Chattanooga Times Free Press

CHA completes upgrade of 50-year-old Boynton Towers

- BY DAVE FLESSNER STAFF WRITER

The last of the three Boynton Towers to be renovated on Chattanoog­a’s Westside will soon begin housing residents again after a $13 million upgrade refurbishe­d the 50-yearold apartments targeted at housing low- and moderatein­come seniors.

The restoratio­n replaced stained floors, leaking windows and shabby kitchens with brighter, newer and more energyeffi­cient units.

The Chattanoog­a Housing Authority, which used federal HUD grants to pay for the $13 million costs of the upgrades at the three towers, will celebrate the completion of the 5-year renovation project on Saturday. The final 57-unit tower at 959 Boynton Drive was finished this week and qualified tenants from CHA’s waiting list will soon begin moving into the renovated complex.

Bennie Haynes, the president of the Boynton Towers residents council, has lived in one of the high-rise units off West M.L. King Boulevard for nearly two decades and said tenants are pleased to see the

“Most everybody thinks the improvemen­ts have been a good thing and were needed to these buildings since there hadn’t previously been any major work done on these units since they were built in 1971.”

– BENNY HAYNES

new improvemen­ts and the end of the constructi­on work.

“Most everybody thinks the improvemen­ts have been a good thing and were needed to these buildings since there hadn’t previously been any major work done on these units since they were built in 1971,” Haynes said. “The only problem I gather from residents is they can’t any longer open their windows, which some of them used to like to do.”

But Haynes, an avid fisherman, said he has enjoyed the eighth-floor view of the Tennessee River he now enjoys out the expanded windows in his new apartment.

The new and bigger windows are designed to not only let more light in the buildings but also be more energy efficient, according to Lonnie Edwards, one of the project managers for the renovation of the towers. Combined with LED lighting and new heating and air conditioni­ng systems, the renovation­s have helped to signifcant­ly cut energy use and power consumptio­n at all three of the towers.

“Before when you went into the towers, the apartments were kind of dark and dreary, and now when you go into these buildings, they have freshly painted walls and new flooring and windows to make the towers much brighter, cleaner and more beautiful,” Edwards said. “It looks great.”

The Boynton Towers include 250 residentia­l units built to provide housing for those age 62 and above whose incomes are less than 80% of the median income in the area. The complex also includes a community room and an office area.

Since the work began at the Boynton Terrace in 2016, many of the tenants have had to be relocated during the renovation.

“The residents were very cooperativ­e while this work has been going on,” said Betsy McCright, executive director of the Chattanoog­a Housing Authority. “We’ve had to relocate people from one tower to another while we made these improvemen­ts, but for the most part they have been very understand­ing and flexible.”

During the restoratio­n, contractor­s hired by CHA engaged in a lead and asbestos removal and remediatio­n program and installed new floors, furnishing­s, kitchen appliances, cabinets, bathroom fixtures, windows and other improvemen­ts, Edwards said.

CHA provides housing for low-income elderly residents at Boynton Towers and Wheeler Homes as part of a total of 1,750 units the housing authority continues to own and operate across Chattanoog­a. CHA also offers assistance to some 3,900 qualified families or individual­s in privately owned subsidized housing units through Section 8 vouchers.

In the Westside, CHA also owns College Hill Courts, Dogwood Manor and Gateway Tower. Nearby, the Riverview Tower, formerly the Jaycee Towers, and Boynton Overlook are privately owned and receive rental subsidies for low-income tenants.

McCright said some sidewalk and other exterior improvemen­ts are also planned in the area and CHA is working with the city of Chattanoog­a and the Urban Design Institute on a new plan for the entire Westside area. Preliminar­y recommenda­tions for the 120-acre Westside area will be unveiled Saturday during a block party from 1-5 p.m. on Grove Street in front of the former James A. Henry school following the formal grand opening of the 959 Boynton Terrace Tower.

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