PORTLAND, Maine — A one-time monastery in Maine’s largest city might see a new life as affordable housing.
Portland developer Josh Soley wants to convert the West End building into single-occupancy rooms. The Portland Press Herald reports the idea is a piece of a three-phase development planned by Soley that includes nearby low-income apartments and a halfway house a few blocks away.
[iframe url=”https://www.google.com/maps/embed?pb=!4v1562937263847!6m8!1m7!1sSkgdts5FOmRQDksrX7XtNQ!2m2!1d43.65254708828741!2d-70.26610508490045!3f183.14378512207978!4f8.898408949947367!5f0.7820865974627469″ width=”600″ height=”450″]
The former monastery is a Greek Revival home built in the early 19th century, originally as a private residence. The Catholic Church bought it, and it became a girls’ school until the 1930s, when it was turned into the monastery.
The building remained as housing for nuns until 2018 when the last two moved to a monastery in Manchester, New Hampshire.
Soley closed on the monastery last month for $1.66 million.


