5-minute read
Talbot House Ministries has revised its proposal for a new shelter and social-services campus on East Memorial Boulevard, shifting the footprint westward and reorienting the building to face North Ingraham Avenue instead of Memorial.
The nonprofit presented its revised site plan to the Lakeland Planning & Zoning Board on Tuesday, Nov. 18, four months after withdrawing its original application amid strong neighborhood opposition.
The new layout places the 55,000-square-foot building partly on a newly purchased parcel at 1005 E. Memorial Blvd., just west of the original site at 1115 E. Memorial. It also pivots the client entrance to Ingraham, next to an existing bus stop.
But nearby residents say the changes don’t ease their core concerns about safety and the future of the corridor.
Next steps
- The Nov. 18 meeting was a public hearing, not a decision point.
- City staff will return next month with a formal recommendation on Talbot House’s request to rezone both parcels as a “planned unit development.”
- The board is scheduled to vote Dec. 16. If they recommend approval, the issue will be sent to the City Commission, which has the final say.

Talbot House’s attorney, Tim Campbell, said the shift was in response to criticisms of the original plan in July.
“When they heard the comments, they went back and said, How can we make it better? How can we reduce the impacts even more?” Campbell said.
He said the new orientation pulls most activity away from Memorial and allows for a more controlled campus layout. The redesigned courtyard is divided into three smaller areas — a shaded lawn, an activity court and a community garden — with limits on the number of people who can use each space.
See the design
Architect Jonathan Kirk shared updated renderings of the two-story campus, which would include separate entrances for residents, clinic visitors, staff and deliveries.
On mobile, click the download icon to open a full-screen view.
The Good Samaritan Free Clinic would keep a small entrance on Memorial but would be open to the public only during business hours.
Residents: ‘One block over doesn’t change anything’
Residents of Edgewater Beach, Lakeshore and nearby neighborhoods said they support Talbot House, but the location is not a good fit.
“Moving the proposal one block doesn’t really solve the problems that we’re facing,” said Chanel Bellotto, owner of Skate World, located less than half a mile away. “There are already high levels of police calls, mental health issues, emergency response and pedestrian dangers.”
Several speakers pointed to the number of child-centered facilities within a mile of the site, including Lakes Church Academy, Phillip O’Brien Elementary, Lakeland Montessori Schoolhouse and several daycares.
Others referenced Memorial Boulevard’s designation as a “high-injury network” in the city’s Vision Zero initiative.
“It’s not that we’re rejecting the Talbot House. We just don’t want it in our neighborhood,” said Edgewater Beach resident Raydene Read, wife of Commissioner Bill Read, who presented petitions to the board.
“We have children. We have people that are blind in our neighborhood,” Read said. “I don’t understand why the Talbot House wants to be in this particular location.”
Helping one area at the expense of another?
City officials have acknowledged that moving Talbot House would make it easier to redevelop the Mass Market area, which includes Haus 820 and the former Yard on Mass. The CRA has acquired most of the nine-block area around Talbot House and wants to offer it to a civic-minded developer.
However, residents said relocating it to Memorial Boulevard would undermine the city’s efforts to transform that corridor into a safer, more economically vibrant area.
They noted that hundreds of residents attended open houses for the “Revitalize 92” and “Restore the Core” initiatives, and a service center for the homeless was nowhere on the vision boards.
“This disregards the city’s own engagement process,” said resident Wanda Avery.
Talbot House: ‘We’re bringing solutions, not problems’
Talbot House supporters argued that those who seek services are typically trying to change their circumstances, not cause problems.
Clinical director Dr. Elizabeth Palazzi said the ministry’s free medical, dental, mental-health and case-management services reduce emergency-room use and police interventions.
“In just the last quarter, we served 61 individuals with mental-health needs,” she said. “We partner with Lakeland Regional, Peace River, Lighthouse, Tri-County — often taking clients they cannot keep.”
“We are a light coming to an area that is in distress,” Talbot House Director of Programs Deborah Cozzetti said. “We are bringing solutions, not problems.”
Lakes Church: Supportive, but still opposed
Leaders from Lakes Church — located directly across Memorial from the proposed site — praised Talbot House’s mission and said they are prepared to be good neighbors. But they echoed concerns about safety.
“Those folks who are most likely to do harm are the least likely people to stay within the confines of a facility,” said executive pastor Dwayne McDow. “It’s not Talbot House’s fault. It’s just a reality that the neighborhood will have to deal with.”
McDow emphasized the church will “support and partner” if the project moves forward, but urged the board to deny the request.
Combee Road site would ‘serve a different population’
Several speakers, including Planning & Zoning Board Member Susan Seitz, said Talbot House was offered more than 10 acres behind the Walgreens at the corner of Memorial and Combee Road at no charge — 7.6 acres from the city and another 2.9 acres from a private donor if they relocated there.
Attorney Tim Campbell said the Combee Road site is larger and was seriously considered, but it would “serve a different population,” move Talbot House out of the urban core and “leave a void” downtown.
“It is not the mission of Talbot House,” Campbell said. “They did consider it. And this really is the right location.”
Assistant City Attorney Alex Landback reminded the board that, legally, they must rule on the specific Memorial Boulevard application before them — not on hypothetical alternative locations.


I have to agree Talbot house has had less issues with homeless hanging around there area. But also there are schools both directions to which they are trying to build. There are alot of kids that walk from skate world down Memorial at night home. I use to get people from the Talbot house when I was head of a temp service and the street was loaded with people that are better off not being around children. Not saying all is bad but one person is all it takes. There alot of pedestrians and traffic on lk Parker and Memorial. I am not trying to be mean but just a fact of life
Leave the city- go rural, Talbot house. It’s best for everyone. Lakeland residents WANT the “void” mentioned by your attorney. The people you serve are troubled and they should be moved away from the rest of the people. Every block currently around Talbot House is ruined because of Talbot House’s mission (and it’s a valuable mission that I hope and pray will continue; but AWAY from the city.). I drove around Talbot house after the recent meeting and it’s exactly the kind of settings that are bad for a city- one person urinating in broad daylight, 6-8 homeless people congregating/loitering at the back of the facility, and FENCES everywhere. Talbot House is a kingmaker in the local chain link fence industry.