AUGUSTA — The company that is spending tens of millions of dollars to remake wine country here is running into some stumbling blocks as it works toward redeveloping these rolling hills and valleys.
The Florida-based Hoffmann Family of Companies, which started buying land and wineries here about three years ago, now says plans are delayed for two luxury hotels. Challenging terrain means it needs to redesign the proposed 12-hole golf course. It’s scrapping the helicopter rides altogether. The company is even getting pushback on designs for a long-awaited overhaul of Augusta’s Town Square Park.
Some Augusta residents say its high time for Hoffmann to get the work done it promised.
“We’ve been kicking this can for almost three years now,†said Augusta Town Board Trustee Randal Oaks, who has helped spearhead efforts to reimagine the city park that also doubles as the community’s festival area.
People are also reading…
Hoffmann announced in 2021 it would spend up to $150 million purchasing existing wineries, planting new vineyards, constructing a hotel and convention center, building a golf course and opening a five-star restaurant, among other things, all aimed at making Augusta a rival to California’s famed Napa Valley, the company said.
Since then, Hoffmann has purchased or renovated more than 50 buildings in Augusta and opened several new businesses. The company’s Missouri CEO, Don Simon, said it is readying to open a nail salon in Augusta and a new bicycle rental shop in nearby Dutzow. In total, Hoffmann owns more than 700 acres in Augusta and employs more than 500 in Augusta and Washington, across the Missouri River, making the firm one of the area’s largest employers.
But Hoffmann made big promises when it started years ago. And it’s finding some are taking longer than first hoped.
The Hoffmann Lodge & Spa was originally presented as a 15,000-square-foot, 65-room hotel and conference center that would be built on a 79-acre undeveloped property in Augusta. It was expected to open this year.
But Simon said this week it’s still in the planning stages, more than two years after plans were first announced.
“It just takes some time to do a project that size,†Simon said.
Plans for the 18-room boutique hotel on the former Emmaus Home campus in rural Marthasville, announced in July 2021, are back in the hands of architects. The luxury inn, known as Chateau Hoffmann, is “trickier than a new-build project,†because it aims to repurpose existing buildings, Simon said. But it’s still in the works.
Simon also said the planned 12-hole par-three golf course is being redesigned after encountering “rough terrain†in the hills surrounding Balducci Vineyards.
“It is still 100 percent our intention to put a golf course in Augusta,†Simon said. But the specific location on the winery grounds might change, he said.
And Hoffmann is altogether scrapping plans to offer helicopter tours, Simon said. The company first pitched leaving from a landing pad near one of the hotels — but residents complained that the flights would have been too close to a local church and cemeteries. Then Hoffmann suggested flights depart from nearby Washington Regional Airport — but the city of Washington, which owns the airport, wasn’t interested.
“No one is talking about offering helicopter rides anymore,†Simon said.
Multiple projects are moving forward, Simon said: Construction of the planned large outdoor amphitheater at Balducci, for instance, is on track; the company expects to see the live music venue make its debut this fall with regional and national bands.
But Town Square Park in Augusta is still a work in progress.
Hoffmann has said it would provide new playground equipment and add restrooms. But the debate this week was on a 24-foot by 24-foot gazebo in the park.
On Monday night, residents met with Hoffmann representatives at a town board meeting to talk through the gazebo. More than a dozen people attended.
And tensions rose some: Hoffmann wanted the gazebo in one spot in the park; Augusta’s festival planners wanted it in another. They worried the location could crowd the site and cause congestion during festivals.
Simon groused a little: “I’ve sat in Arizona with 15,000 people on a project and they didn’t have this many questions,†he said at one point in the meeting. “It’s a conceptual drawing, that’s it.â€
Still, by the end of the meeting, it appeared the sides had agreed.
“It honestly has been every bit of six months to get everyone on the same page, and to have a clear plan that we can move forward with,†Simon said later. “I think the whole thing has been very methodically planned.â€
He said the gazebo will cost the company between $30,000 and $40,000. Hoffmann is also donating the cost of designing the new park layout, which includes space for updated playground equipment, a walking path, and a water fountain.
JoAnn Milster, president of the Greater Augusta Chamber of Commerce, said she is pleased to see the investments.
“They had lots of ideas, but I don’t think that a lot of those ideas had been fleshed out,†Milster said of Hoffmann’s arrival. “It has taken them some time, but they are following through on what they said they would do and are being good neighbors for Augusta.â€
Officials hope to finish the first round of park upgrades by mid-September, when the community hosts its annual Harvest Festival.