The City of Atlanta has made an offer to buy the Morris Brown campus, Invest Atlanta officials confirmed Thursday.

The $12.6 million offer, made in conjunction with Friendship Baptist Church, reportedly proposes giving part of the 37-acre property to the church and allows financially strapped Morris Brown to retain its historic buildings. The college has filed for bankruptcy.

If the offer is accepted, Atlanta would take control of such amenities as the college’s stadium, officials said.

Invest Atlanta Managing Director Eloisa Klementich said under the proposal, Atlanta will spend $9 million. Friendship Baptist, one of two churches that sold its property to make way for the new Atlanta Falcons stadium, will contribute $3.6 million. Invest Atlanta is the city’s economic development agency.

Klementich said the city has many reasons for pursuing the property, including helping to redevelop the nearby communities and the Martin Luther King Jr. Drive corridor. The deal would also allow Morris Brown to continue offering educational programs.

“It’s an opportunity to make sure there’s a comprehensive and cohesive strategy around what’s happening in this very important part of town, making sure we’re supporting jobs and economic development as much as we can,” she said. “That’s the vision for us at this point.”

Mayor Kasim Reed said in a statement Thursday that partnering with Friendship allows both parties a “critical stake” in the revitalization of the area.

“If we succeed in this bid, it will bring much-needed stability and cohesiveness to these communities as we embark on a determined effort to spur job creation, civic engagement and business investment to the historic neighborhoods of Vine City and English Avenue,” Reed’s statement read.

Morris Brown president Stanley Pritchett could not be reached for comment Thursday.

Atlanta officials are playing a role in the $1.3 billion Atlanta Falcons stadium, including issuing $200 million in bonds backed by hotel-motel taxes for its construction. The stadium is within walking distance of the Morris Brown campus.

Invest Atlanta has also committed $15 million from the Westside tax allocation district for redevelopment projects in the area.

Facing about $30 million in debt, Morris Brown filed for bankruptcy in August 2012. Bids to purchase the college, near downtown by Northside and Martin Luther King Jr. Drives, were due Wednesday. Morris Brown hired brokerage firm Jones Lang LaSalle to market the property.

Those agents will review the bids, in conjunction with the African Methodist Episcopal Church, which has loaned the college millions to pay its debts, and Clark Atlanta University, which has a claim on a 17 of the acres.

If more than one qualified bid is received, an auction would be held May 12 at the college, according to bid procedures filed in bankruptcy court. Anyone objecting to the sale would have 10 days after the auction to file with the court, and a hearing on the sale and any objection would be held May 29.

The college hopes to move fast. Bidders were asked to be able to finalize the deal by May 31, pending court approval.

Friendship Baptist has long been interested in the property. Lloyd Hawk, chairman of Friendship’s board of trustees, said the combined deal made sense for both Atlanta and the church.

“We share a common interest in what happens on the MLK corridor and the community in general,” he said.

It’s unclear whether Mount Vernon Baptist Church, the other church relocated for the football stadium, has made an offer on the land.

Morris Brown has been trying to sell its property for a year, according to court documents filed in March, but two previous deals fell through.

Atlanta and Morris Brown have had on-again, off-again talks about buying the property. The college rejected a $10 million offer from the city in 2013, but through Jones Lang LaSalle reached out to Mayor Kasim Reed in March to revive talks.

At the time, Reed indicated interest.

“Let me be very clear in my thinking about Morris Brown. There’s getting ready to be a $1.2 billion investment on that corridor,” he said, referring to the future Falcons stadium. “It makes sense for the city to control a strategic asset to be developed with the strength of the community in mind.”

Falcons owner Arthur Blank has since said construction costs have climbed to nearly $1.3 billion.

A spokeswoman for the Atlanta Falcons has said the organization doesn’t plan to make an offer on the property.