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Historic
Old North Knoxville
On November 8, 2000, members of the Old
North Knoxville neighborhood met with Mayor Victor Ashe, City
Director of Development Doug Berry (who has since resigned), City Council representative Larry Cox,
and head of codes enforcement, Ken Flynn. The lunchtime meeting took
place at the Steamboat restaurant. This meeting was reported on in
the November 30 - December 6 Metro Pulse, in an article entitled
"Central Concerns," which is duplicated below:

North Central Avenue can feel like a time
machine.
As you head north on the street across
Broadway, you encounter block after block of low-slung buildings, crammed
together in a way that feels both urban and old-fashioned. Some of
them are vacant, but many are occupied by small independent businesses,
ranging from small car lots to sandwich shops to general
merchandisers. There's a 1950s-era ice cream joint on the left, just
north of Baxter Avenue, and a string of funky antique dealers on the
right.
Without a big-box retailer in sight, the
area seems to have avoided both the promises and problems of late 20th
century commerce. It's a stubbornly neighborhood-oriented corridor,
serving the locals and not much concerned with the heavy traffic on the
parallel Interstate 275. But that might be about to change.
Doug Berry, director of development for
the city of Knoxville, says the city has started a comprehensive study of
the area to go along with its plans for redeveloping the Coster Shop rail
yards that lie between Central and the interstate. "It's a
profile of the physical characteristics of [the] existing area," he
says of the study, which is partly funded by the federal Economic
Development Administration. "Average lot sizes, their uses, the
types and sizes of structures and their conditions" are included, he
says.
And the roadway itself is being accessed,
which is what has some local residents talking. In a meeting with
residents of the adjacent Old
North Knoxville* neighborhood a few weeks ago, Berry mentioned
that the study could lead to recommendations for widening pieces of
Central Avenue. That prompted speculation about the impact of such a
project, which could include displacement of some existing
businesses. [Note from webmaster: click here
to see map of area being discussed.]
But Berry says there's no cause for
alarm. "There is absolutely no money anywhere to proceed with a
widening," he says. "We are basically going to be doing a
methodical analysis of the transportation network. We've to look at
all these roads and how they need to function."
The city hopes to spend about $5.5
million to acquire the Coster Shop property and clean up environmental
problems on the site. Berry is lining up potential tenants including
Eagle Distributing, which plans to relocate there from its current site on
Radford Place. Because the Coster yards are so visible from the
interstate, Berry says the project would send a signal about Knoxville's
dedication to inner-city redevelopment.
But it would also affect surrounding
neighborhoods, probably by increasing truck traffic to and from the
interstate via mostly narrow streets. Berry says some intersections
may need widening. But he also hopes the EDA study will identify
improvements the city can make to help local residents as well -- by
routing traffic off neighborhood streets, for example, and by identifying
small commercial properties that could attract new investors.
The EDA study is a required step toward
qualifying for federal development funds for the Coster project.
Berry hopes to get $1.1 million in EDA money for the site. The study
should begin in January and be completed by the end of March.
--Jesse Fox Mayshark
*The Metro Pulse actually reported
that it was the Oakwood neighborhood that met with Doug Berry, but
when contacted for a clarification, Jesse Fox Mayshark corrected that
statement, saying that it was indeed the Nov. 8 Old North Knoxville
meeting that he and Berry discussed.
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