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Community Center

City OK’s contract for Mary Sue Rich Community Center Multi-purpose center in west Ocala will cost almost $10 million, span 41,750 square feet

By Brad Rogers Ocala Gazette

After years of planning, the Ocala City Council voted unanimously Tuesday night to begin construction on the Mary Sue Rich Community Center, a nearly $10 million project city officials say will be a centerpiece for the revitalization of the city’s west side.

The council voted 5-0, without comment, to award the construction contract to R L Burns Inc. out of Orlando to build the 41,750-squarefoot, two-story community center. It will be built on the former Royal Oak charcoal plant site, across the street from the now-closed Pine Oaks Golf Course.

City Councilman Ire

Ocala insurance and financial advisor Austin Little has been selected by NAIFA-Florida as one of this year’s Top 4 Advisors Under 40 in Florida.

The Top 4 Advisors Under 40 award each year recognizes excellence and achievement in the insurance and financial services field by measuring business production, longevity in the business, professional association involvement and community involvement -- for professionals 40 years of age and younger. The award is based on an advisor’s achievements in the industry, NAIFA Bethea said after the meting that the community center, the first true facility of its kind in the city, will be a benefit to the entire city, although it will be located on the west side.

The community center will include a health and wellness area with an open fitness area; indoor walking track; two multi-purpose studios with a partition for larger groups; a mind, body and dance studio; two full basketball courts in a gymnasium with 120-person bleachers for each court; an indoor playground that connects to one of the courts, which will be used for camps; a senior studio and multipurpose room; and a library and media

The lobby of the Mary Sue Rich Community Center is shown in this artist rendering. The 41,750-square-foot facility will be built on the site of the former Royal Oak charcoal plant in west Ocala [Courtesy of the City of Ocala] also huddle rooms for tutoring and health advice.

In addition to the health and wellness areas, the center will have designated indoor spaces for senior, youth and family programs; a 400-seat banquet/ event space that can be divided into three rooms; and a kitchen to serve seniors and children after school, in addition to being available for catered events.

When asked how big of a deal the community center was for west Ocala, which he represents, Bethea said, “I think it’s a big deal for the city in general. We need to spread out things that benefit the whole city. ... I think, all in all, it’s going to be a great benefit to the west side as well as the whole community.”

Bethea, who used to work for the city as a recreation supervisor, said he approached former city Recreation and Parks Director Kathy Crile with the idea of a community center about eight years ago. The two of them developed a plan and convinced former City Manager John Zobler to get behind it.

The city administration figured out financing by borrowing money from the city itself that will be paid back over 10 years at 2 percent interest with

Community Redevelopment Area tax revenues. It also received a $2.3 million grant from the Marion County Hospital District, with the stipulation that the district can conduct health and nutrition programs at the community center.

In addition to the Mary Sue Rich Community

Center, Crile – before her retirement this summer – said the area has the Lillian Bryant Recreation Center nearby, as well as the city’s new Water Recharge Park, with its walking trails. She described the combination as a “fantastic recreation corridor.”

Bethea agreed, noting that the community center is in keeping with the city’s

Vision 2035 Plan that calls for “connectivity” between recreational facilities across Ocala.

R L Burns was the low bidder of 12 companies that bid on the project. Local firms that bid on the project were Ehlers and Scherer Construction, Cullison- Wright Construction and Tallen Builders.

The contract calls

for $8.95 million for construction, an 8 percent contingency fund totaling $716,286 and $117,028 for the cost of five alternate bids. The total cost is not to exceed $9.78 million.

In addition to the recreation facilities that will complement the Mary Sue Rich Community Center, the city has approved plans to develop

the old Pine Oaks course into hundreds of homes, including affordable housing. That project has yet to get under way.

“I think this quadrant (the city’s northwest region) is going to be a great gateway to the city, and the further they come into the city, the better it will be,” Bethea said.

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