Discovery Park Archives
Local Schools
Messenger Front Page
Weakley County Press Front Page
Lauderdale County Enterprise
Local News
National News
News Notes
Business
Videos
Education
Farm
Health
Religion
For The Record
Entertainment
Hitman
Messenger Sports
Weakley County Sports
Local Sports Features
National Sports
The Great Outdoors
Opinions/Editorials
Just A Thought
Cravens World
Anniversaries
Births
Birthdays
Annie's Mailbox
Engagements
Smartt View
General
People and Places
Weddings
mAY 15, 2013
May 8, 2013
May 1, 2013
April 24, 2013
April 17, 2003
April 10, 2013
April 3, 2013
March 27, 2013
March 20, 2013
March 13, 2013
March 6, 2013
Feb. 27, 2013
Feb. 20, 2013
Feb. 13, 2010
Feb. 6, 2012
Jan. 30, 2013
Jan. 23, 2013
Jan. 16, 2013
Jan. 9, 2013
Jan. 2, 2013
Dec. 26, 2012
Dec. 19, 2012
Dec. 12, 2012
Dec. 5, 2012
Nov. 28, 2012
Nov. 21, 2012
Nov. 14, 2012
Nov. 7, 2012
Oct. 31, 2012
Oct. 24, 2012
Oct. 17, 2012
Oct. 10, 2012
Oct. 3, 2012
Sept. 26, 2012
Sept. 19, 2012
Sept. 12, 2012
Sept. 5, 2012
Aug. 29, 2012
Aug. 22. 2012
Aug. 16, 2012
Aug. 8, 2012
Aug. 1, 2012
Weakley County Home Lawn & Garden
Weakley County Bridal
Messenger Bridal Section
Weakley County Babies
UCDM Christmas Geetings
WCP Christmas Greetings
Reader's Choice Weakley Co.
Messenger Gift Guide
Weakley County Gift Guide
Veterans Day
Decision 2012
Messenger Football
Weakley County Football
Weakley County Bridal Section
Messenger Bridal Section
Submission Information
Read Before Submitting Content
Community Submitted News
Submit Photos
Submit Calendar Events
Discussion Forums
Submit Birth Announcements
Submit Engagements Announcements
Submit Wedding Announcements
Share

Riverwalk expansion planned


Posted: Tuesday, October 2, 2012 7:00 pm
By: Kate Harrison, Chattanooga Times Free Press

By KATE HARRISON
Chattanooga Times Free Press
CHATTANOOGA (AP) — As the Tennessee Riverwalk twists along through swamps and into the city, a bike ride down the trail can feel like a visual history lesson in Chattanooga’s evolution.
A planned extension of the Riverwalk will add a crucial chapter to that story: The factory.
The new 3 1/2-mile Tennessee Riverwalk extension plans to take bikers and joggers past the woods and streams into Chattanooga’s industrial heritage, tracing a route along active and abandoned manufacturing sites lining the Tennessee River as it bends around Lookout Mountain.
The new trail will allow its users to venture behind large scrapyards, old foundry sites and still-working businesses that have monopolized the area for decades. At one point, the trail will pass under a part of the mammoth crane that Alstom uses to load its power-plant turbines onto barges, giving passers-by a rare peak at the manufacturing process.
“It’s not like the trail goes through a green, open field,” said Rick Wood, director of the Chattanooga branch of the Trust for Public Land.
The trust has been helping acquire the property and easements needed to extend the Riverwalk.
“It’s not beautiful and lush, but people who use the trail can see this is a real part of our city. These are jobs, and this is an important part of our economy,” Wood said.
It will be about two years before the Riverwalk, which now runs about 10 miles from the dam to Ross’s Landing, will reach its planned stopping point in St. Elmo. Engineers say the walk eventually will tie into Lookout Mountain trails.
With sprawling vistas of the mountain and river, scenery will be a big part of the new trail, but planners also are interested in unpacking the stories of the scenery. John Brown, project manager for Barge, Waggoner, Sumner & Cannon Inc., which engineered the extension, envisions a path dotted with interpretive sign sculptures formed out of machinery and products welded in riverside factories.
“We’re trying to tie the city’s cultural history and industrial history with the natural features — the river and the mountain that actually formed that whole quarter to be what it is today,” he said.
But the area’s history goes beyond the industrial. Near the crossing at the top of M.L. King Boulevard, planners hope to feature exhibits about a black community called Blue Goose Hollow. Bessie Smith, the famous singer known as the Empress of the Blues, was born there.
And at the top of a hill that rises 40 feet on old U.S. Pipe property next to Interstate 24, Brown hopes the National Park Service can use the panorama of Lookout Mountain facing Moccasin Bend to outline the landscape for Civil War activity for visitors.
Recently, the Chattanooga City Council and the Hamilton County Commission have approved a $2.8 million grant agreement with the Tennessee Department of Transportation to help the Riverwalk extension project reach its funding goal of about $13.1 million, said county engineer Todd Leamon.
While planners hope to start work by the end of this year, they are now busy working with commercial landowners and railroad companies, trying to piece together a patchwork of easements and property crossings for the trail’s alignment.
“Once we cast the vision for the Riverwalk, most landowners are very cooperative,” said Wood. “We want it to have meaningful connection to the city, not just exist for recreational activity you do on a Saturday morning. We want it to be close to where you work, close to where you live.”
Alstom has paved the way for the Riverwalk to cross its property, even offering to cut off part of an existing building to make room for the 12-foot-wide path.
Perimeter Properties, which owns the old U.S. Pipe and Wheland Foundry sites, has offered “whatever is necessary to make the project successful,” said Perimeter partner Michael Mallen.
Mallen said he and other owners of the property, which covers more than 140 acres, hope to see a mixed-use retail and commercial development there one day.
———
Information from: Chattanooga Times Free Press, http://www.timesfreepress.com



Print
Chattanooga, Tennessee Riverwalk


Powered by Bondware
Newspaper Software | Connect Email Marketing | Express Website Builder