


Loyola University Maryland has sold its Timonium graduate center to a Hunt Valley-based limited liability company for $14 million, online property records show. With the sale, the university no longer has a footprint in the county — only in the city.
The sale to 2034 Greenspring LLC was finalized on Dec. 19, according to a statement from Helen T. Schneider, Loyola’s interim vice president for administration and associate vice president for facilities and risk management.
Most recently, the center has been used as a professional development training hub and office space for Baltimore County Public Schools. That arrangement will continue after the sale, said school district spokesperson Gboyinde Onijala in a statement. The lease, which began in June, lasts through 2027, Onijala said.
State records show the LLCformed in 2024 and registered at the same address as Hunt Valley’s Admiral Leasing, which leases cars, trucks and SUVs, according to its website. The company did not return a request for comment Wednesday.
Loyola opened the facility, located close to Interstate 83 on Greenspring Drive, in 1998 to offer graduate classes in Baltimore County.
In late May, the university halted academic programs at the center and moved those operations to its main campus in north Baltimore, citing growth on that campus and an increase in remote learning due to the coronavirus pandemic.
Administrative offices were also relocated, according to a June news release from the university.
“While Loyola works to consolidate space and achieve goals related to environmental sustainability, the University’s student body continues to grow,” read the news release. “Two of the largest incoming first-year classes in Loyola’s history enrolled in the past two years.”
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