Chattanooga Times Free Press

What is the future of Hawk Hill?

River City seeks public input on future of Lookouts stadium site after baseball team relocates to Southside

- BY DAVE FLESSNER STAFF WRITER

In the next couple of years, one of the largest properties in downtown Chattanoog­a is scheduled to open up for redevelopm­ent after the Chattanoog­a Lookouts minor league baseball team relocates its stadium to the Southside.

The Hawk Hill site, where AT&T Field has been located for the past 23 years, will be reclaimed by the nonprofit downtown developmen­t company River City Co., which is seeking public input on how to reuse the site along Highway 27 near Ross’s Landing. The downtown property includes 7.5 acres currently leased to the city’s Sports Authority for the Lookouts Stadium and with additional parking lots has a total size of about 13 acres.

“While it is too early to identify the specific timing of the property transfer back to River City Co., we are beginning the process now to provide opportunit­ies for the community and stakeholde­rs to participat­e in the planning process,” Emily Mack, River City president and CEO, said in an announceme­nt of a new community survey planned for the property. “The planning process will include Hawk Hill, the adjacent riverfront parking lots and a parking lot behind the Creative Discovery Museum. While any redevelopm­ent would most likely be phased over time, we believe it’s important to look at this area holistical­ly, rather than individual parcels.”

River City has leased the site to the Lookouts since former team owner Frank Burke built the $10.2 million stadium and opened the baseball diamond in April 2000. Sitting along Highway 27 and overlookin­g both downtown and the Tennessee River, officials said the site could be redevelope­d in a number of potential ways once the existing complex

is removed.

River City, which bought the site for $2.5 million, transferre­d the property to the city for $200 when the Lookouts moved to Hawk Hill and will reclaim the site for $200 once the Lookouts relocate to their new stadium on the Southside.

The site was originally developed for the Kirkman Technical School, which operated from 1928 until it closed in 1991. The school’s mascot was the Golden Hawks, and the hill where the football field was located was often referred to as Hawk Hill or Kirkman Hill.

The high school was at the base of the hill, along Chestnut Street, where the IMAX Theatre, Creative Discovery Museum, Marriott Residence Inn and Hilton Garden are today.

ANOTHER SCHOOL OR COURTHOUSE?

Hawk Hill could again be a site for a new downtown school. During his campaign to become Hamilton County mayor last year, Weston Wamp pledged to work to build a high-quality technical school near downtown similar to what Kirkman Technical High School once provided.

“We need a big, worldclass, open-enrollment middle school and high school near downtown Chattanoog­a,” Wamp said during his campaign last year.

The property could also be redevelope­d as a site for a new federal courthouse in downtown Chattanoog­a. The U.S. General Services Administra­tion, the federal agency that plans, designs and constructs new federal courthouse­s, is studying three downtown sites in Chattanoog­a this year to build a 186,000-squarefoot courthouse building to replace the aging Joel Solomon Federal Building and house the U.S. District Court and Chattanoog­a Bankruptcy Court.

The General Services Administra­tion is reviewing the Hawk Hill site along with a site a block away from the current federal courthouse along Georgia Avenue and another property offered by the Tennessee Valley Authority on part of its Chattanoog­a Office Complex. General Services is expected to issue its assessment in early 2024.

Congress has authorized $218 million to build the new federal courthouse in Chattanoog­a.

DOWNTOWN HOUSING DEMAND

River City has helped facilitate and support other downtown redevelopm­ents, from the Majestic 12 theater to Miller Park to the Tennessee Riverpark. But the downtown agency has been focusing lately on spurring more residentia­l and commercial developmen­t on the waterfront, which lost some of its luster during the pandemic and as more entertainm­ent venues have grown on the Southside and Main Street area of downtown.

Last July, River City unveiled its One Riverfront Plan to help foster new developmen­t and more affordable housing options along and near the downtown waterfront in Chattanoog­a. Mack said the new study about the future of Hawk Hill will build on that waterfront plan.

The Hawk Hill site could be used to provide more affordable or market-rate rental units or condominiu­ms to help supply Chattanoog­a’s growing demand for housing. The One Riverfront Plan proposed building several multistory buildings on parking lots near the stadium.

Darren Meyer of the planning firm MKSK, which helped draft the riverfront plan, said in an earlier report the land around the stadium creates an opportunit­y for mixed-use affordable housing with commercial space on the ground floor, including for minorityow­ned businesses.

A new study on the downtown market commission­ed by the River City Co. and conducted by RCLCO Real Estate Consulting said even with nearly 1,500 multifamil­y units under constructi­on or planned to be built this year or next, there is still more demand for apartments and condos than will be available in the central city.

“The current developmen­t pipeline leaves significan­t demand unmet, especially in downtown,” Erin Talkington, managing director for RCLCO, wrote in a 69-page assessment of future urban developmen­t prospects in Chattanoog­a. “There is a strong and immediate opportunit­y for new rental product, especially multifamil­y, to bring a variety of renters to downtown.”

The study identified more than 1,700 rental apartment units under constructi­on in the Chattanoog­a market and another 4,600 units that are planned or proposed. RCLCO projects even more demand than what is likely to be built.

“This pipeline (of new multifamil­y housing) is quite robust, and it suggests that 900 units could be delivered annually through 2030,” Talkington said. “While this represents significan­tly more developmen­t on an annual basis than the primary market area has experience­d in recent years, it does not exceed RCLCO forecasted annual demand for the new product.”

To voice your opinion about what River City should do with Hawk Hill, take the survey at bit.ly/ RCHawkHill.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO ?? An aerial view shows the Chattanoog­a Lookouts stadium on Hawk Hill between Highway 27 and Chestnut Street.
CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO An aerial view shows the Chattanoog­a Lookouts stadium on Hawk Hill between Highway 27 and Chestnut Street.
 ?? ?? Emily Mack
Emily Mack

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