Demolition continues on apartments in Dayton’s oldest public housing development

Public housing agency GDPM plans to tear down 234 units; all of Hilltop could become parkland, while some DeSoto Bass units will be redeveloped nearby
Demolition crews were knocking down multiple buildings in the DeSoto Bass public housing complex in West Dayton on Tuesday, Dec. 10, 2024. Jeremy P. Kelley/Staff Photo

Demolition crews were knocking down multiple buildings in the DeSoto Bass public housing complex in West Dayton on Tuesday, Dec. 10, 2024. Jeremy P. Kelley/Staff Photo

Demolition of apartments in the city’s oldest public housing development continues in West Dayton.

Greater Dayton Premier Management, the local public housing authority, said it has plans to demolish some of the DeSoto Bass housing development and all of the Hilltop Homes apartment complex.

The 150-unit Hilltop Homes site could become something similar to a natural park, while GDPM plans to replace the 84 DeSoto Bass units it knocks down with new flats and townhomes.

GDPM ultimately plans to tear down and replace all of the 350 units in DeSoto Bass, which is Dayton’s oldest and largest public housing project.

Greater Dayton Premier Management (GDPM) plans to demolish all 150 units in the Hilltop Homes public housing development in West Dayton. Most of the apartments are already vacant and remaining residents are being relocated. CORNELIUS FROLIK / STAFF

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Hilltop Homes

Earlier this year, just 27 of Hilltop Homes’ 150 housing units were occupied, and GDPM was working to relocate the remaining residents, said Jennifer Heapy, CEO of the local public housing authority.

Hilltop residents had the option to move into other GDPM public housing properties or they can receive housing choice vouchers to use in the private rental market, she said.

Hilltop Homes, which was built in 1965, used to have 205 apartments, but GDPM demolished 55 housing units back in 2016.

The Hilltop apartments likely are obsolete based on their condition, location and other factors, says GDPM’s 2020-2025 plan submitted to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD).

Hilltop Homes is located along Groveland, McCabe and Haberer avenues in the Lakeview neighborhood, south of U.S. 35 and McCabe Park, and one mile west of the DeSoto Bass Courts public housing project. It is a collection of several small two-story buildings, many of them holding four to eight apartments.

Some other similarly designed buildings on surrounding streets are not part of GDPM’s Hilltop Homes.

Greater Dayton Premier Management, the local public housing authority, plans to demolish all 150 apartments in Hilltop Homes and dozens of apartments in the DeSoto Bass Courts public housing developments. STAFF

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Hilltop Homes apartments are outdated and have “inefficient” layouts and floor plans that do not meet the modern needs of residents, says the Renew Miami Chapel plan, which is a vision for multiple West Dayton neighborhoods, including Lakeview.

DeSoto Bass Courts

GDPM plans to demolish 84 aging apartment units in the DeSoto Bass Courts apartment complex.

DeSoto Bass, built in 1945, has about 350 units, and the demolition of nine buildings is taking place this year or early 2025, Patrick said.

The public housing authority says it plans to redevelop all of DeSoto Bass in phases, and the first stage will result in the construction of 44 new townhomes onsite near Germantown Street and Danner Avenue.

DeSoto Bass Courts public housing along Germantown Street in West Dayton is the largest and oldest public housing development in Dayton. JIM NOELKER/STAFF

Credit: JIM NOELKER

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Credit: JIM NOELKER

Construction on this $15 million project could start in early 2025 and the work is expected to take about 15 to 18 months to complete.

DeSoto Bass apartment units that are eliminated also will be replaced with apartments in a nearby but off-site project at 1520 Germantown St.

The $16 million Germantown Crossing development will offer 50 new multi-family apartments.

The project, at the former Day-Mont Behavioral Health Care property, is expected to be completed in the fall of 2025, Patrick said.

A map showing DeSoto Bass Courts in West Dayton. CONTRIBUTED

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GDPM ultimately wants to compress the 45-acre DeSoto Bass site into a smaller footprint, and this means there would no longer be public housing apartment buildings south of Stewart Street, Patrick said.

Patrick said the full redevelopment of DeSoto Bass could take five to 10 years.

GDPM is waiting on approvals from HUD for the demolition activities for both Hilltop Homes and DeSoto Bass, Patrick said.

DeSoto Bass residents whose units are going to be torn down have been or will be moved to other unoccupied apartments in the complex.

A rendering of proposed new public housing in West Dayton at the DeSoto Bass Courts. CONTRIBUTED

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These residents will be given priority access for the new housing units that are being built.

GDPM residents who must be relocated are moved to the top of the housing voucher waiting list or they can get special “tenant protection” vouchers that often are offered when public housing units need to be demolished, officials said.

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