The Commercial Appeal

Shouting, tension precede Thornwood plan approval

- Corinne S Kennedy Memphis Commercial Appeal | USA TODAY NETWORK - TENNESSEE BRAD

After another lively Germantown Board of Mayor and Aldermen meeting marked by shouting, parliament­ary interjecti­ons and a near physical altercatio­n, the board approved an amended outline plan for the Thornwood developmen­t.

The approval paves the way for a second hotel and fewer apartment units in the often controvers­ial smart growth project’s closing phases.

The plan was ultimately approved 3-1, with Alderman Dean Massey voting no. Alderman Rocky Janda was absent.

Approval followed a heated debate in

Mark Russell is the executive editor of The Commercial Appeal. A 34year industry veteran, Russell has worked at

The CA for five years and previously worked as an editor and reporter in Orlando, Florida, Cleveland, Ohio, and Pittsburgh. He lives in Colliervil­le. Contact him at mark.russell@commercial­appeal.com or follow him on Twitter, @Markrussel­l44. which Mayor Mike Palazzolo turned off Massey’s microphone multiple times, resulting in the alderman shouting over the other members of the board to voice points. Massey, who lives near the developmen­t, said he had heard concerns from neighbors about the density and “transient nature” of the project.

He also accused the city administra­tion of lying to the public and called Alderwoman Mary Anne Gibson a puppet. That led Gibson and Alderman Forrest Owens to interject and appeal to the mayor to restrict his comments to the specifics of the outline plan as he continued to speak.

Earlier in the meeting, Palazzolo turned off Massey’s microphone after a terse exchange on a different agenda item, which prompted Massey to call the mayor a clown. City administra­tor Patrick Lawton threw his glasses down in exasperati­on at the comment and Massey got up from his seat and marched across the room to confront Lawton.

Lawton put his hand up between himself and Massey to indicate he did not want to speak with him. After returning to his seat, Massey said Lawton had made irritated facial expression­s in his direction.

Massey left the meeting after the vote on the Thornwood outline plan,

GERMANTOWN WEEKLY:

saying the discussion had been a disgrace. He did not vote on the remaining agenda item.

Thornwood developmen­t plans

The outline plan was originally approved by the board in 2014. The new plan calls for a second hotel and a decrease in the number of multifamil­y housing units within the developmen­t in the future. No changes will be made to the amount of office and retail space or the amount of open space. The planning commission unanimousl­y approved the new outline plan in February.

Alderman Scott Sanders said he was not a fan of smart growth overall, but supported the new plan for one key reason.

“This amendment decreases the number of apartments that will be allowed in this project by 114,” he said.

He added that the hotel use would provide additional tax revenue for the city and possibly lead to less traffic than housing units.

Plans for the 114-room Marriott-towneplace Suites hotel was unanimousl­y approved by the planning commission last week. The five-story, 83,000-plussquare-foot building will include space on the first floor for retail and commercial uses.

Set on 1.2 acres at the corner of Neshoba Road and Owens Manor Avenue, the new hotel will include a rooftop event space as well as surface-level and undergroun­d parking.

The current hotel in the developmen­t, a Hampton Inn and Suites, is often fully booked, even midweek, developer Spence Ray told the planning commission. He added that the nightly room rate was raised to more than $200 due to demand, well above the nightly rates at other nearby hotels.

Ray said Monday that he understood concerns about density but added that a certain mass of people had to be living or staying within the developmen­t for all the pieces – office, retail, restaurant­s, entertainm­ent and more – to succeed.

“You pick up not only less vehicular traffic, you increase your sales tax, you increase your property tax,” he said. “It’s almost like a living organism.”

 ?? VEST/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL ?? Thornwood developmen­t in Germantown in January 2019.
VEST/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL Thornwood developmen­t in Germantown in January 2019.
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 ?? THE CITY OF GERMANTOWN ?? This rendering shows what a future Marriott-towneplace Suites in Germantown could look like. The hotel would be the second within the Thornwood mixed-use developmen­t.
THE CITY OF GERMANTOWN This rendering shows what a future Marriott-towneplace Suites in Germantown could look like. The hotel would be the second within the Thornwood mixed-use developmen­t.
 ?? THE CITY OF GERMANTOWN ?? This rendering shows what a future Marriott-towneplace Suites in Germantown could look like. The hotel would be the second within the Thornwood mixed-use developmen­t.
THE CITY OF GERMANTOWN This rendering shows what a future Marriott-towneplace Suites in Germantown could look like. The hotel would be the second within the Thornwood mixed-use developmen­t.
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