Jeramey Jannene
Eyes on Milwaukee

Construction Starts on St. Rita Square

Senior housing and new "Little Pink Church" will replace St. Rita's on Lower East Side.

By - Nov 8th, 2018 05:22 pm
St. Rita Square progress and rendering. Rendering by AG Architecture. Photo by Jeramey Jannene.

St. Rita Square progress and rendering. Rendering by AG Architecture. Photo by Jeramey Jannene.

Developer James A. Tarantino is moving full-speed ahead on his plans to develop a six-story, 118-unit senior living facility on Milwaukee’s Lower East Side.

In recent months Tarantino acquired and demolished St. Rita’s Catholic Church and its former school convent to create the development site along E. Pleasant St. between N. Van Buren St. and N. Cass St.

Now workers from Pepper Construction a host of subcontractors are working to build a foundation for the complex.

Apartments aren’t the only thing planned. In exchange for acquiring the site for $1, his firm will construct a new church and sell it back to the Archdiocese of Milwaukee for $1. The new church, designed to reflect the long-gone Blessed Virgin of Pompeii church in the Historic Third Ward, will be utilized by the Three Holy Women parish led by Reverend Tim Kitzke.

It will also be a nod to the history of St. Rita, which was originally a mission outpost of the Pompeii church established in 1933, and later became an independent parish with its own church, built at 1601 N. Cass St. in 1939. But its old mother parish in the Third Ward, often called the “Little Pink Church,” was demolished in 1967 to make way for Interstate 794, with much of its interior making its way into the hands of the Milwaukee County Historical Society. A small memorial and park marking the location of the Blessed Virgin of Pompeii church can be found at the end of the N. Van Buren St. off ramp.

Artifacts from both churches, Pompeii and St. Rita’s, including stained glass windows, will be installed in the new church. Parishoners will also enjoy a fully handicapped-accessible church that won’t require climbing a set of stairs to enter the sanctuary.

Tarantino’s Capri Senior Communities will own and operate the market-rate senior living facility. The 118 units will include 72 independent living apartments, 20 assisted-living apartments and 26 memory-care apartments. The complex will be staffed around the clock.

The new complex is being designed by AG Architecture.

Tarantino, whose parents attended church at St. Rita’s, said he hopes to open the first apartments in 2019. In February, Tarantino told the City Plan Commission that there were more people interested in residing in the complex, which will have a heated connection to the church, than there are units available.

He had to acquire more than just the church and former school to create space for the development. In December 2017 an affiliate of Tarantino & Co. paid $660,000 for a home and vacant lot at 1612-1618 N. Van Buren St. In April Tarantino acquired the former church rectory, then an apartment building, for $700,000. The developer also paid $56,000 for the city to vacate the alley that bisects the site, with the city scheduled to use the funds to construct a new alley access point along E. Cass St.

Accessed via N. Van Buren St., 70 parking stalls will be included in the base of the building. Those will be used by residents and employees of the building, with the latter required to park in the building and not on the street.

Tarantino’s Capri Senior Communities operates a number of senior living facilities in southeastern Wisconsin.

Renderings

Photos

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