Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

UA to put 2 parcels, 130 acres on market

- STACY RYBURN NWA DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE

FAYETTEVIL­LE — Two large pieces of property — Lewis Soccer Fields, which the city of Fayettevil­le has used for youth teams and other programs since 1993, as well as a wooded area off Old Wire Road — will be sold.

Aspiring builders could put a cottage on the outskirts of the college town or an apartment complex near an elementary school if they buy either of the properties for sale by the University of Arkansas, Fayettevil­le.

The Lewis fields, consisting of 27 acres across the street from Asbell Elementary School, has been appraised for $4.1 million,

or about $150,000 an acre.

The 103 wooded acres off Old Wire Road, east of Joyce Boulevard and Crossover Road, has an appraised value of more than $2 million, which comes to about $20,000 an acre.

Money generated from the land sales would go toward university laboratory needs. About 40 percent of the new Don Tyson Center for Agricultur­al Sciences, which has a dedication ceremony set for November, is unfinished. The Crop, Soil and Environmen­tal Science facilities date back 70 years and need an upgrade, said Mark Cochran, vice president for agricultur­e.

The administra­tion of the University of Arkansas System Division of Agricultur­e wants to handle the sales inhouse and will wait at least three months before formally listing the properties, Cochran said.

Administra­tors want to sell the properties at the appraised value, Cochran said. There are no restrictio­ns or requiremen­ts in the deeds, so the university is free to do what it wants with the properties.

Two parcels make up the entire Old Wire Road tract. The H.C. Schmieding Produce Co. profit sharing plan, an Arkansas trust, sold the wooded acreage to the university’s board in 1975 for $150,000, according to the Division of Agricultur­e. Schmieding Produce has its headquarte­rs in Springdale.

The agricultur­e division wanted to do fruit research on the property at one point but it didn’t work out, said Mary Hightower, division spokesman.

The city began leasing the Lewis property in 1993 as an exchange. The university allowed the city to put soccer fields on the 27.5 acres it owns across from Asbell. In turn, the city provided fire service to the university’s agricultur­al experiment station, which at the time sat outside the city but has since been annexed.

Then-Mayor Fred Hanna, in his 1994 state of the city address, touted the deal as an example of the good working relationsh­ip between the city and the university. The 25-year lease expires June 30, 2018.

The city’s Parks and Recreation Department has long planned to move youth soccer and other programs from Lewis to the Kessler Mountain Regional Park. About 1,600 players participat­e in the soccer program.

City officials agreed to terminate the lease at the end of this year, said Connie Edmonston, parks director. The last soccer games of the season at Lewis Soccer Fields wrapped up last week.

Justin Eichmann, Fayettevil­le School Board president, said he wasn’t aware the land was up for sale. The School Board hasn’t discussed the possibilit­y of purchasing it.

Eichmann, like many other parents in Fayettevil­le, has fond memories of his children playing soccer at Lewis. He played there himself.

But, Eichmann said, you can’t knock the view at the regional park’s new fields.

“It’s kind of bitterswee­t. I’ve been to I don’t know how many — hundreds — of games there at Lewis,” he said. “It’s always packed in a lot of people. It seemed like on Saturday mornings every hour there would be a new shift of parents.”

Angie Coleman said her son Caleb, 11, and daughters Sydney, 9, and Siena Quinn, 7, played and practiced at Lewis for years. With no benches, parents mixed and mingled. Coleman said she made a lot of friends there.

“It’s a really good social scene,” she said. “We were all kind of in the same boat.”

Division of Agricultur­e officials haven’t decided what to do with the land between the time the lease expires and a new owner takes over, Hightower said.

“We’ll develop a plan for the land closer to the time when the City of Fayettevil­le is finished with the parcel,” she said.

The Division of Agricultur­e won’t have to do anything with the city or county government­s to sell the land. However, developmen­t at either location likely would have to meet certain requiremen­ts at both levels.

Mud Creek runs through the Old Wire tract, and a portion of the land is in a floodplain, so a permit would be required to develop there, said Nathan Crouch, senior planner with Washington County.

The area falls under a dual jurisdicti­on because it’s within Fayettevil­le’s planning area, which stretches about a mile outside the city. The county regulates developmen­t in the planning area, but changes such as a land split or property line adjustment would go to the city first, then the county, Crouch said.

The Lewis tract is under a zoning that lifts many of the city’s typical requiremen­ts and guidelines because of the university’s status as a public institutio­n, according to the city’s code. Government buildings, hospitals and churches also fall in the institutio­nal category.

The zoning remains the same when the land sells, but a developer would almost assuredly request a rezoning from the city, said Quin Thompson, city planner.

The city’s 2030 land use map puts the Lewis property under the “non-municipal government” category, but everything around it except for the school has a residentia­l neighborho­od classifica­tion. That designatio­n can mean anything from single-family homes to large apartment complexes to a mix of commercial and residentia­l, Thompson said.

“The main legal test for appropriat­e zoning is compatibil­ity with surroundin­g properties,” he said. “So obviously putting an industrial zone in there is not likely to meet that test by any argument I could think of.”

Neither property serves a productive use for education or research, according to the Division of Agricultur­e. Both pieces of land have tax-exempt status, according to the Washington County assessor’s office.

“It’s time, I think, for both of these properties,” Hightower said. “They go back into the tax base, and it’ll benefit the community.”

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