South Street Apartments bought by Natchez church developers
Published 6:45 pm Wednesday, October 24, 2018
Officials for a Natchez church have plans to rehabilitate and transform the vacant South Street Apartments to once again make it a viable residential area.
New Hope Missionary Baptist Church in Natchez bought the apartment complex from Warren County Habitat for Humanity in September for $115,000.
“We are getting estimates for the work that needs to be done, and basically we’ll be doing a complete rehab of the whole complex,” church deacon Aaron Patten said. He said the church at this time does not have a time frame, adding it is applying for tax credits and funding from several sources like the Federal Home Loan Bank and the U.S. Department of agriculture.
“The application period doesn’t open until February of next year, so I would say if all goes as planned with the tax credits and everything, we could possibly be in renovation by October of next year,” he said.
When the project is completed, Patten said, the complex will have 47 units ranging from two- to four-bedroom. Rents will be from the moderate range and up.
He said New Hope officials received a telephone call from someone in the area who told them about the apartment complex.
“They (the caller) know we do a lot of apartment rehabs in Natchez — our community development organization does — and they called. We looked at the numbers and what they (Habitat) were asking for it, and it kind of made sense, and Vicksburg is only an hour and 15 minutes away from Natchez.
“We wanted to bring housing into the area, and then, too, we know part of the area is challenged, so that’s our mission; to get in and not only bring more housing, but to change the concept and the mindset of the people who are having challenges in their life. We are a ministry, number one, and housing number two.”
Creating housing
Patten said New Hope was founded in 1997 by Bishop Stanley Searcy Sr. He said the church became involved in community development in 1999.
He said the church built a new $3.5 million facility in 2002, built 30 apartment units next to the church site, and purchased 29 units in downtown Natchez called the Brumfield Apartment complex. He said the church is also developing 34 acres of land for a 16-home gated subdivision, and renovating property in Newellton, Louisiana, for a 42-unit complex for homeless veterans.
Also known as the Triple Six Apartments, South Street apartment complex is located between South and Locust streets.
The city in June 2012 closed 14 of the apartments because of their condition, and later condemned the rest of the complex, putting it under the city’s slum clearance ordinance, which allowed the city to take control of the property, demolish it and put it up for sale to recover its costs.
While it was vacant, the apartment complex was vandalized for copper pipe and wiring, and was used by vagrants as a place to sleep or get out of the weather.
In 2014, the apartment complex was bought by Kent Smith, a Holly Springs lawyer, who intended to refurbish the apartments. The project never materialized, and Smith in 2016 donated the complex to Habitat for Humanity with the provision that whatever happens to the property it enhances the city, the South Street neighborhood and the city’s downtown district.