Chattanooga Times Free Press

$100 million medical office campus proposed in Ooltewah

23.4 ACRES NEAR HUNTER ROAD COULD HOLD 13 BUILDINGS, A BOUTIQUE HOTEL

- BY MIKE PARE / STAFF WRITER

A proposed $100 million medical office campus in Ooltewah won rezoning approval from a Chattanoog­a planning panel Monday.

A 23.4-acre tract near Hunter Road and Interstate 75 could hold 13 medical buildings and a boutique hotel for patients to stay in before and after procedures, said Joseph Ingram of the Chattanoog­a engineerin­g firm Ingram, Gore & Associates.

“We’re getting a lot of push from doctors wanting to come out here,” Ingram said. “There’s a lot of push for this type of developmen­t.”

The Chattanoog­a-Hamilton County Regional Planning Commission recommende­d rezoning the property from R-1 residentia­l to C-2 commercial with conditions restrictin­g it to a medical office campus with a pharmacy.

The City Council is slated to take up the proposed rezoning Aug. 13 for final approval.

City Councilwom­an Carol Berz termed the project “fabulous.”

“This is going to be plastic surgery, upscale day surgery with an overnight place,” she said, adding that the site also could hold park space.

She said a roadblock had been finding the right zoning, noting she didn’t want the land to be zoned “unfettered C-2.”

John Bridger, the Regional Planning Agency’s executive director, recommende­d C-2 with the conditions to control the site’s use to the medical office campus, and Planning Commission member and City Councilman Darrin Ledford offered a motion

“WE’RE GETTING A LOT OF PUSH FROM DOCTORS WANTING TO COME OUT HERE.” – Joseph Ingram of the engineerin­g firm Ingram, Gore & Associates

to approve the zoning.

“We can work out the details,” Ledford said.

Ingram noted at the planning commission meeting that there was no one opposing the proposed campus.

“You see from the lack of opposition that this is the first plan [for the site] where neighbors haven’t lost their minds,” he said about prior concerns over new developmen­t and traffic in the area.

The office buildings would be one or two stories in height, Ingram said. Individual practices would buy the lots, he said, citing specialtie­s such as orthopedic­s, plastic surgery, orthodonti­cs and others.

Likely one of the buildings would hold an inside pharmacy, Ingram said.

“We’ve got a lot of interest,” he said, predicting the proposed developmen­t could go over $100 million when fully built out.

The Ooltewah College dale area is one of the fast-growing areas of Hamilton County. Among Tennessee’s 100 largest cities, Collegedal­e was second only to the Nashville suburb of Mount Juliet in its growth rate from 2010 to 2016.

Ingram said work on the planned site likely wouldn’t start for about two years as a lot of permitting would be involved to build the campus.

A 20-unit boutique hotel could go on the parcel furthest away from nearby residentia­l, Ingram said.

While the medical office campus could be visible from nearby I-75, he said, the aim is to keep it “subtle, calm …. Campus is a good designatio­n. I’d almost want to gate it so it’s not a lover’s lane.”

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

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 ?? GRAPHIC BY INGRAM, GORE & ASSOCIATE / ILLUSTRATI­ON BY MATT MCCLANE ?? A site plan shows a proposed medical office campus near Hunter Road and I-75.
GRAPHIC BY INGRAM, GORE & ASSOCIATE / ILLUSTRATI­ON BY MATT MCCLANE A site plan shows a proposed medical office campus near Hunter Road and I-75.

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