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Warm weather means the start of construction

Warm weather means the start of construction







Ox Next







Build the promise rendering

A rendering of the new Build Promise emergency shelter planned for homeless men on Sycamore Street. It took five years of fundraising and planning, but work is now underway on the site across the street from St. Luke’s Mission of Mercy campus.


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April showers certainly bring May flowers, but they also signal the start of the construction season.

After five years of planning and fundraising, a new homeless shelter and medical center are finally coming to the East Side, as work began on the Build Promise facility across from the sprawling Mission campus of Mercy of St. Luke.

The 30-year-old nonprofit’s new project will bring a 24,000-square-foot building to a vacant grass-filled property at 1297 Sycamore St., at the corner of Miller Avenue, providing housing and health care to those who need it.







Build Promise Elevations

Elevations planned for the new Build Promise shelter for homeless men on Sycamore Street.


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First proposed by St. Luke’s co-founder and leader Amy Betros in 2019, but conceived much earlier, it will include 96 semi-private shelter beds for homeless men, as well as a shelter 80-bed Code Blue emergency room during cold and freezing winter nights. . There will also be showers and laundry facilities for residents.

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Build Promise Floor Plan and Site Map

The floor plan and site plan of the new Build Promise shelter for homeless men on Sycamore Street.


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“We’ve been serving the needs of our Buffalo community for thirty years, but we’ve felt a void in caring for homeless men, so this is the answer to that dilemma,” Betros said.

It will include medical, dental and mental health services, as well as maternal health care, nutritional support and a barbershop. And its users will have access to additional services on the main campus, including food and clothing.







Perspective View Building the Promise

A perspective view of the new Build Promise shelter for homeless men on Sycamore Street.


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“I’ve been dreaming of this for 20 years,” Betros said. “I really believe this will be very beneficial to Buffalo because it will help so many men get off the streets and back into society.”

St. Luke’s and Build Promise – a separate nonprofit led by Stuart Harper, the former executive director of City Mission – also partner with several other service providers, including Jericho Road Community Health Center, BestSelf Behavioral Services, OLV Human Services, Evergreen. Health, Feedmore WNY, Mental Health Advocates of Western New York, Restoration Society, Neighborhood Legal Services, and the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.

Resources will include job training and job placement, family literacy, financial literacy, legal assistance, housing placement, transportation and even email access.

Harper called Build Promise “a shelter where men can come and put their heads down, eat something and be treated with dignity, a place where we can maybe help them out of their situation and give them a place of recovery and recovery.” ‘hope “. and change course.”

“These men are our brothers, fathers, uncles, siblings, neighbors,” Harper said. “Poor decisions, family issues, mental health issues, addiction, and simple bad luck have brought them to where they are today. However, each of these men is redeemable. All they need is is from a caring hand, from a listening ear, from a safe place, a willingness to see beyond their anger, their loneliness, the physical and mental ailments they face on a daily basis.

The privately funded project was supported by the Greene, Gibson, Mattar and Nanula families; Mark Sieczkarek, Adele Kraus, M&T Bank Corp., Foundation 214, The Russell J. Salvatore Foundation, The Frank L. Ciminelli Family Foundation, the Swede Anderson Foundation, Baille Lumber, The Mother Cabrini Health Foundation John R. Oishei Foundation and First Niagara Foundation.

“We brought in a wonderful group of community stakeholders who reached out to their families and friends, and we are excited to begin the construction phase,” said Kathleen Mattar, a member of the project steering committee who made the initial donation with her husband, William. .

IMA Life comes to Tonawanda

Italian manufacturer IMA Life has already begun construction of its new $30 million headquarters at Colvin Woods Business Park in the town of Tonawanda.







IMA Life rendering (updated)

An updated rendering of the new IMA Life facility planned in Tonawanda.


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Located on 15 acres at 700 Colvin Woods Parkway, Steel will be constructed on an 80,000 square foot building that will include 30,000 square feet of office space and 50,000 square feet of research, development and production space for the manufacture of freeze-drying equipment used by the pharmaceutical industry to transform vials of liquid medicines into transportable powders.

The new installationdesigned by LaBella Associates and Wendel, and built by Montante Construction and Tedesco Construction Services, will also serve as the North American headquarters for IMA Life, part of the IMA Group. It is expected to be completed by May 2025and would represent the company’s largest capital investment outside Italy.

With 6,900 employees worldwide, IMA manufactures aseptic drug processing and lyophilization equipment for customers around the world such as Pfizer and Moderna. Its machines – which also include blowers, washers, bacteria removal tunnels, liquid and powder fillers, automatic loaders and unloaders, labelers and isolation systems – ensure high integrity and sterility pharmaceutical products. The US market represents 20% of total sales of $2.3 billion.

“We have deep respect for the life-saving medicines our customers process using IMA equipment, and we look forward to expanding our production capabilities and creating jobs right here in Western New State. York,” said Ernesto Renzi, president of IMA Life North America. “The impressive skill of the workforce has allowed us to expand our customer base and grow the business.

Empire State Development Corp. is providing up to $1.13 million in Excelsior Jobs Program tax credits to support the project. In exchange, the company, which already operates a 60,000-square-foot factory at 2175 Military Road that will be retained, agreed to retain 157 jobs and create 70 new ones.

Welcome to Buffalo Next. This newsletter from The Buffalo News will bring you the latest on developments in Buffalo Niagara’s economy – from real estate to health care to startups. Learn more at BuffaloNext.com.

For sale

More than a year after a nonprofit agency and developer teamed up to convert the underutilized former St. John Kanty Church school into apartments, the former Catholic church convent is for sale.

The church is looking to sell the 13,248-square-foot building at 101 Swinburne St., just off Broadway and several blocks west of Bailey Avenue in the Broadway-Fillmore neighborhood.

The three-story special-use building is being marketed by David Doerr of Hanna Commercial Real Estate as ideal for religious, office or multifamily use, with parking in front and potential for historic and other tax credits to finance a project redevelopment.

It’s also right behind the former high school or parish school, which is now called Apartments at the Lyceum, after Community Services for Every1 partnered with Edgemere Development on an $18 million renovation into 42 affordable apartments, including 12 intended for permanent supportive housing for survivors of domestic violence. violence.

St. John Kanty is asking $295,000.

THE LAST

Why Buffalo Niagara’s the recovery was delayedwhen other cities prospered.

Noco has a new president – and for the first time, it’s not a member of the Newman family.

A shuttered movie theater in Niagara County could become an automobile service center.

Biden official’s visit highlighted infrastructure improvements.

The 43Nord Foundation has big plans to boost Buffalo Niagara’s startup scene.

A Western New York consultant says manufacturers have a big impact on the regional economy.

A local developer says he was chosen for the city’s new DPW complex. The city says not so fast.

The old Médaille campus was sold to a charter school.

SUNY provides campuses more help to cover salary increases for teachers.

Tesla is cut more jobs in Buffalo after the company dissolved the supercharger unit.

National Fuel expects natural gas prices stay low for the immediate future.

What Sectors of Buffalo Niagara’s Economy add jobs. And which ones aren’t.

JC Penney lost another call to keep its Boulevard Mall store.

The 43North Business Plan Competition is enters its 10th year.

A Long Island developer plans for the Byers building.

Increase in interest rates on deposits hurt Evans Bank’s profits.

Why a research program is at UB for collect samples and health information from the volunteers.

Why is Tops redemption its largest franchise operator.

ICYMI

Five reads from Buffalo Next:

1. The the state’s oldest investment club is in Lockport.

2. Struggles opposite the Factory Outlets of Niagara Falls.

3. How a Buffalo Woman Became a pioneer in the field of architecture.

4. How the new CEO of Lake Shore Savings Bank is trying to overcome the shortcomings cited by federal regulators.

5. If eating healthy is good for you, why not do it diet programs as medicine get better participation? Two UB researchers are trying to understand why.

The Buffalo Next team gives you insight into the region’s economic revitalization. Email tips to [email protected] or contact Buffalo Next editor David Robinson at 716-849-4435.

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