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City OKs new housing development, strikes down Grove Park expansion
Tuesday, 04 July 2006 14:00
By DAVID FORBES

In two cases that elicited intense feeling from citizens ?? mostly in opposition to both projects, Asheville City Council on June 27 unanimously approved a new residential development located on Alexander Drive, while voting 6-1 to reject an attempt by the Grove Park Inn to significantly expand the size of a future condominium building.
 


In the first case, residents of the surrounding neighborhood asserted that the Skylofts development, consisting of eight separate buildings, with condominiums in the $155,000 to $350,000 range, will drive up property values in the area ?? making it harder for the mostly African-American working class residents of the neighborhood to remain there.


Meanwhile, the developer, Mike Parker, said that he has set aside 10 percent of the units at lower prices for affordable housing and is working to ensure that environmentally friendly construction methods are used.


Several citizens also spoke in favor of the project, asserting that it will help give young professionals a place to live affordably in the city.


?®This is my first development project,?∆ Parker said. ?®We believe that the project will not only make a positive impact on the entire neighborhood, but will be good for the Asheville community. We believe we are establishing a worthwhile model that other developers can follow. I??m willing to spend money on positive solutions and I think that as a developer we need to be responsible leaders.?∆


Furthermore, he added, ?®We have worked hard to address all the neighborhood??s issues and come up with some good compromises.?∆


Later, Gerald Green, representing the developer, asserted that he had spoken with the county tax department and that Skylofts would be considered a separate community for tax-evaluation purposes.

However, some members of the community maintained that the project will lead to increased gentrification in the area and, with increasing property values and taxes, may harm the existing community.

Glenda McDowell, president of the East End/Valley Street Association, said that the community is already facing economic pressure.


?®We??ve been before this council many, many times,?∆ McDowell said. ?®We??re not against housing. Never, never believe that. But we want people to have affordable housing. Asheville??s affordable housing crisis is legendary, which is causing the real estate prices to skyrocket. On the other hand, our industries need more low-wage workers ?? the combination is disastrous.


?®Long-time working-class homeowners now face the prospect of losing their previously affordable homes because of escalating property values. I??d like to leave my home to our children. The neighborhood where I live is a fine example of this. It??s made up of working-class African-Americans, most of whom own their own homes.?∆


A ?®large, upscale development?∆ will have an impact on that community, she asserted and ?®the community has reacted swiftly in opposition to this proposal. If this is approved, gentrification will result. The implications of this type of gentrification affect the entire city.?∆


In separate remarks, resident Liam Young, who noted that his family has lived in the community for 91 years, asked, ?®Why do they want to build here? We??re a small residential area and we??re in the heart of the urban area. We??re not meant for this sort of high density.?∆


In contrast, Merrimon Avenue resident Charlie White said he was ?®just a young professional trying to find affordable housing in Asheville that??s in close proximity to downtown. This is a good project that seems to cater to the middle of the road incomes, not just the very poor or luxury condos. I hope council will support more projects like this to integrate more young professionals into downtown.?∆


Mary Elmes, who lives on Martin Luther King Jr. Drive, said that the new development is, ?®simply more than the area can take. Please consider the average people in this neighborhood who can??t afford to live in a place like that.?∆


Council, however, found Parker??s willingness to set aside a portion of the development for affordable housing to be convincing.


?®This is just a really good project ?? I like it a lot,?∆ Councilwoman Robin Cape said. ?®I have to commend you (Parker) on this. Its refreshing to see a developer who??s going out of their way to help the city. Density downtown is a good thing. It helps with walkability and affordability.?∆


Councilman Brownie Newman noted that while the project ?®can influence property values, it can also help the city grow its tax base in a positive way.?∆


Mayor Terry Bellamy, who grew up in the neighborhood, said the decision was particularly hard for her, but that she felt the development will be good for the city.


?®When I went down the names on the petition against this ??? I have relatives on that list,?∆ Bellamy said. ?®On developments like this, its clear that developers are hearing council and including things like green building and affordable units. But development can change the fabric of a neighborhood. My own family lived at 35 Weaver St. But I don??t make decisions up here based on my family members ?? and tonight, this is a great project.?∆


Earlier, the Grove Park??s proposed Fitzgerald Condominium building, the first phase in a 10-year plan of expansion and renovation to the resort, came under fire from residents, who criticized the proposed expansion ?? from 50,000 to 60,000 square feet on the original master plan, to 85,000 square feet and an additional floor.


?®This is smack dab in the middle of a residential neighborhood,?∆ resident Peter Gantley said. ?®We??ve seen the Grove Park Inn go from a quaint inn to a major resort, but this is just too big, too close.?∆

In addition, Gantley and many other residents who spoke at the meeting said that the city would set a bad precedent by allowing the inn to so radically depart from its original plan.

?®This threatens our trust in the city,?∆ Gantley said. ?®We need to know that these plans and ordinances stand for something.?∆


Green, also representing the Grove Park Inn, said that the increased size would help make the project more viable.


In the end, a majority of council ended up agreeing with the residents.


?®A 25 percent size increase is just too much,?∆ Cape said after hearing from residents of the area. ?®This is a different-looking building from the one originally proposed ??? it??s just too much. Why couldn??t the Grove Park Inn work within the criteria council set??∆


?®I think the general feeling is that this project is just too big,?∆ Bellamy said in separate remarks.

The sole dissenting vote came from Councilman Carl Mumpower, who originally said he would oppose the project based on its size, but changed his mind when informed by Planning Director Scott Shuford that city officials did not consider the size increase to be large enough to give the project a negative recommendation.
 



 


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