The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

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Hawks lead owner Tony Ressler tells us how downtown could be transforme­d,

- By J. Scott Trubey strubey@ajc.com

Atlanta Hawks lead owner Tony Ressler said plans to redevelop downtown’s Gulch will transform the city, but the complex project requires not only billions of dollars in private funding, but also a substantia­l public investment to make it a reality.

Ressler, in his most expansive comments to date about the Gulch, told The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on that the Hawks and their developmen­t partners, CIM Group, are c ommitted to bringing billions in new investment downtown.

But to make the project feasible, he said the developers need a substantia­l portion of three decades of expected sales taxes and property taxes created by the developmen­t to build the infrastruc­ture necessary to serve the site and connect neighborho­ods across downtown. But it will take

“Do we want what we have? Or do we want to go forward to develop what I do think is 100 percent certain to be a positive to metro Atlanta and to downtown Atlanta more particular­ly?” Ressler said.

Downtown, Ressler said, could be much more vibrant, but the Gulch has been “an anchor” dragging on downtown revitaliza­tion.

Under the proposed structure, CIM and partners would fund constructi­on of the platform, and as parcels are developed would recoup their investment from sales and property tax growth.

The proposal to redevelop the Gulch has received pushback from members of the City Council and some neighborho­od groups concerned about the potential 10-figure commitment of public funds.

Council members have concerns about the long-term commitment of property taxes and potential impact on future budgets before the city sees the full financial windfall from future developmen­t.

Other critics have said CIM’s commitment for 20 percent of future residentia­l units to be reserved as affordable isn’t enough to help the city tackle its affordabil­ity challenge.

Ressler said jobs created by the tenants in the developmen­t — from corpora- tions taking up office space to retailers and restaurant­s on the street fronts — would create tens of thousands of jobs to uplift residents.

“Are the majority of Atlan- tans going to see an improve- ment in downtown Atlanta and does this become an engine of growth?” he said. “That is our bet. We believe that at our core.”

As proposed, the public funds would come from two sources, a portion of sales taxes generated on-site under a state designatio­n known as an Enterprise Zone, and through bonds backed by the Westside Tax Allocation District (TAD).

A TAD is a zone where government­s freeze property tax collection­s and use future expected increases in prop- erty values over many years to fund infrastruc­ture and other improvemen­ts in that zone.

Mayor Keisha Lance Bot- toms told council members last month that “the elephant in the room” is Amazon, which has Atlanta on its list of 20 communitie­s for its second headquarte­rs project and 50,000 jobs.

In an interview, Ressler said he did not know what Amazon’s plans are, but the developmen­t partners will proceed whether Amazon picks Atlanta or not.

“This is a developmen­t that does not require — by any stretch — Amazon,” said Ressler, whose partners started planning for developmen­t in the Gulch when they purchased the team in 2015, nearly two years before Amazon announced its HQ2 project.

“We actually planned, developed and thought through this entire developmen­t not even aware of the Amazon headquarte­rs search,” Ressler said. “That was never part of this discussion whatsoever.”

The governor’s office has been closely involved in the negotiatio­ns to redevelop the Gulch.

Georgia economic developmen­t officials have been trying to lure in other big fish to the developmen­t site beyond Amazon, and are quick to note that the state owns a giant chunk of the downtown Atlanta property and will carry a large financial risk with whatever project goes forward.

Gov. Nathan Deal’s top aide, Chris Riley, visited Atlanta City Hall on Friday to encourage council members to back the project — and pledge the state’s partnershi­p with City Hall and CIM moving forward on the developmen­t.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? A rendering from developer CIM Group shows a new plaza within the redevelope­d Gulch.
CONTRIBUTE­D A rendering from developer CIM Group shows a new plaza within the redevelope­d Gulch.
 ??  ?? Tony Ressler
Tony Ressler

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