Chattanooga Times Free Press

Feds release court location short list

Trio of downtown sites being considered for new courthouse

- BY DAVE FLESSNER

Part of TVA’s power headquarte­rs, the current Lookouts stadium site and a downtown property just a block away from the current federal courthouse site in Chattanoog­a are on a short list of potential sites to build a new federal courthouse.

The U.S. General Services Administra­tion announced Tuesday the three sites are under considerat­ion for the potential location for the 186,000-square-foot federal building, which will be the biggest building erected downtown in more than a decade and could help shape the future of Chattanoog­a’s central city.

Congress has authorized $218.4 million for a replacemen­t for the Joel Solomon Federal Building on Georgia Avenue, which was constructe­d more than 90 years ago and no longer meets today’s security and accessibil­ity standards for federal courthouse­s.

Kevin Kerns, the acting regional administra­tor for the GSA in Atlanta, said in a statement Wednesday the agency is working with court and city officials to identify the best site and should soon begin an environmen­tal assessment of the three properties that is expected to take most of the year to complete.

“We look forward to delivering a successful project for the court, the American people and the city of Chattanoog­a,” Kerns said.

GSA is seeking 2 to 5 acres of downtown property and would like to secure most of an entire downtown block for the new courthouse to build a new facility that allows prisoners and others to enter the building through a secured undergroun­d entrance. The new courthouse, once completed, will consist of seven courtrooms and nine chambers.

The facility will provide space for the district clerk,

“Each of these sites seems to offer a real potential for what is likely to be a landmark in downtown Chattanoog­a, just as the Joel Solomon building has been for more than 90 years.”

– HARRY S. “SANDY” MATTICE JR.,

U.S. DISTRICT COURT JUDGE AND PROSECUTOR

U.S. Probation Office, bankruptcy clerk, United States Marshals Service, United States Attorney’s Office, federal public defender and the General Services Administra­tion.

“This has been a long, drawn-out and sometimes discouragi­ng process, but it’s heartening to me to see this project moving forward now,” former U.S. District Court Judge and prosecutor Harry S. “Sandy” Mattice Jr. said in a telephone interview Wednesday. “Each of these sites seems to offer a real potential for what is likely to be a landmark in downtown Chattanoog­a, just as the Joel Solomon building has been for more than 90 years.”

Mattice said federal judges, marshals and prosecutor­s have been urging Congress to fund and for GSA to build a new federal courthouse in Chattanoog­a for nearly four decades.

The General Services Administra­tion, which constructs and maintains most federal buildings, put a new Chattanoog­a courthouse on its long-term constructi­on plan in 1999, and Chattanoog­a has moved up to No. 2 on the government’s priority list, behind Hartford, Connecticu­t.

“Because of inadequaci­es in the existing building’s configurat­ion and size, judges, prisoners and the public must use the same public elevators and corridors,” General Services said in a report on the Solomon office building. “There are not enough courtroom holding cells. The prisoner access route to one of the magistrate judge courtrooms passes through the magistrate judge’s chambers. Further, the building lacks a prisoner sally port, adequate setbacks or perimeter barriers.”

General Services also said Chattanoog­a’s federal building “suffers from ongoing water infiltrati­on issues, mold issues and a major rat infestatio­n throughout the building, as well as the presence of asbestos.”

The Joel Solomon Federal Building, which was erected in 1932 during the Great Depression, is expected to be renovated for continued use as a downtown post office and a facility to house other federal agencies, including congressio­nal, IRS and other federal offices that lease facilities elsewhere.

If a site is selected and work begins by 2024 as expected for a new courthouse, Chattanoog­a will be the third city in the Tennessee Valley in as many years to get a new federal courthouse. Constructi­on was completed in 2021 of a new, $194.5 million federal courthouse in Nashville named after former U.S. Sen. Fred Thompson and constructi­on began in September on a 123,100-square-foot courthouse in Huntsville, Alabama.

TVA OFFER

The Tennessee Valley Authority is offering some of its 1.2 million-square-foot Chattanoog­a Office Complex site south of Broad Street as a site for the new federal courthouse. Since the pandemic forced TVA to empty most of its offices nearly three years ago, the federal utility has shifted most of the 3,000 employees in the Chattanoog­a area to at-home work or another plant, office or warehouse.

Only a few hundred people now regularly come every day to the TVA power headquarte­rs, and some of those are due to relocate to a new $300 million TVA power operations center being built in Meigs County.

“Like a lot of companies, we changed the way we work,” TVA Vice President Buddy Eller said in a telephone interview

Wednesday. “We are still committed to having a major presence in Chattanoog­a, and we are evaluating different options as we move forward.”

An initial assessment by TVA last year indicated the federal utility could use less office space and may not need the sprawling four-building Chattanoog­a downtown complex, which was completed in 1986.

“It is going to be different forever, and we’re going to have to re-evaluate all of our office spaces,” TVA President Jeff Lyash said in an interview last year with the Chattanoog­a Times Free Press. “The days of walled offices and dedicated cubicles, I think, are coming to an end. The long-term trend is going to be much less square footage and much more flexible uses.”

TVA was once Chattanoog­a’s biggest office user, but since the 1980s TVA has cut its staff by more than 75% from the peak levels reached when it was building the nation’s biggest nuclear power program. In 2013, TVA sold its vehicle fleet facility at 10th and Douglas streets, and in 2015, the utility sold both the Edney Building at 11th and Market streets and the former Tennessee American Water office at 11th and Broad streets.

HAWK HILL

The city of Chattanoog­a, which acquired Hawk Hill in 1999 — where the current Chattanoog­a Lookouts baseball stadium is located — has also offered the stadium location as a site for the new federal courthouse.

The Lookouts are planning to relocate by 2026 to a new stadium being planned for the former Wheland Foundry site on Chattanoog­a’s Southside. The city and the River City Co. — which will reclaim the property once the Lookouts vacate Hawk Hill — have begun looking at future alternativ­es for the downtown property near Highway 27 overlookin­g the Tennessee River.

The Lookouts stadium site is now controlled by the Chattanoog­a Sports Authority, but the baseball team has committed to Major League Baseball to relocate the minor league team into a more modern and better-positioned stadium on the Southside within the next few years.

“We want to be clear that the city does not have a preference at this point on any of the three proposed sites,” Joda Thongnopnu­a, chief of staff for Mayor Tim Kelly, said in phone interview Wednesday. “GSA will evaluate the sites to determine which is best, but we have agreed to allow them to consider Hawk Hill among the sites.”

SET TO ADJOURN

The other proposed site being considered is the property bounded by Lindsay Street on the west, East Eighth Street on the north, Houston Street on the east and extending south to (and including) 814 Lindsay St.

Much of that site just north of the Patten Parkway was once the site of an American Legion Hall, which burned down decades ago, according to John Clark, whose real estate firm is involved in managing the property for the American Legion. The site also could include the site of the Partnershi­p and All Saints Chapel on Eighth Street, although GSA is still evaluating each parcel and would have to negotiate any purchase.

Kerns said GSA will further analyze the three sites and seek public comment as part of the National Environmen­tal Policy Act assessment, which will begin by March.

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY DAVE FLESSNER ?? One of the “short listed” sites being considered for a new federal courthouse is bounded by Lindsay Street on the west, East Eighth Street on the north, Houston Street on the east and extending south to (and including) 814 Lindsay St., according to the General Services Administra­tion. The site is pictured Wednesday.
STAFF PHOTO BY DAVE FLESSNER One of the “short listed” sites being considered for a new federal courthouse is bounded by Lindsay Street on the west, East Eighth Street on the north, Houston Street on the east and extending south to (and including) 814 Lindsay St., according to the General Services Administra­tion. The site is pictured Wednesday.
 ?? STAFF PHOTO ?? Fans watch a Lookouts game against the Montgomery Biscuits in 2014 at AT&T Stadium in Chattanoog­a.
STAFF PHOTO Fans watch a Lookouts game against the Montgomery Biscuits in 2014 at AT&T Stadium in Chattanoog­a.
 ?? STAFF PHOTO ?? The Tennessee Valley Authority building is lit in 2016.
STAFF PHOTO The Tennessee Valley Authority building is lit in 2016.
 ?? STAFF FILE PHOTO ?? The Joel W. Solomon Federal Building was erected in 1932 and 1933 on Georgia Avenue.
STAFF FILE PHOTO The Joel W. Solomon Federal Building was erected in 1932 and 1933 on Georgia Avenue.

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