Chattanooga Times Free Press

Austin Hatcher Foundation to anchor $40 million project

- BY MIKE PARE STAFF WRITER

The Austin Hatcher Foundation is to anchor the commercial part of a planned $40 million redevelopm­ent of a former Chattanoog­a manufactur­ing site near downtown.

“It’s a pretty good deal for us and pretty good for them,” said Nashville developer Michael Kenner, who bought the former Rock-Tenn facility at 1601 Holtzclaw Ave.

Tracey Burke, executive director of the Chattanoog­a foundation that provides services to children with cancer and their families, said it has agreed to buy a 33,000-squarefoot building at the site.

“It’s a huge expansion for us,” she said. “We’re very excited.”

Plans are to expand the foundation’s services, such as adding occupation­al therapy, and grow others which it already offers, Burke said.

The developmen­t group’s planned makeover of the empty 8-acre manufactur­ing site into new commercial and residentia­l space will be one of the biggest projects

to date in Chattanoog­a’s hot East Main Street corridor.

Kenner said plans are to have 250,000 square feet of commercial space along with about 120 residentia­l units.

He said there’s enough pre-sale of loft-style townhomes to start work on the project, called Park Central Lofts. Sales for the initial units are expected to hit the low $300,000 range, Kenner said. Eventually, bigger units will go from $500,000 to $600,000 each, he said.

Also, for-lease apartments are planned for the tract, Kenner said.

A groundbrea­king for the project is scheduled for Aug. 15 at 10 a.m.

Officials at the foundation, currently located in the Fleetwood Building on East 11th Street, are looking forward to the move to the renovated space, said Burke.

“The building is in really nice shape,” she said about the foundation’s part of the project valued at approximat­ely $3.2 million.

The location is convenient to Erlanger hospital for the foundation’s patients who are still in treatment, Burke said.

“That’s critical,” she said. Burke said Kenner’s group, MiKen Developmen­t, is helping financiall­y with the project and the foundation is seeking partners to aid with constructi­on supplies.

She said about 10 people work at the foundation currently and plans are to increase that number to up to 15.

Burke said the site will hold an in-house auto garage to permit youth to work with tools.

“It’s good therapy,” Burke said. “It’s great for families to do. We do a lot of projects with autos.”

Also, plans are to have music therapy and to use part of the space for a “gallery of hope,” she said. It will hold artwork from those affected by cancer, Burke said.

Kenner said the redbrick buildings at the site date to the 1930s and he termed the structures “in beautiful shape.”

He said his company is the fourth largest in-fill developer in Nashville, though this is his first project in Chattanoog­a.

“We’re looking to develop a nice pipeline in Chattanoog­a,” Kenner said.

The East Main Street area from Central Avenue to Dodds Avenue is seeing a number of new developmen­ts with more planned.

 ?? RENDERINGS BY HEFFERLIN + KRONENBERG ARCHITECTS ?? A rendering shows an aerial view of the Holtzclaw Avenue commercial and residentia­l project. The site is to hold 250,000 square feet of commercial space and about 120 residentia­l units.
RENDERINGS BY HEFFERLIN + KRONENBERG ARCHITECTS A rendering shows an aerial view of the Holtzclaw Avenue commercial and residentia­l project. The site is to hold 250,000 square feet of commercial space and about 120 residentia­l units.

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