Tag: Housing

Delaware Beach Builder Marnie Oursler Shines In Custom Home Industry

Marnie Custom Homes of Bethany Wins National Award

BETHANY BEACH — Years ago, Marnie Oursler moved down to Ocean View after college and started working as a realtor and other odd jobs to save up money and figure out her next step.

Instead, she built her own company, Marnie Custom Homes, which has built 140 houses to date and earned her the 2022 Custom Builder of the Year by the National Association of Home Builders. She was honored during the International Builders’ show in Las Vegas earlier this year.

“It’s pretty unbelievable,” Oursler told the Delaware Business Times. “I didn’t think it was something that we’d be recognized for on a national level. I feel like we were kind of the underdog because when I started I did feel like I was fighting my way through. Well, I guess people do notice you.”

Oursler is Delaware’s first builder honored with the award as well as the first woman.

“I’m just grateful to be doing this for a living,” she added. “I never thought 20 years ago when I started this that I’d be on a stage in Las Vegas for this award, thanking people. I’m definitely grateful.”

A Southern Maryland native, Oursler and her family spent their summer vacations at Delaware’s beaches. Her father was also a custom homebuilder and developer and would often drop her and her brother off at a new neighborhood where they would sweep out houses, build decks and form concrete.

When Oursler was 24, she decided to buy her first property – a tear-down house seven blocks from the beach – and flip and sell it. Then she repeated the process again and again.

“I couldn’t afford to hire a builder, and I was honestly surprised about how much I knew about the process,” she said. “I didn’t realize it growing up, but I was learning about new materials and maintaining a job site along the way. I was really surprised at how comfortable I was.”

After she flipped and sold her third house was when the neighbors started paying attention and wanting to hire her to build their dream homes. The timing to start her own company also wasn’t ideal. Marnie Custom Homes launched in September 2007, right ahead of the housing crisis. But through networking from her previous real estate career, she was able to land referral projects and shore up her brand.

Today, Marnie Custom Homes has 14 employees. She also hosted two television shows: DIY Network’s Big Beach Builds and HGTV’s 2018 Dream Home.

“It’s almost funny, because I didn’t really know the difference of the market at the time. But I did have a lot of questions at the time. How was I going to sustain this and do it for a living,” she said.

Oursler prefers to handle clients hands-on, starting first with their wish lists and then seeing what’s possible, especially in the living area ratios allowed by each municipality and flood zone requirements. Then it comes down to priorities and finances.

“A majority of our clients want the same things, like open showers. But in terms of how a family lives in a house, that’s where it becomes different,” she said. “We’ve had clients that we’ve dealt with for a number of years, so their family grows and we need to add more bedrooms. Or there was a wedding, so now you have to add more space.”

Since the COVID-19 pandemic, business boomed with people looking to escape the constant tedium of being indoors and renovating their houses. But Oursler said the pace is returning to normal: designing and building homes between Labor Day and Memorial Day, something she wants to keep doing for a long time.

“I don’t really want to do anything else. I love watching my team grow and get better, making sure our houses are creative. This is a lot of fun,” she said. “I always want to build new things, and for me, the current house I’m working on is my favorite.”

This article was originally posted on the Delaware Business Times at: https://delawarebusinesstimes.com/news/marnie-custom-homes-national-award/

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A Healthy Mix in the Heart of Milford

Milford Wellness Village Flourishes in Former Hospital Space

When Bayhealth announced plans to build a new hospital off Route 1 in Milford, downtown residents were worried. Surrounded by homes, Milford Memorial Hospital was a beloved city fixture. Indeed, parts of the building date back to 1938.

“No one wanted to see a 250,000-square-foot facility boarded up to become a massive white elephant,” says Meir Gelley, CEO of Nationwide Healthcare Services, which purchased the old hospital site in June 2019.

Nationwide, which owns and operates long-term-care and skilled nursing facilities, specializes in turning around old properties. But the energetic Gelley did not want to limit the building’s reuse to long- and short-term, post-acute care. He saw the need for preventative and ongoing services.

“I always dreamed of creating a program so that if someone needs us, we’re still in touch and have services to offer,” he explains.

With the help of Ohio-based Dynamis Advisors, Nationwide has transformed the former hospital into the vibrant Milford Wellness Village. In just a few years — and during a pandemic — the $30 million Milford Wellness Village has racked up an impressive roster of tenants that have created new jobs: 220 and counting.

Checking All the Boxes

Bayhealth hired Dynamis Advisors to explore the potential use for the hospital after the healthcare system’s departure. The firm helps providers and the communities design, finance, develop and manage innovative healthcare real estate projects.

Having worked with Nationwide in the past, Dynamis President Scott Keller reached out to Gelley. “We said, ‘Are you interested?’ He said, ‘Yes,’ and the rest is history.”

“Dynamis was extremely helpful,” Gelley recalls. “We met with all the stakeholders and the community.”

Milford was a logical setting for the ambitious multi-use endeavor. “Milford is one of the fastest-growing towns in the state,” Gelley notes. It sits on the border between Kent and Sussex Counties, which have a large population of retirees and people who need affordable services.

The Clarke Avenue building was available and had the proper infrastructure. Although it required renovations — one wing dates to 1954 — it had been maintained up until Bayhealth opened its new hospital near Route 1. “It checked all the boxes,” Gelley says of the facility.

The site was also in Delaware. “There are friendly opportunities and room for advancement here,” says Gelley, who has worked in surrounding states. “Delaware is very welcoming.”

The village is not his first project in the First State. Nationwide, which came to Delaware in 2006, also operates Regal Heights Healthcare & Rehabilitation in Hockessin and Regency Healthcare & Rehabilitation Center in Wilmington.

It Takes a Village

Nationwide removed the hospital’s labyrinth of corridors to create a straightforward “Main Street”-style flow between tenant services.

Polaris Healthcare & Rehabilitation Center, licensed for 150 beds, occupies the second and third floors while Banyan Treatment Centers is on the fourth. La Red Health Center, a familiar name in Sussex County, opened in the village in November 2019.

Also on board:

  • Kidz Ink Academy of Early Academics Child Care Center, which has classrooms for 160 children
  • Nurses ’n Kids, which cares for infants and children with acute and chronic medical needs, developmental delays and nutritional deficiencies
  • The Lab at Seascape
  • WeCare Program, which helps seniors stay healthy in their own homes
  • AquaCare Physical Therapy

The village does not duplicate services, Gelley says. “It’s really filling in the gaps.” He’s hoping to lease space to a program of all-inclusive care for the elderly or PACE program, which is like a “nursing home without the overnight stay,” he explains. “They have access to doctors, dietitians and pain care.” Currently, he says, there is only one PACE program in Delaware.

Such services have become especially important as so many people want to remain in their homes. Since the pandemic, many seniors have become skittish about long-term-care facilities, which were vulnerable in COVID-19’s early days.

The village has space for additional “like-minded” organizations that “enhance each other and benefit from each other’s presence,” he says. There is a spirit of collaboration. La Red, for instance, offered COVID-19 vaccinations to everyone in the building.

Gelley does not hesitate when asked how he will measure the project’s success. “When I am making people’s lives better — that’s what I consider my success.”

This article was originally posted on the Delaware Prosperity Partnership website at: https://www.choosedelaware.com/success-stories/gaming-their-way-to-success/

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