Waukesha selects proposal to redevelop Delafield Street site into senior apartments

Plans call for 80-unit mixed-use building, plus ideas for future projects

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Waukesha officials have selected a proposal from Horizon Development Group Inc. and Luther Group to redevelop a site along Delafield Street across from Waukesha City Hall.

Horizon Development and Luther Groupโ€™s proposed Delafield Street redevelopment. (Rendering: Galbraith Carnahan Architects)

Madison-based Horizon and Elm Grove-based Luther were one of three groups that submitted proposals to redevelop up to 5 acres of land along the west side of Delafield Street, near the northwest corner of where the street meets Madison Street.

Meeting Thursday night, Waukesha Common Council members voted 13-1 to select the Horizon and Luther proposal. The other proposals came from Waukesha-based Berg Management Co. and Kenosha-based Bear Development.

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City leaders sought redevelopment proposals for as much as five acres for the site just north of downtown. The development was separated into two zones: Zone A is nearly 3.4 acres and currently consists of a former automotive repair facility and vacant land. The roughly 1.5-acre Zone B to the south of Zone A is the current location of the City Hall Annex Building just south of Zone A, which will be vacated by the city once construction of a new city hall building is finished in 2021.

Horizon and Luther pitched to the city a mixed-use, 80-unit building consisting of senior apartments and 7,500 square feet of first-floor commercial space. Although a specific commercial tenant was not identified, the proposal listed possibilities such as a wellness studio, travel agency, coffee shop and neighborhood retail. This four-story building would go up in Zone A.

Plans for Zone B are more conceptual, but possible uses include hospitality, medical, additional retail or even more residential units, especially if they were to serve a different market segment than the senior apartments.

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Representatives with Horizon were not immediately available for comment. But Scott Kwiecinski, development manager with the firm, said in March the demographics of Waukesha support more senior housing.

โ€œI think our project can be successful,โ€ he said.

The developers will next need to work with the city to craft more detailed plans before closing on the property.

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