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Posted: 6:20 p.m. Monday, June 2, 2014
Facade grants help businesses grow
By http://www.journal-news.com/staff/rick-mccrabb/" rel="nofollow - Staff Writer
MIDDLETOWN —
During
the first 2 1/2 years of the city of Middletown’s facade grant program,
more than $100,000 has been reimbursed to downtown businesses that invested in
their exteriors.
Amanda
Burkholder, manager of Downtown Middletown Inc., which administers the grants,
said $25,000 was spent in 2012, the first year for the program, and $69,000 was
paid out last year, and $25,000 to six businesses for the first round of grants
this year. She said the program is a business rehabilitation tool designed for
building and property owners to use to repair or replace their building
facades. The program is a 50/50 matching grant program and is designed
primarily for downtown buildings, she said.
The
program will match up to 50 percent of the total facade project cost, she said.
The applicant will be reimbursed only after completing the entire project, she
said.
When
considering whether to award a grant, Burkholder said the board considers
several criteria, including the “visual impact” of the project. The committee
looks at impact (40 percent), sustainability/permanence (30 percent), community
contribution (20 percent) and financial leverage (10 percent) when judging
applicants, she said.
“We
want to get the most for our money,” Burkholder said.
Since
2012, DMI has awarded 27 grants, and every business that received reimbursement
is still open, Burkholder said. Prior to submitting an application, the
business owner must meet with Burkholder, and the design committee in regards
to their project. They also must be approved by the historic commission.
Some
of the businesses that have received grants: Pendleton Art Center, Middletown
Historical Society, Design 2 Wear 2, Sorg Opera House, Music Central, Blue
Goose Deuce, Middletown Cabinets, Beauverre Riordan Stained Glass Studios, and
Cincinnati State Middletown. The grants range from several thousand dollars to
a couple of hundred.
Typically,
she said, the applications are due on April 1 and Sept. 1. If approved for a
grant, the business must start the work within three months and complete it
within one year, otherwise they lose the grant, she said.
Burkholder
said six projects were recently approved, though all the paperwork hasn’t been
completed so she couldn’t release the names of the recipients. Burkholder, who
started in February, said she’s “very excited” about these projects because
this will be the first time she has seen them from start to finish.
The
program, she said, can “spur development” downtown by attracting new
businesses.
Jessica
Mobley, co-owner of Design 2 Wear 2, said the grant from the city — $400 for
the $800 sign — was “helpful because it’s expensive to open up a business.” She
applauded the city for trying to help small businesses succeed downtown.
Downtown
Middlet0wn Inc. has awarded 27 facade grants since 2012. Here are the grants
for 2012 and 2013. The six grants for this year have not be announced.
2012
Chamber
of Commerce, $1,700
Rumford
Productions, $5,500
Sorg
Opera House, $1,500
Stained,
$8,500
Forest Hills Country Club, $7,748
2013
Pendleton Art Center, $12,500
Middletown Arts Center, $2,000
Rumford
Productions, $700
Sorg
Opera House, $5,725
Masonic
Lodge, $13,492
Head
Hunter’s, $8,192
We
Can Incubator, $786
Design
2 Wear 2, $406
Middletown Historical Society,
$3,160
Denny
Lumber, $6,051
Blue
Goose Deuce, $1,857
Middletown Cabinets, $610
Former
FOE, $3,637
Cincinnati State, $1,567
Former
TenHo, $6,677
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