Distraught over more plans to add tall buildings on North Fourth Avenue, some residents and area merchants hope city leaders will quash the latest proposed development — an apartment complex that will take the place of Maloney’s Tavern.
The mixed-use project would include market-rate apartments and ground-level retail, which would specifically exclude — among other things — gun shops, pawn shops, marijuana dispensaries or drive-through services, records filed with the city show.
Partners on Fourth will appear before the ÃÛèÖÖ±²¥ City Council Tuesday, April 17, hoping to get the zoning and regulatory approval for the southwest corner of Fourth Avenue and Eighth Street, bordered by Stevens Avenue on the west.
Their concept plan, filed with the city, shows the west side of the site, along Stevens Avenue, would have two buildings of a minimum 110 feet and maximum 160 feet in height.
People are also reading…
A shorter building to the east would be a minimum of 80 feet and maximum of 110 feet in height, neighbored by a 50-foot building and a 30-foot building, the shortest of which would sit on Fourth Avenue.
“We have a lot of concerns, especially when it comes to parking and making sure the retail remains local and is in character with the rest of Fourth Avenue,†said Fred Ronstadt, executive director of the Fourth Avenue Merchants Association. “Some people see it as a great thing that more people will be down in the area to patronize their businesses; others are concerned about the gentrification of the area.â€
He said the association does not have an official position on the proposed development.
“We’re advocating for local retail and mitigating the lost parking,†Ronstadt said. “We have, especially at night, challenges with parking.â€
Partners on Fourth would not be the developers of the project, but would sell to a developer once all the necessary entitlements are in place. The number of units and stories will depend on the future developer’s choice of ceiling heights for the apartments.
The city of ÃÛèÖÖ±²¥ Office of Integrated Planning Historic Preservation Office has granted permission for the two existing structures to be demolished “in the interest of infill development,†city records show.
This latest proposal comes on the heels of another apartment complex project on Fourth Avenue.
Developer EdR, based in Memphis, Tennessee, is planning to build a multilevel apartment complex on the avenue, between Sixth and Seventh streets, called The Union on Sixth.
The property is mostly occupied by The Flycatcher bar and music venue.
The northeast corner would be three stories tall and the southeast corner two stories tall. The tallest part of the development, seven stories, would sit back closer to Fifth Avenue.
The complex would be market-rate apartments with about 250 units with 1-, 2- and 3-bedroom floor plans.
Arlene Leaf, owner of ÃÛèÖÖ±²¥ Thrift, 319 N. Fourth Ave., has had her store there for 38 years and is one of the organizers of the “Save Fourth Avenue†movement.
“Totally inappropriate to scale for Fourth Avenue,†she said of both projects. “The big buildings belong downtown with the other big buildings.â€
In a recent letter-writing campaign she helped organize, half of the people who wrote letters objecting to the buildings were out-of-town visitors.
“Do you measure economic vitality by the number of floors in a building?†Leaf asked. “Or, do you measure it by the number of people who visit because of the unique nature of Fourth Avenue?â€
Merchants are also concerned that the apartment units will primarily be rented by college kids.
“We’d like people living here who shop in our stores and are active in our community,†Leaf said. “Students are not, they’re separate and none of us believe the developments will be filled with young professionals.â€
City Councilman Steve Kozachik, who represents Fourth Avenue, said the city’s responsibility is to consider the increased traffic and noise collectively when it comes to these developments.
“While they come to us independently, we aren’t in a position to consider the impact independently,†he said.
The Union on Sixth, for example, is being developed by the owners of The District student housing on Fifth Avenue, and Kozachik said they could offer some public parking in their parking structure.
Also, owners of undeveloped land could turn it into public parking lots.
“We don’t have the money or real estate to build a four or five-story structure to take care of parking on Fourth Avenue,†he said. “No one is going to be the magic bullet.â€
Tuesday’s City Council meetings begins at 5:30 p.m. at City Hall, 255 W. Alameda St.