MISSOULA — More than $100 million in construction is planned for the Old Sawmill District this summer, including a student housing facility, two additional condominiums, a high-end apartment building and a new restaurant, the developers said this week.
A new commercial building may also break ground this year, along with the start of a 55-and-older active living center on the district’s west end.
Leslie Wetherbee, a real estate agent with Windermere and a partner in the project, confirmed that construction had started on Building C in Polleys Square. The new building is the third to break ground in the cluster of four condominiums and is slated for completion in March 2018.
The new building was listed on the MLS last week, and Wetherbee said several units have already gone under contract. Building D is also expected to break ground this spring, with a June 2018 completion date.
“We’ll be doing more three bedroom and larger units in that one,” Wetherbee said of Building C. “The three bedrooms have been going right away. Our customers wanted bigger units than we offered in the first two buildings.”
Several other buildings associated with the Old Sawmill District are expected to break ground this year, including a new student housing facility. Wetherbee said it will include 50 units and 200 beds.
“They’ll each have their own bed and bath, with a shared kitchen and living area,” she said. “We have some cool designs on that. We’re looking at a completion date in May 2019.”
The flurry of construction planned this year represents roughly $125 million in development, according to Wetherbee. The Old Sawmill District, located west of downtown Missoula near the baseball stadium that is home to the Pioneer League’s Missoula Osprey, represents one of the largest urban infill projects in the state.Several years in the making, the project continues the public-private investment in what formerly served as the Champion lumber mill site. The city completed Silver Park two years ago, and a separate development is slated nearby in downtown Missoula at the Riverfront Triangle.
In the Old Sawmill District, work on Cambium Place also began last year, and the foundation is now in place. That project—a four-story building with a market and fitness center planned for the ground floor—will offer roughly 65 high-end apartments and office space.
Wetherbee said several other projects will also begin this year, including a restaurant and a new commercial building.
“We’re going to be working on another commercial building across from Cambium, with retail and office,” she said. “We’re also working on several different restaurants. I’d expect several of those to be up and running by next year. We have at least one in the works and expect to have others.”
While construction moves forward on as many as five new buildings in the Old Sawmill District this summer, Wetherbee said plans for an active living center are in design. The project will include a gathering space and a partnership with the Lifelong Learning Center.
Wetherbee said interest is high.
“People are interested in a different project and they’re excited about the niche markets we’re hitting,” she said. “We’ll be doing more residential after that. We’ll be busy on this for several years.”
Development plans for the district call for a variety of residential offerings. Wetherbee said they’ll include row-style houses, condos, town homes and patio homes.
The project’s blend of amenities and living styles has been popular among buyers, she said. Those who have made a purchase include locals looking to downsize, parents wanting to live next to their college-aged kids, and others from outside the region.
Seven units in Polleys Square A and B are still available. Buy-sell agreements are currently being accepted on Polleys Square C.
“We do have some that have sold their homes here and are downsizing,” Wetherbee said. “We have others who had just always loved Montana, had been here on vacation and wanted to be here. They searched around Montana and found our product was offering something no one else did. And we have about 30 percent using them as a second homes.”
The district’s last parcel, reserved for a taller office building near Osprey Stadium, remains a work in progress, Wetherbee said.
“We’re waiting on that space closest to the ball field,” she said. “We see a high-end restaurant and lounge on the top floor with offices below it. We see that being completed after more of the development is build out.”
This article originally appeared on Missoula Current, an independent online newspaper, of which Martin Kidston is the founding editor.