The old Marsh Supermarket store at 1033 Indianapolis Rd., vacant or only used for storage since the early 2000s, is expected to become a family practice medical clinic/physical therapy facility following action of the Greencastle Board of Zoning Appeals (BZA).
Hendricks Regional Health, in the process of acquiring the 2.12-acre site from Jeff Moe of Zionsville, received approval for a parking variance for only having 82 parking spaces on the property, the size of the parking spaces and only providing parking in front of the building.
According to building size and the number of clinic employees working the largest shift, the property would require 194 spaces, according to strict adherence of city code.
Rendering of Marsh building as a Hendricks medical clinic
The applicant points out that the property could not accommodate that number of parking spaces, City Planner Scott Zimmerman noted in his report.
“If we say no to this,” BZA Chairman Doug Wokoun suggested, “we’re going to say no to anybody.”
That’s because, he noted, the third BZA-approved finding of fact spells out that strict application of the ordinance results in a practical difficulty dealing with the property, which was developed in approximately 1985 before current zoning code and the site cannot accommodate the requirement to provide 60 percent of all parking in the rear yard. The applicant’s only other option to operate a medical clinic on the site, it was noted, would be to tear down the building and construct a significantly smaller one closer to the front boundary of the property.
“It’s a really unique property to make fit,” Zimmerman said. “There’s no side yard and very little rear yard. You’re just left with the front and only so many spots where cars can fit.”
Anybody who would want to use the property for anything other than a grocery store, which was grandfathered in, would be required to get the same variance, Zimmerman added.
A medical clinic is a permitted use there, the planner noted, as it is consistent with medical office uses in the General Business district.
Hendricks Regional Health, represented at the December BZA meeting Tuesday by attorney C. Addison Bradford, Indianapolis, and HRH Director of Plant Operations Troy Tucker, expects to renovate the old Marsh facility and be open by sometime late summer to the start of fall.
The petitioners were asked if HCH could acquire more parking spaces or an easement to the west from Moe, who retains ownership of the old karate studio, Rescued Treasures and Goodwill portions of the site.
“People are going to park where there’s an open spot,” Bradford allowed.
Tucker, who said he had the responsibility for the $3 million renovation the Danville campus of Hendricks Regional Health, said the Greencastle Marsh site will “see similar changes.” No price tag was revealed on the local renovation.
Told the site would involve mostly family medicine and physical therapy, BZA member Paul Champion responded with, “so it’s a consolidation of some of the uses Hendricks County Hospital has in town.”
“That’s my understanding, yes,” Bradford replied.
Moe bought the Marsh property at auction in 2008 about the time a sign there proclaimed the coming of a Greencastle Flea Market that never materialized. Moe also noted that Big Lots had twice held an option on the site but never moved forward with the project.
In recent years the Marsh building has either been vacant or used for product storage by some of the city’s industrial operations.
The BZA unanimously approved the HCH variance request.