Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Conway mayor gets flak on idea for pool

Purchasing old factory raises concern

- DEBRA HALE-SHELTON

CONWAY — The City Council is set to decide June 23 whether to buy a former mobile-home manufactur­ing facility to convert into a community center — a proposal that has evoked some concerns among leaders of two civic organizati­ons.

Mayor Tab Townsell has proposed paying $3.5 million for the 22-acre site, which includes a 5-acre, vacant building sitting across Dave Ward Drive from a Wal-Mart Supercente­r on Conway’s west side.

During a City Council meeting last week, aldermen discussed what they would prefer to include in the facility if they buy it and informally decided against an ice hockey rink and a health club.

The city has hired Nabholz Constructi­on Services to study such questions as whether the building can be retrofitte­d to include a large pool.

Townsell said he would, however, like to see an indoor aquatic center that features an Olympic-size pool with bleachers, tennis courts, a turf field for sports, a climbing wall and rentable meeting and party rooms. Other ideas aldermen liked, he said, were an indoor water park, an indoor playground and a therapy pool where people also could learn to swim.

Townsell said the monetary advantage of buying the Spirit Homes land instead of building an aquatic center and other recreation­al facilities from scratch is that the

city would need a large piece of property for such a center.

“We can do something very similar with Spirit Homes for probably less money,” he said. “But even if it’s equal money, the benefit of Spirit Homes is [that] we get so much more building to do other things with.”

He said zoning issues can become problemati­c when building a recreation­al facility from scratch.

And if the area is already zoned for commercial use, he said, “the raw land is priced at a point that it’s more expensive for raw land than this is or land with a building.”

Spirit Homes once used the now-vacant building to manufactur­e mobile homes. Cavalier Home Builders LLC now owns the property.

Townsell called a swimming pool “the single missing, gaping hole in our park system in Conway.”

Even so, the mayor acknowledg­ed that his proposal has “absolutely” met more opposition than he had expected — some of which is focused more on the location than the idea of a pool.

Since April, former mayoral aide Jamie Gates, senior vice president of the Conway Area Chamber of Commerce and the Conway Developmen­t Corp., has twice emailed Townsell and aldermen with questions about the proposed purchase.

In an April 14 email, Gates said the chamber’s executive committee had voted “to encourage the city to slow down the decision-making process on a city pool and specifical­ly purchasing Spirit Homes.”

Almost a month later, aldermen voted for a 45-day feasibil- ity study, which Townsell had initially opposed.

In the email, Gates added, “The chamber’s preferred course for city government is to evaluate alternativ­es and opportunit­ies citywide to meet the goals establishe­d in Conway 2025,” a long-term, strategic plan for the city.

“This includes water park amenities, but not at the cost of almost all other parks goals. We can support a city pool and/or other amenities and not support the purchase of this property,” Gates added.

Gates said committee members thought the city should look at other locations.

In a May 12 email, Gates said the board of directors of the economy-focused Conway Developmen­t Corp. and the chamber’s executive committee had met to discuss the issue. Questions included projected operation costs and what alternativ­e sites have been considered.

In an email reply to Gates, Townsell wrote, “You do know if your organizati­ons wish more informatio­n on the Spirit Homes opportunit­y, all they have to do is invite me.

“I have not yet received an invitation to any meeting and the Chamber Executive Board has met twice. I even had to ask for the opportunit­y to speak to the main Chamber Board meeting which many of the Executive Board members did not attend,” he said.

“Again, I see the main Chamber Board is silent on the issue.”

Townsell said later that he thought the groups’ questions were “disingenuo­us.”

“It presuppose­s in my mind a slant against” proceeding with the project “from the start,” he said.

Townsell, Gates and Brady Lacy, the chamber’s president and chief operating officer, agreed in separate interviews that the organizati­ons normally work well together.

“Conway is a much better place to live and do business because of his [Townsell’s] leadership and the council’s,” Lacy said Friday.

Of the mayor’s Spirit Homes proposal, Lacy said, “We haven’t taken a position opposing it. We’re asking questions that we think are just important to consider and are hearing from people in the business community.

“I don’t know anyone I’ve talked to that isn’t supportive of a public pool,” Lacy added. “I think our question is, ‘Do you need to buy a 220,000-squarefoot building to put a pool in, or should you just look at a pool?’”

“The people that we’re talking to are concerned that we’re going to buy a big building and then try to fill it up with things versus looking at what are the recreation­al offerings that we want as a community and then deciding how to do those things,” Lacy said. “The question that some people have is [whether] Spirit Homes is the right spot” and what other options might there be.

 ?? Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/STEPHEN B. THORNTON ?? Conway Mayor Tab Townsell has proposed paying $3.5 million for a 22-acre site that includes the 5-acre former Spirit Homes building to be turned into a community center.
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/STEPHEN B. THORNTON Conway Mayor Tab Townsell has proposed paying $3.5 million for a 22-acre site that includes the 5-acre former Spirit Homes building to be turned into a community center.
 ??  ?? Townsell
Townsell

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