Knoxville Marathon 2013

Knoxville Marathon Start, April 2013

Knoxville Marathon Start, April 2013

It’s hard to know at the end of this week whether I should continue recounting last weekend or move the focus to the upcoming weekend. I’ll go with last weekend, but I must mention that this weekend is likely the biggest of the Dogwood Arts Festival, with the Arts and Crafts Festival on Market Square and throughout Krutch Park. The artisan works are phenomenal and the food tent, in which chefs prepare dishes with wine pairings, is one of my favorite single events of the year.

Mayor Rogero, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

Mayor Rogero, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

American Flag on Clinch Avenue, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

American Flag on Clinch Avenue, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

Arm Cyclists, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

Arm Cyclists, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

Still, I must give a nod to last weekend’s Knoxville Marathon which drew several thousand people. The race has grown to include a 5K, Half-Marathon, Marathon and Marathon Relay. Urban Son-in-Law backed off to the half-marathon this year and many Urban Friends ran various other races. I think one reason for the massive crowds last weekend was the marathon, as a number of people came in from out of town or simply stayed downtown to enjoy the other events going on.

Health and Fitness Expo, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

Health and Fitness Expo, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

Health and Fitness Expo, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

Health and Fitness Expo, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

Arm Cyclists2, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

Arm Cyclists, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

Arm Cyclists3, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

Arm Cyclists, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

I love the fact that a fitness-based event has become so big in the city. It also works beautifully to have so many great activities downtown to greet any out-of-town visitors. There is no way someone visited the city last weekend, encountered the beautiful weather, pianos on the square, Chalk Walk, First Friday, Rhythm and Blooms and came away with anything other than a very positive impression of what is happening here. They also spent time and money in the Health and Fitness Expo on Saturday.

Knoxville Marathon Start, April 2013

Knoxville Marathon Start, April 2013

Knoxville Marathon Start, April 2013

Knoxville Marathon Start, April 2013

Knoxville Marathon Runner, April 2013

Knoxville Marathon Runner, April 2013

Knoxville Marathon Start, April 2013

Knoxville Marathon Start, April 2013

The starting line and staging area always attract me. Nerves jangle about at every turn, runners giddy with excitement warm up maybe a bit too much. Proud families wish their loved ones well. The mayor spoke at this year’s opening and the national anthem makes any sporting fan’s blood reach a quick boil of anticipation. Some are there to win, others to have fun and others simply to finish. Music pounds from a PA system as it will throughout the race as live bands play for the runners.

Entertainment on Market Square, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

Entertainment on Market Square, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

John D. Cable and the Empty Bottle Band, Clinch and Locust, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

John D. Cable and the Empty Bottle Band, Clinch and Locust, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

I photographed eventual winner Wojciech KopecĀ (2:22:15) as he left the start line (red jersey above, number 2), but missed him at the twenty-five mile mark. I did catch Edward Tabut passing the UT Conference Center, heading into the final stretch. He was about three minutes behind first place. He also nearly left the course by not turning onto Locust, but a policeman yelled, pointed and Edward corrected his course.

Second Place Runner (No. 4), Mile Tweny-five, Knoxville Marathon 2013

Second Place Runner (No. 4), Edward Tabut, Mile Tweny-five, Knoxville Marathon 2013

Third Place Runner, Mile Twenty-four, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

Third Place Runner, Bryan Morseman, Mile Twenty-four, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

Fourth Place Runner, Mile Twenty-Three, Knoxville Marathon 2013

Fourth Place Runner, Stewart Ellington, Mile Twenty-Three, Knoxville Marathon 2013

Fifth Place Runner, Mile Twenty-four, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

Fifth Place Runner, Abraham Kogo, Mile Twenty-four, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

About four minutes behind him was Bryan Moresman in third and I really felt for the next two guys as I photographed them leaving Market Square. They ran within steps of each other around the twenty-four mile mark and clearly, they would battle to the finish line. In the end, while Stewart Ellington (No. 6) lead by a few yards at that point, Abraham Kogo (No. 3) would pass him in the end to win fourth place. Two seconds separated them at the finish line. You can find complete results here.

Half-Marathon Medal, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

Half-Marathon Medal, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

Others would pass through downtown on into the afternoon. In fact, Urban Son-in-Law spotted a couple going through around 4:00, well after the official times have stopped. It reminds me of Cake’s awesome song, “The Distance.” All that matters at that point is finishing. And whether anyone else knows or acknowledges the fact, you know. It has to feel good. I never made it to the complete marathon and I admire those who do.

Fractured Friday Factoids: Small Bits of News from the City

There are a number of smaller news items that have surfaced downtown in the last couple of weeks or so that haven’t made it onto the blog and seem important to mention. I’ll hit several for today’s post.

Marble Slab has closed on Market Square, March 2012
  • Marble Slab has closed on Market Square. It also closed several other locations around the city, so I’m doubting that downtown business had much to do with the closing. Competition from Rita’s and Coolato Gelato could have something to do with it. I’m not sure how many ice cream/shaved ice places we can support at this point.
  • Or maybe not . . . A yogurt shop is reportedly opening at 36 Market Square. It is Orange Leaf Frozen Yogurt with a store currently open in Cleveland, Tennessee, but soon to open franchises in each of the five largest cities in Tennessee. They are based in Oklahoma. What happened to the Vet?
  • In a development that may be related to the departure of Marble Slab, Tomato Head implied last week that they may expand into that building – which Tomato Head owners Mahasti Vafaie and Scott Partin recently purchased. The only portion mentioned was the back side for an expansion of the kitchen, but you have to wonder if they wouldn’t be interested in the increased frontage. Anyone who has waited on a table at Tomato Head could easily imagine them filling the space.
U.S. Bank, Market Street, Knoxville, March 2012
New Dental offices on Gay Street, Knoxville, March 2012
  • The exterior of the dental offices of Buzz Nabors has been finished, while work continues on the interior.
710 and 712 Walnut, slated for demolition, Knoxville, 2012
  • 710 and 712 Walnut Street continue to be endangered. The demolition was, once again, on the agenda of the Downtown Design Review Board and St. Johns, once again, asked for a one month postponement. One board member questioned whether this could go on indefinitely while another felt a need to make it clear that he would vote for demolition if ever given the chance. My worry here is that it will continue to be postponed until they are confident interest has flagged and then they will slip it through with little or no resistance. Remember, the staff recommendation is for approval of the demolition request.
CBID community meeting, March 2012
  • At the most recent community meeting of CBID, the police department reported increased patrols downtown and decreased crime. The two weeks leading up to that meeting had seen zero crimes downtown with the exception of some surplus materials reported stolen from the World’s Fair Park. The officer present encouraged people to never leave valuable objects (including coins between the seats) in plain view inside a vehicle and to call 215-4010 to report any suspicious activity.
  • More pet dispensers are being added downtown by the Issac Walton League, due to increased pet traffic.
  • A work session will be held March 31 beginning at 9:00 for the CBID board in which they will discuss allocation guidelines. There is some sentiment that the grants are not being distributed fairly on a case-by-case basis.
  • Approval was granted for the placement of thirty-six solar panels atop the Market Square garage. These panels will power the electric re-charging stations.

Behind Those Doors: Development in the City

Winter isn’t the biggest time of the year for construction, though with the winter we’ve had, conditions would have been pretty good for constructing on all but a few days. There are several projects about which people downtown are pretty excited or interested and here’s what seems to be going on with a couple.

Recent View inside 304 S. Gay

The dental offices are quickly being put in place at 304 S. Gay Street on the bottom floor of the residence there. I think I heard something about hours being added by sometime this spring. I’m also pretty sure this gives us two dentists downtown, as I believe another works out of the, appropriately, Medical Arts Building on Main.

415 S. Gay
Doors at 415 S. Gay, Knoxville

The other doors I noticed this week were at 415 S. Gay. And beautiful doors, they are. If I remember correctly, this was slated to be a bar, but I have to say the doors look too pretty for a common bar. Maybe the plan is for something really upscale. Unless I’m mistaken, a business (restaurant first, then bar) has been in the works at this address for three years. It looks like something is finally happening.

In the category of not so much going on:

120 S. Central Street: The former home of Big Don’s Elegant Junk, the owner promised “something completely different,” but so far there is little sign of much going on.

1 Market Square: I thought once the CBID grant was offered, we’d see work begin immediately on the former Market Square Kitchen as it transforms to Tupelo Honey. I hope the inactivity simply means it’s winter and not that there’s a snag.

400 Block of Union Avenue: These retail fronts look like they have since the garage to which they are attached was built. The floors in some of the units are still gravel and the facades which are slated, with $12,000 of CBID money to be upgraded and changed, still look the same. Again, I’m hoping spring.

Arnstein Building: I saw a guy hammering inside a fifth floor window today. Supposedly the upper floors are leased as soon as they are finished, but the lower floor is, so far, pretty windows with numerous rumors attached. I wish it would become something that would make a splash. We need a little splash.

Tupelo Honey Commits to Knoxville (And More Coming Attractions)

CBID Board: Rich Ray, Alan Carmichael, Rick Emmet,
Robyn Askew, Melissa Everett and Patrick Hunt

I wrote a post two days ago encouraging everyone to come to the evening meeting of CBID. I knew in advance it would be very lightly read. I guess organizations that do detailed work aren’t that sexy. The meeting was very interesting, as my nerdy self would have expected – and you can ask Andrea, the single Stuck Inside of Knoxville reader who attended as far as I could tell.

It was afterward that everyone got interested. This would be the point at which the Metropulse reported that Tupelo Honey will, in fact, open a third location in addition to the two locations in Asheville. By this morning the Metropulse report was linked to Josh Flory’s Property Scope Blog and Tupelo Honey themselves confirmed it on a blog post on their website. In case anyone has been hiding under a rock and hasn’t heard, it will be at 1 Market Square on the southwest corner in the Kern’s Building which is home to the Hotel Oliver. They will also have a bakery, of sorts, in the basement where they will make their famous pies. And it all started with the CBID meeting.

Phillip Welker, one of the owners of the Oliver Hotel had requested on their behalf a grant of $275,000 for improvements to the first floor facade of the building both on the side that faces Market Square and the side that fronts Union. If you’ve walked past there in recent months you may have noticed how deteriorated it has become. Their interest is in finishing the facade as nicely as they have the interior of the hotel, which is very well done, indeed.

There was turbulence along the way. The development committee apparently debated for an hour about the size of the grant. The Arnstein Building across the street only received a $300,000 grant for the entire building. Concerns were also expressed that the proposal had mentioned a specific tenant for the space and that CBID might appear to be funding a specific business rather than a project. The committee recommended appropriation of $125,000 which is quite a bit less than the request. The board finally agreed after much discussion and with a bare minimum 3-2 vote.

What wasn’t clear in the meeting was what this would mean. Would Mr. Welker and his partner Mr. Orly go forward with the project without the additional $150,000? Would they go forward with a scaled down version which might not appeal to Tupelo Honey specifically? Most people left the meeting not knowing the answers. Business moved forward.

Out in the lobby, however, Cari Wade Gervin asked Mr. Welker the question I had followed him out into the lobby to ask: “Do we get Tupelo Honey or not?” For his part, he said they would make up the difference in cost in some manner and go forward with the project. A gentleman representing Tupelo Honey added that there should be no obstacle to their move into the space now that this was resolved.

So, it appears, that very soon improvements should begin to the facade and that by some time this summer Tupelo Honey should be a reality. I’ll admit it feels pretty good that they feel Knoxville is a good fit for them. Asheville has a very large “cool” factor and this kind of establishment is part of the vibe there. I’m not ready to do a Knoxville/Asheville smackdown, but I’m happy to be their increasingly hip cousin for now.

There was other business at the meeting. The coolest news is that an as yet unnamed music series will be starting in the Square Room in a couple of months. It will be a monthly two hour show including music and other entertainment, which will be broadcast over a local radio station and filmed for television broadcast. Sounds a lot like a smaller version of Tennessee Shines, but it is actually patterned after a Nashville show called Music City Roots which broadcasts from the Loveless Cafe.

Those of you who read this blog regularly would surely be able guess how I would end it. I fell in love with Tupelo Honey when it first came out in 1971. So, here you go . . .

Central Business Improvement District: An Organization You Should Know

Michele Hummel leads CBID sponsored resident meeting November 2011

I’ve mentioned them before. It’s the kind of name for an organization that makes people momentarily scratch their heads before moving onto the next channel. As a concept, the CBID is pretty simple: It’s an organization funded by an extra tax on downtown residents and businesses whose purpose is to improve downtown. The devil is, as always, you know where. What gets funded, whose project gets funding and how much funding they get is where matters get sticky.

The board that makes the decisions is supposed to be representative of all the various groups who would have an interest in such matters. It’s a pretty diverse group in some ways, not so much in others. Some of the same names pop up in all the lists of decision makers. Marshall Stair, for example, who I happen to like quite a bit, is on City Council and CBID. The other names on the board are generally familiar to people who follow downtown goings on. You can see a full list here if you scroll down the page.

One of my concerns as a downtown resident who isn’t particularly connected, is that the board makes all the decisions and the board meets at 11:30 AM each month to make those decisions. My money is being spent at a time of day when I cannot be present. Businesses and developers can be present, but how many residents are able to be there at that time of day. I expressed my concerns to Michele Hummel the Director, who is also a downtown resident. She was very patient and seemed to understand my concern. I’m not sure that had anything to do with the fact that the August board meeting was subsequently scheduled at night, but it was and it was very well attended.

CBID Board members meet downtown residents, November 2011

In November they had the first of what they are billing as a series (though I can’t find a schedule on the webpage) of Residential/Quality of Life Meetings. This was a meeting for residents to have input and it was also very well attended. First on the agenda was the announcement that four of the board meetings for 2012 would be held at night. The first of these will be January 23 at 5:30 at 17 Market Square. You can find the full schedule for the year here. I’m excited this is happening and hope those of you who are interested will attend. The meetings are open to everyone interested in downtown.

Other topics on the agenda included Downtown Knoxville Gift Cards (which were a subsequent success), parking, a downtown map and guide (still coming) and a stakeholder survey which they encouraged people to complete online. The more interesting portion of the evening came when discussion was opened to the residents. Here are some of the topics and opinions expressed:

  • Dog bags and posts are important.
  • There need to be more KPD patrols, particularly in the Old City.
  • A listserv/message board for downtown residents would be nice.
  • Panhandling continues to be a problem. Persons can be told to call 211 24 hours a day for needs.
  • Concern was expressed over bicycle and pedestrian safety. Bicycles on sidewalks are an issue for some people.
  • Events were discussed. Most people supported continuing major events but some people question whether we may be reaching a saturation point and the suggestion was made that events be scattered around downtown.
  • A young man presented a call for more park space claiming that our downtown falls far behind other cities in a per capita comparison. Possible spaces were discussed for green space. Some of the parents of young children noted that it would be nice to have green space that is pet-free.
So, it was a good meeting and more like it are promised. In the meantime, why not try to make the board meeting tonight? If you are a downtown resident, you are a member of CBID. If you are reading this blog post you are an interested party and you are welcome.