Chattanooga Times Free Press

Foundry Flats apartments sold for $7.5 million to Colorado group

Investors buy into growing Southside

- BY DAVE FLESSNER Contact Dave Flessner at dflessner@timesfree press.com or 423-757-6340.

Chattanoog­a’s emerging Southside apartment market is beginning to attract outside investors.

A new apartment complex built in the shadow of a pair of shuttered Chattanoog­a foundries has been purchased by a Colorado investment group eager to enter Chattanoog­a’s rental market. A real estate group organized by Bill Bivens, an accountant and real estate investor in the Denver suburb of Edgewater, Colorado, paid $7.55 million to acquire the 44-unit Foundry Flats apartments built near the former U.S. Pipe & Foundry and Wheland Foundry.

“Chattanoog­a is a great place with all that is happening— and even more that could happen — between downtown and Lookout Mountain this looks like a great longterm investment,” Biven said. “I wanted to get a toehold in Chattanoog­a because I just think Chattanoog­a is well positioned for growth. Nashville and Atlanta have gotten so big and expensive, but Chattanoog­a is that nice little town in between that has a lot of positive things going for it.”

Bivens said he and a handful of other investors collective­ly have bought more than 3,000 apartment units from Colorado to North Carolina and he said he is interested in possibly buying other rental property in Chattanoog­a.

“I absolutely love Chattanoog­a and once our kids are done with school I would love moving down there,” Bivens said.

The purchase by Biven’s Foundry Flats LLC is among more than $500 million of acquisitio­ns of Hamilton County rental properties made in the past six years by outside investment firms lured by Chattanoog­a’s appreciati­ng property values.

Foundry Flats, which was completed in May 2020, includes a pair of 3-story buildings that front on 25th and 26th Street, just off South Board Street and next to the KFC restaurant on South Broad. The former industrial site near the apartments is being eyed as a possible site for a new Chattanoog­a Lookouts baseball stadium, although no agreement for such a developmen­t has yet been inked.

Second Story Real Estate Management in Chattanoog­a, which began marketing and leasing Foundry Flats last summer, will continue to manage the apartments under the new owners. Foundry Flats is currently more than 80% occupied.

“It leased extremely well in some challengin­g times during the pandemic,” said Matt McGauley, CEO of Fidelity Trust Company and one of the developers of Foundry Flats. “We’re seeing a lot of people move to Chattanoog­a right now, especially from larger cities. That’s helping to lead to strong leasing and home sales.”

Foundry Flats includes studio and one-bedroom apartments, ranging in size from 429 square feet up to 703 square feet. The current monthly rent for the apartments ranges from $1,025 to $1,650 a month.

The apartments are among an array of new housing being built along the South Broad Street corridor.

Nashville developer Southeast Venture is planning a 180-unit apartment complex on a 4.4-acre tract near Chattanoog­a Creek near the new Publix being built on South Broad Street. Chattanoog­a developer Hiren Desai is also preparing to add 35 townhouses in the 2500 block of Cowart Street in the first phase of the proposed new developmen­t. And Off West 33rd Street near Chattanoog­a Christian School, a Knoxville developer, Neyland Apartment Associates, has plans for hundreds of new housing units in a new $75 million developmen­t.

In 2018, planners in the South Broad District envisioned a mixture of new housing and retail for the area just south of Interstate-24. A blueprint also included a multi-use minor league baseball park anchoring the area in the 141-acre U.S. Pipe/ Wheland Foundry site among other developmen­t.

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY DAVE FLESSNER ?? The Foundry Flats apartments are located on 25th and 26th streets off of South Broad Street on the Southside.
STAFF PHOTO BY DAVE FLESSNER The Foundry Flats apartments are located on 25th and 26th streets off of South Broad Street on the Southside.

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