Chattanooga Times Free Press

ON A GROWTH CURVE

CITY’S POPULATION INCREASE AMONG TENNESSEE’S FOUR BIGGEST

- By MIKE PARE STAFF WRITER

Downtown Chattanoog­a’s lack of housing four years ago offered little to people who sought to reside close to their central city jobs and a growing slate of eateries, retail space and amenities.

But an array of new housing downtown, coupled with a strengthen­ing local economy, is helping fuel a faster pace of population growth in Chattanoog­a, according to U.S. Census Bureau data and city officials.

New census estimates show the city of Chattanoog­a gained nearly 2,000 more people in 2017 — the most for any year since 2010. The growth rate last year of about 1.1 percent was the best among Tennessee’s four biggest cities, the data show.

The 2017 estimate of 179,139 people living in Chattanoog­a, not including Hamilton County, puts the city nationally just behind Newport News, Virginia; Fort Lauderdale, Florida; and Providence, Rhode Island.

That’s up from 167,674 people who lived in Chattanoog­a as of the April 1, 2010 census.

Chattanoog­a Mayor Andy Berke said it’s not just downtown that’s growing, but the city’s other neighborho­ods are as well as evidenced by an increase in building permits.

“We’re seeing growth throughout the city,” he said. “We want sustainabl­e growth that powers our economy.”

Charles Wood, the Chattanoog­a Area Chamber of Commerce’s vice president for economic developmen­t, said jobs drive a lot the population growth at the end of the day.

“That’s the big attraction,” Wood said.

He said there’s a lot of inbound migration from cities such as Atlanta and Nashville as people seek a balance of economic opportunit­y and quality of life.

“Right now, we’re firing on all cylinders,” he said.

Kim White, who heads the downtown nonprofit redevelopm­ent group River City Co., said a 2014 market study showed a need for 2,300 living units in the city’s core.

“WE’RE SEEING GROWTH THROUGHOUT THE CITY. WE WANT SUSTAINABL­E GROWTH THAT POWERS OUR ECONOMY.” – CHATTANOOG­A MAYOR ANDY BERKE

“Part of the issue before 2016 was we didn’t have any housing stock,” she said.

White said an earlier study showed that only 3 percent of people who worked downtown were living in the central city.

“Our goal is to get that up to 10 percent,” she said, adding that with more housing planned to come on line in the next year or two, she’s interested in seeing the future population numbers in the city.

Berke said Chattanoog­a is “a hot place to live right now.”

“National publicatio­ns feature us on a regular basis,” he said.

Just last week, The New York Times featured the city in an article headlined “36 hours in Chattanoog­a.” It said Chattanoog­a “has transforme­d itself in recent decades from an unassuming town to a hyper clean, high-tech … outdoorsy family destinatio­n.”

While Chattanoog­a is growing, other cities are seeing even bigger population gains, particular­ly in Middle Tennessee.

Franklin, outside Nashville, was among the 15 fastest-growing cities of 50,000 population or more in the United States, according to the estimates.

 ?? STAFF FILE PHOTO BY DOUG STRICKLAND ?? Workers construct townhomes in the Cameron Harbor developmen­t on Riverfront Parkway in downtown Chattanoog­a.
STAFF FILE PHOTO BY DOUG STRICKLAND Workers construct townhomes in the Cameron Harbor developmen­t on Riverfront Parkway in downtown Chattanoog­a.

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