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Manchester Planning Board approves Stebbins Community Center application

January 23rd, 2025


Manchester Planning Board approves Stebbins Community Center application

 
 
The nonprofit behind the Mark Stebbins Community Center on Manchester’s West Side has been granted variances by the city’s Zoning Board of Adjustment.
Rendering submitted by PROCON for the Mark Stebbins Community Center
 

Manchester Planning Board members have unanimously approved an application to build the Mark Stebbins Community Center on the city’s West Side.

The Stebbins Center, a 501(c)(3) charity, is proposing to build a nearly 20,000-square-foot multipurpose social services center and community center with a corresponding playground and parking lot on the Kelley Falls apartment complex property at 315 Kimball St. owned by the Manchester Housing & Redevelopment Authority.

Once constructed, the building will be home to several nonprofit organizations that will provide social and community services under one roof.

 
 

The two-story facility would include spaces for youth and child services, meeting rooms, a food pantry and an outpatient health clinic.

With Planning Board Chairman Bryce Kaw-uh unable to attend the meeting, and vice chair Erin George-Kelly recusing herself from the discussion and vote, former city planner and current board member Robert Gagne was voted chair pro tem specifically for the Stebbins Center item.

 

Once the application was approved unanimously, George-Kelly presided over the remainder of the agenda.

Jeanine Tousignant, project facilitator of the proposed center, said planning for the site began in November 2021, involving community leaders, nonprofits and West Side residents.

 

Hours of operation for the center would be Monday through Friday, 6 a.m. to 7 p.m., with hours extended occasionally to 8:30 p.m. to serve community needs.

 

No public funding is being sought for the project.

Tousignant said organizers hope to start construction this spring, with a goal of opening the center in the fall of 2026.

 

“This project will be beneficial to the neighborhood and community as it will be a beacon of hope, providing children and families with much-needed access to resources and services and a welcoming community based setting now and for generations to come,” Tousignant said.

Back in May, the New Hampshire Executive Council approved $1 million in funding to help cover costs associated with construction, anticipated to begin in the spring of 2025.

The center, in the planning stages for years, would be named after Mark Stebbins, CEO of the state’s largest architectural construction firm, who died in 2021 at 67.

 

After several months of reviewing options and exploring possible sites, representatives from the Stebbins Center and the Manchester Housing and Redevelopment Authority signed a 75-year lease to locate the facility at the Kelley Falls housing community on Kimball Street.

Kelley Falls is a 132-unit low-income apartment complex. Some or all apartments in the complex are rent-subsidized, which means rent is income-based.

 

The housing authority owns the land and has agreed to lease the land to the community center for what organizers have termed a “nominal amount.” The Stebbins Center will raise the funds and build the facility.

 

Organizers say the Boys & Girls Club and Amoskeag Health will provide services for youths and families through the new center. Services will include affordable child care, after-school care, access to affordable health care, community meeting space and additional support services.

Nonprofit partners currently involved in the planning are Boys & Girls Club of Manchester, Amoskeag Health and Manchester Housing & Redevelopment Authority.

 

The 2.5-acre lease area is within a currently vacant portion of the larger, 19.6-acre property. There are 19 multi-family apartment buildings on the site.