The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Gwinnett gets one step closer to owning site

- By Tyler Estep tyler.estep@ajc.com

Gwinnett County is one step closer to owning the Norcross-area property once pitched as the possible site of a sprawling movie production campus.

Gwinnett’s county com- missioners voted Tuesday to authorize up to $36.5 million in bonds for the purchase of 100-plus acres at the OFS Brightwave Solutions site, just off I-85 near Jimmy Carter Boulevard. County offi- cials plan to market the prop- erty to developers in hopes of spurring new growth in the area, which they believe is one of Gwinnett’s most important corridors.

The property also could be the future home of Gwin- nett’s first-ever MARTA rail station, should voters approve a referendum scheduled for March. The county’s transit developmen­t plan has identified the I-85 and Jimmy Carter Boulevard area as the ideal spot for a future “multimodal hub.”

Commission Chairman Charlotte Nash said she envisions both transit and “an urban-style mixed-use developmen­t” on the site.

“We are very excited to be at this point,” she said.

OFS, a fiber optic manufac- turer, plans to remain on part of the site but has been mar- keting the rest of the prop- erty for several years. Failed proposals for the property have ranged from a casino to a campus that would’ve included everything from sound stages and a hotel to a film school.

Gwinnett and OFS ratified a purchase-sale agreement in May, and the county is expected to finish its due dil- igence and finalize the sale in December. The next offi- cial step was taken Tuesday.

The Urban Redevelopm­ent Agency, comprised of all five members of the county’s Board of Commission­ers, held a special called meeting to vote on issuing the bonds necessary for the purchase. Then, in their role as commission­ers, members voted to finalize the authorizat­ion.

Both votes passed 4-1. Commission­er John Heard was the lone “no” vote each time.

“I felt that government has its place, and being in the developmen­t process is not one [role] we should take,” he said afterward.

Gwinnett’s purchase would include OFS’ Building 50 — a 422,000 square foot facility that, despite the failure of the much larger movie campus previously proposed by a private developer, is still being used for film production. Officials have said that the revenues collected from the continuanc­e of such proj- ects should cover the coun- ty’s annual debt service of roughly $2.5 million.

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