Chattanooga Times Free Press

Collegedal­e area office center is planned

- BY MIKE PARE

Amid an array of new housing, more commercial space is headed to the Collegedal­e area as a developer plans to put up a pair of buildings to meet needs of residents in this fastgrowin­g part of Hamilton County.

Some 12,000 square feet of offices are planned in the twostory buildings to match an earlier developmen­t at the high-profile corner of Apison Pike and Old Lee Highway, said Mike Price, owner of MAP Engineers.

“We want to do a plan that mimics that which was done adjacent to it,” he said in a phone interview Wednesday, adding that the new multimilli­on-dollar project could hold medical uses.

The existing center has a couple of dentist offices, another healthrela­ted entity and a financial services business.

An applicatio­n for new zoning by the Lyle Finley Revocable Trust of Nashville to the Chattanoog­aHamilton County Regional Planning Agency seeks a change from residentia­l to commercial use of the vacant 1-acre tract. The proposal is slated to be heard by the Regional Planning Commission in April for the site that sits just outside of Collegedal­e.

Hundreds of new apartments and other housing units are going up within minutes of the site on both Old Lee Highway and Apison Pike.

Price said as more people move that way, the intersecti­on is “a prime location where people are coming through.”

Work on the office buildings by developer LF Holdings LLC could start in mid-summer and finish in spring 2024 if the zoning change receives the needed approvals, he said.

In January, more than 150 people in the Collegedal­e-Ooltewah area met to discuss galloping growth and traffic concerns of residents.

Hamilton County Commission­er Jeff Eversole, R-Ooltewah, said during the meeting that he has seen his commute into Chattanoog­a go from 10 minutes to sometimes more than an hour during the past 25 years.

“We’ve been reactionar­y,” he told the group about the issue of growth. “We’re going to look at things differentl­y as a county.”

Dan Reuter, executive director of the Regional Planning Agency, said at the meeting that outside consultant­s are to be brought on to help his team update the area plans for different parts of the county. Such plans serve as a guide for growth for different communitie­s in the city

and county.

Earlier this month, Reuter called the effort “probably the largest planning process we’ve ever undertaken at one time.” He told the Planning Commission at a meeting that the initiative­s will include traffic studies.

“It’s going to involve pretty major traffic studies and other things that will happen,” Reuter said.

He added that the agency will work on a comprehens­ive plan for the unincorpor­ated parts of the county, too.

“There are areas of Hamilton County that have never had any thoughtful planning on growth,” Reuter said.

In a recent Chattanoog­a Times Free Press survey, more than one-third of county voters thought the Chattanoog­a area was growing too fast.

Among 311 voters sampled at the polls during the Nov. 8 election, nearly 52% said the city and county are growing at the right pace, and nearly 36% of respondent­s said local growth was too fast. Fewer than 7% of those sampled said they thought the county was growing too slow.

 ?? RENDERING CONTRIBUTE­D BY MAP ENGINEERS ?? New office space similar to this rendering is proposed for a tract at Apison Pike and Old Lee Highway near Collegedal­e.
RENDERING CONTRIBUTE­D BY MAP ENGINEERS New office space similar to this rendering is proposed for a tract at Apison Pike and Old Lee Highway near Collegedal­e.

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