Chattanooga Times Free Press

Animal hospital, townhomes set for South Broad District

- BY MIKE PARE STAFF WRITER

A veterinary hospital is moving to the South Broad District to a site where plans also call for townhomes as the redevelopi­ng Chattanoog­a neighborho­od sees an array of new investment.

Veterinary Care and Specialty Group, currently located in St. Elmo, plans to build a new, 24-hour animal hospital at 3201 Broad St. where a Long John Silver’s restaurant operated for many years, said Ben Berry of Berry Engineers.

While the nearly 15,000square-foot animal hospital will face Broad Street, up to 11 townhomes will be raised in the rear of the tract toward St. Elmo Avenue, he said.

Berry said Claudia Pullen, who is putting up a large-scale mixed-used project in St. Elmo, also is connected to the Broad Street location. Her husband, Dr. Billy Pullen, opened Veterinary Care and Specialty Group in 2016.

Berry said the two projects are unrelated, though there was a concept of trying to incorporat­e the new animal hospital into the estimated

$21 million St. Elmo developmen­t, which includes residentia­l and commercial space and a parking garage.

But, he said, the demand on the animal hospital is “an immediate one.”

“They were out of space,” Berry said. “St. Elmo is long-term and will take a while to get finished.”

Chattanoog­a architect Bob Franklin said the animal hospital will be built up against the

street in compliance with the Urban General Commercial zoning existing in the district.

“It’s going to create the streetscap­e UGC intends,” Berry said.

Franklin cited the growth in the district that’s basically bordered by St. Elmo to the south and Interstate 24 to the north with Broad Street serving as its spine.

Earlier this year, the developer of a new Publix supermarke­t nearby off Broad Street on a site that held the Mt. Vernon Restaurant for decades won a bruising zoning battle. George Chase of the developmen­t group Alliance Realty Services said that plan meets the intent of UGC zoning and is walkable and bikeable.

Berry said he expects constructi­on of the animal hospital to begin within 45 days. Building of the townhomes, which will face the current terminus of the Riverwalk, should start shortly thereafter, he said.

The townhomes’ look will continue the style and quality of those currently under developmen­t nearby by Collier Constructi­on, Berry said.

“This will be along those same lines,” he said. Berry said he didn’t know the price points for the townhomes or the dollar cost of the entire developmen­t.

“It’s going to create the streetscap­e UGC intends.”

— ARCHITECT BOB FRANKLIN ON THE PLANNED ANIMAL HOSPITAL

Also off Broad Street, new housing and commercial space is planned for a tract at West 33rd Street.

Hundreds of townhouses, apartments or condos are slated for the 15.6-acre parcel across from Chattanoog­a Christian School. Up to about 450 housing units could go on the site, according to planning documents submitted to the city.

Also, the owners of the Wheland and U.S. Pipe properties within the South Broad District are looking at redevelopi­ng that property, with a potential new Chattanoog­a Lookouts multi-use entertainm­ent venue serving as the centerpiec­e.

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

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY MIKE PARE ?? A lot holding a former Long John Silver’s restaurant off Broad Street will become the site of an animal hospital and townhomes.
STAFF PHOTO BY MIKE PARE A lot holding a former Long John Silver’s restaurant off Broad Street will become the site of an animal hospital and townhomes.

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