New county facilities headed for Lakewood Ranch area in 2026

Manatee County has multiple projects slated for Lena Road and Premier Sports Campus North.


A Manatee County Sheriff's Office substation is under construction at Premier Sports Campus North.
A Manatee County Sheriff's Office substation is under construction at Premier Sports Campus North.
Courtesy image
  • East County
  • News
  • Share

East County residents are used to seeing new communities and businesses added to their landscape every year.

While 2026 will be no different, Manatee County will add its own significant contributions as well.

Manatee County will both start and wrap up multiple projects off Lena Road and at Premier Sports Campus North.


Premier Sports Campus North

It took six years for Manatee County to open its first amenity on the Premier Campus North land — the Lakewood Ranch Library — and the final vision for the park remains a work in progress. 

Construction is moving forward on three projects, which are all anticipated to be finished this year — the Athletics and Aquatics Center, the Manatee County Sheriff’s Office substation, and the second floor buildout of the Lakewood Ranch Library. 

Construction on both the second floor of the library and the Sheriff Office substation began in November with the library upgrades anticipated to be complete in April and the substation in October. 

Because the substation will be a secure facility, designs can’t be released to the public, but the cost and timeline were released in October 2025 in an agreement with Willis A. Smith Construction, Inc. 

The guaranteed maximum price to construct the facility is $7,477,321.25 with the access road accounting for $578,808.07 of that cost.

The $6.9 million plan for the library’s second floor is not under wraps. 

Construction is underway on the restrooms and a small service station for library staff. The Friends of the Lakewood Ranch Library, the library’s nonprofit arm, is also getting a work space. 

The rest of the floor will be dedicated to flex space, which the public will be able to reserve once open. 

In 2017, Manatee County had five years to build an aquatics center, according to its agreement with Schroeder-Manatee Ranch. The stipulation was written into the deal. 

With often changing plans and budgets, the Athletics and Aquatics Center didn’t break ground until eight years later. Now, 2026 is the year that East County swimmers will stop driving to Sarasota for swim practice. 

The $44.2 million center that will feature two pools and 24 pickleball courts is slated to open Sept. 2. 


Lena Road

While improvements to Lena Road between State Road 70 and State Road 64 were stalled due to budget constraints, two construction projects will be moving forward along the corridor in 2026 — a property evidence building for the Manatee County Sheriff’s Office and a renewable natural gas facility.

The latter is being designed and built in a partnership between Nopetro Energy and Johnson Controls. The $50 million facility will start construction in 2026 in anticipation of being operational in 2027. 

Patrick Shea, director of Utilities for Manatee County, said the construction won’t impact nearby residents. 

Once operational, the facility will capture the methane gas generated by the Lena Road Landfill and convert it into natural renewable gas. 

According to Nopetro, the annual carbon dioxide that will be eliminated by the facility is equal to the carbon dioxide produced by 5.3 million gallons of gasoline. The renewable energy anticipated to be produced by the facility could power more than 4,500 homes per year. 

Manatee County is getting its first landfill-to-renewable natural gas facility, a $50M project led by Nopetro Energy.
Manatee County is getting its first landfill-to-renewable natural gas facility, a $50M project led by Nopetro Energy.
Courtesy image

The Sheriff’s Office property evidence building is planned for 1707 Lena Road. The county purchased 161 acres in 2020 for $32.5 million with plans for a county compound. 

In January 2024, the property was added to the county's list of surplus properties, and D.R. Horton made a $35 million offer. 

But one year later, with a new commission in place, commissioners voted to keep the Lena Road property and revert back to the original plan. 

In the interim, the $2.3 million evidence building was planned for 3500 9th Street West in Bradenton next to the Sheriff Office’s current building that houses the Child Protection Investigation Division. 

Because the location changed, plans for a two-story building morphed into plans for a one-story building, but the square footage will remain the same — 45,000 square feet. 

Bill Logan, information outreach manager for Manatee County, said the design is 60% complete, and the construction documents phase, which transforms the concept into a buildable architectural plan, has also begun. 

A start date for construction is not set, but the documents should be finalized during the first quarter of 2026 so the county can start the procurement process to find a contractor. 

No matter where the building was to be constructed, it’s a necessary addition to comply with Florida statute's mandated evidence retention requirements. 

"The Sheriff’s Office is quickly approaching its storage limits for property and evidence," Public Information Officer Randy Warren said. "With the growing number of criminal cases each year and the large volume of evidence, much of it requiring long-term retention, the Manatee County Sheriff's Office is on track to run out of storage space within five to seven years."

 

author

Lesley Dwyer

Lesley Dwyer is a staff writer for East County and a graduate of the University of South Florida. After earning a bachelor’s degree in professional and technical writing, she freelanced for the Sarasota Herald-Tribune. Lesley has lived in the Sarasota area for over 25 years.

Latest News

Sponsored Health Content

Sponsored Content