Chattanooga Times Free Press

M.L. King growth

‘Big Nine’ Building slated to return to downtown site Apartment, retail project is second for developers

- BY MIKE PARE STAFF WRITER

‘Big Nine’ nickname returning to East M.L. King Boulevard

The “Big Nine” nickname is returning to East M.L. King Boulevard.

Chattanoog­a developers Bobby Joe Adamson and Chris Curtis are joining up to raise their second new apartment and retail structure on the key downtown corridor, which they’ll call the Big Nine Building.

Their newest project at 621 M.L. King Blvd. will rise four stories and house 41 apartments. Its name will reflect the road’s history — it was long known as Ninth Street and served as a thriving center of black commerce and entertainm­ent.

The $3 million to $4 million building, that will also hold ground-floor commercial space, is to start going up in about six months and open in 2020, the developers said.

Earlier this year, Adamson and Curtis started constructi­on on the Gateway Building just a couple blocks west at M.L. King and Douglas Street. That structure, also four levels, will hold 31 apartments and ground-floor retail when it opens next year.

Adamson, who is black, and Curtis, who is white, said they want to show that people of different races can work together.

“The corridor is evolving,” said Curtis. “What we’re trying to do is shepherd that.”

Adamson’s company, Adamson Developmen­t, and Curtis’ business, Riverside Developmen­t, each won requests for proposals for the individual sites and decided to pool their resources and knowledge for the two projects.

Adamson said he’s trying to leave a legacy for people who “look like me,” recalling that the corridor for many years was a business and entertainm­ent hub for blacks.

“The corridor is evolving. What we’re trying to do is shepherd that.”

– DEVELOPER CHRIS CURTIS ON THE M.L. KING PARTNERSHI­P WITH BOBBY JOE ADAMSON

Long before it was M.L. King Boulevard, black-owned retail shops, offices and entertainm­ent venues were clustered on the strip and the area bustled.

Adamson recalled that when he was a teen, he would come to thenNinth Street to eat at its restaurant­s because he wouldn’t be served in other parts of downtown.

But when businesses began opening their doors to all races and traffic patterns changed, that put the boulevard at a disadvanta­ge and a lot of the commerce died off.

For decades, efforts to revive East M.L. King saw mixed results.

However, with downtown’s core seeing a rebirth, coupled with an expansion in the University of Tennessee at Chattanoog­a’s housing footprint and the effect of the city’s Innovation District, a renaissanc­e appears to be taking hold.

Adamson said he has already put up new housing in the M.L. King area and there’s a need for more.

Curtis is the developer of Douglas Heights, the $41 million, seven-story student housing complex on Douglas Street just off M.L. King that opened in 2016.

Curtis said rents for apartments in the Gateway Building will start at about $800 monthly.

“We’re trying to make it affordable,” he said. They see both buildings appealing to young profession­als, students or anyone interested in that part of downtown.

One factor that’s making building easier in the corridor is that there has been a consolidat­ion of tracts, Curtis said, which creates both a willingnes­s and the possibilit­y to put in projects.

“A lot of parcels were chopped up,” he said.

Adamson’s son, Charles, cited spill over from the Innovation District as helping growth. That 140-acre district in downtown’s core was created in 2015 as a place where entreprene­urs, tech-based startups, and business incubators can mesh and create a so-called innovation ecosystem.

Both Curtis and Bobby Joe Adamson, who has sons Charles and Jeffery and daughter Brenda Jean Adamson Cothran involved in the business, foresee more growth in the area over the next decade even after the addition of hundreds of other apartment units downtown in the past couple of years.

“It doesn’t have enough buildings,” Adamson said.

Curtis said there’s room for 100 to 150 residentia­l units with a need for more services.

Also, he said, there could be a parking garage raised in the area, though that may need public help.

Contact Mike Pare at mpare@timesfreep­ress.com or 423-757-6318. Follow him on Twitter @MikePareTF­P.

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY TIM BARBER ?? Developers Bobby Joe Adamson, left, and Chris Curtis, right, stand with Jeffery Adamson, back center, as they talk about their new four-story building that will be erected at the corner of M.L. King Boulevard and Douglas Street.
STAFF PHOTO BY TIM BARBER Developers Bobby Joe Adamson, left, and Chris Curtis, right, stand with Jeffery Adamson, back center, as they talk about their new four-story building that will be erected at the corner of M.L. King Boulevard and Douglas Street.
 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY TIM BARBER ?? Developers Bobby Joe Adamson, near center, and Chris Curtis, right, talk about a four-story project they plan on calling the Big Nine Building. Jeffery Adamson stands with them at left.
STAFF PHOTO BY TIM BARBER Developers Bobby Joe Adamson, near center, and Chris Curtis, right, talk about a four-story project they plan on calling the Big Nine Building. Jeffery Adamson stands with them at left.

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