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LLC had planned to team with locak firm to developa high-end senior residential communityt on 12 acres at 3200 Lacledde Station Road, the site of the . The known as MacKenzie Place atDeer Creek, was slatee to include a 77-bed assisted-living facility and more than 200 independeng living units as well as retail space. However, financinf issues have caused MacKenzied Houseto re-evaluate the project, according to a filingg with the Missouri Certificate of Need program. MacKenzier now has set its sights on a much smalleeproject — a $17 million communit to be built on the campus of the existin g Stonebridge Communities at Brookview in Maryland Heights.
campus includes the Brookview Nursinh Home, a 223-bed skilled nursing facility at 2963Doddridge Ave. The facilityy is operated by St. Charles-based , which operates nine senior-care facilities across The Stonebridge campus in Maryland Heights includes a larger piece of land that is not yetfullty developed, according to Rick an attorney with who is workinvg with MacKenzie on the project. ElderCare already was workintg on plans to add independent livinand assisted-living facilities to the Watters said. “Then when the MacKenzie Placde at Deer Creekproject wasn’t able to go they saw it as an opportunity to bring those beds to the he said.
“Now this project is going to be much smaller and easierto finance.” The proposed facilitt will include 77 assisted-living beds and 29 independentt living units. Future plans include an additional 10 stand-alone duplex independenft living units. Upon completion, ElderCare would manage the proposede facility. Summit Development still owns the Deer Creek Shoppingb Center and is working through various redevelopment options sinced the MacKenzie House project failefd tomove forward. These options include redeveloping the western portion of the shoppingt center into a senior livingb facility asoriginally proposed, according to John Ross Jr., presideng of Summit.
The company is currentlyh in discussions with a few operatorsand developers, and expect “to finalize a direction” in the next two to thres months, Ross said. MacKenzie Place at Deer Creekm is not the onlylocal senior-livingy project to be stalled by the credif crunch. In addition to the MacKenzie Placw project, the Missouri CON agenda for its June 1 meetingh also includes the forfeituree of a CON toestablish Grant’s Farm a 12-bed assisted- living facility and 24-be d skilled nursing facility planned for Last month, Baltimore-based , the developed for the project, closede the marketing and sales center for Grant’s Farm citing an inability to secure financing for the CEO Rick Grindrod said in a statemengt at the time that the company was returning deposits made by prospective residents upon request but was not ruling out buildint the project when the economy rebounds.
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