Old K-1 School Building Declared Surplus

Fairhope, Alabama 

 

106 S. Church Street.


Front entrance.

 

TO BE LEASED FOR A "BUSINESS INCUBATOR"

The city council is set to pass an ordinance declaring the old K-1 building itself at 106 S. Church Street "not needed for public/municipal purposes" -- and leasing it to the Baldwin County Economic Development Foundation, Inc for use as a technology "business incubator and innovation hub" called HATCH.

The term of the lease is 15 years, at $1 per year.

From the BCEDF website: "Hatch Fairhope is a business incubator, startup accelerator, and coworking space in Fairhope, Alabama. Founded with the goal of fostering innovation and economic growth, Hatch Fairhope is supported by the City of Fairhope, Coastal Alabama Community College, and the Baldwin Community and Economic Development Foundation (BCEDF). The BCEDF is a member of the Innovate Alabama Network, which positions Hatch Fairhope as one of the state’s leaders in nurturing Alabama’s entrepreneurial ecosystem. For more information, visit HatchFairhope.com."

PORTIONS TO BE RENOVATED/DEMOLISHED

The oldest part of the building in front is to be remodeled/significantly-restored (about 16,300 square feet) with the help of a $2.5 million EDA federal grant and a $1 million ADECA state grant; but the newer central assembly hall/gym in back and the far-end of the southwest wing will be demolished because of their poor condition.

About 3,300 square feet of basement space below the north wing side is to be retained by the city, for a future as-yet undetermined use.

Surrounding property (including the community playground across Church Street) remains the city's except for that leased previously to the FEEF for their Pelican's Nest project.

PURCHASED IN 2019

The city purchased the whole of property in 2019 from the Baldwin County Board of Education for $4 million.  $70K was spent for asbestos removal in 2023, $366K for site plan engineering/design  -- and another $2 million was committed to the project last year by the city council because of rising construction costs. 

A performing arts center and parking garage have been discussed as possible uses for other adjacent vacant parts of the property as well (see at very bottom).

Leased area in purple.

Possible long-range plan.


Comments

Anonymous said…
They should have never bought it in thier first place.The city has spent WAY to much on this over the last several years.Those funds could have easily been spent on a full time fire dept,or other city services in a tax based city at 8.5%. Providing no emergency services.Call the PD and ask to send an ambulance in an emergency.
Anonymous said…
“Is needed for public/municipal purposes" as a parking lot
Anonymous said…
Glad to see the old building being saved!
Anonymous said…
a parking deck is planned too , it sezs ...
Anonymous said…
$6million for a co-work space with fantastic internet in an old building. Will the garage or parking lot add a few more dollars to the price tag? This is sounding like a government “Money Pit” project.
Anonymous said…
DOGE needs to investigate HATCH. This building was promised to be used for the children /education in the community. We need a performing arts center and small businesses already have plenty of help from other places. This city council is spineless.
Anonymous said…
Well if the city had real leadership and progressive solutions, the school would be removed and a PAID parking lot by the city could generate the revenue to pay for it.Now that the single tax corp is NON PROFIT,the city is the owner.They should be able to install parking meters downtown,as the STC and city tax violates the STC charter anyway.The city tax was NEVER voted on,but that nothing new in Baldwin Co Alabama or the Fairhope of success.See ya at the polls.
Anonymous said…
I for one am glad to see the city do something about restoring this eyesore. I wish FEEF would do something with theirs too.
Anonymous said…
Chamber of Commerce runs the town now. This will be good for their business.
Anonymous said…
Parking revenue will not buy us out of this financial hole that the City Council and Mayor continue to dig. We need a professional City Manager, with the accompanying education and experience, to work with a ceremonial Mayor for the best interests of the City. That said, parking meters downtown do not jive with most ideas of an idyllic weekend strolling the shops and restaurants.
Anonymous said…
Ugly, time-wasting, irritating, commerce-discouraging parking meters and/or signs are a lazy, self-defeating solution. Incentivize behaviors that generate revenue, curb spending.
Anonymous said…
"Their" business is your business, my business, OUR business.To be fair, government money is much the same.