguished expertise is helping to grow the tax base in Maine’s largest city. 

We expect to add more than 1,000 new high-quality jobs in southern Maine and believe this downtown location will be critical towards attracting world class talent.
— Benjamin Shaw, co-founder & CEO, Vets First Choice

We expect construction to start soon. A pharmacy and fulfillment center should be finished by October of next year, then office space, labs and other commercial space should be ready by the end of April, 2020. As a result of this project, Vets First Choice expects to be able to create hundreds of new professional jobs for Maine residents.

If you are just learning about Bateman Partners, we welcome you to our new web site. Since 1979 our partners are responsible for more than a quarter of a billion dollars in high quality development projects, in Maine and New Hampshire. Here’s a list if you’d like to take a look.

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