DELAWARE, Ohio (WCMH) — Developers are moving forward with plans to build the second half of a nearly 100-acre central Ohio subdivision, to be broken up in sections totaling more than 250 single-family homes.

The Delaware Planning Commission approved on May 1 a proposal to construct the last three of six phases making up Winterbrooke Place, a sprawling subdivision built by M/I Homes, Rockford Homes and Arlington Builders. Plans call for the development’s final three phases to include 84 lots, increasing the subdivision’s total footprint to about 260 homes.

Winterbrooke’s fourth phase will include 30 lots on seven acres, while the fifth will feature 35 lots on 19 acres and the final phase will include 19 lots on eight acres. Developers have been aiming to complete Winterbrooke since 2019, when the Delaware City Council approved the property’s rezoning for the development.

Plans call for the development’s final three phases to include 84 homes, increasing the subdivision’s total footprint to about 260 homes. (Delaware Planning Commission)

The following year, the council approved the site’s first phase which includes 66 lots on about 30 acres. In 2022, phase two with 73 lots on 25 acres and phase three with 40 lots on 16 acres were approved. Construction of phases four, five and six will officially complete the Winterbrooke subdivision, the proposal states.

In addition to Winterbrooke, several other developments are taking shape in Delaware. Romanelli and Hughes are constructing 97 single-family homes to continue building out the 473-acre Terra Alta development north of Braumiller Road and west of Berlin Station Road. The plan calls for 43 homes to be built on 27.2 acres and 54 homes on 21.2 acres.

Maronda Homes is aiming to build 655 homes as part of a residential and commercial development named “Donovan Farms” on a 114-acre site next to Boulder Park, east of South Section Line Road and west of Houk Road.

Further, Addison Rutherford is moving forward with plans to expand its central Ohio footprint by building more than 72 single-family homes across 22 vacant acres. The developer is one of several development companies owned by Jason Friedman — a prolific real estate developer also constructing Delaware’s sprawling 273-acre Addison Farms development.