Posted: 12:00 a.m.
Sunday, March 15, 2015
Riverfront development has been challenging
for Middletown
By http://www.journal-news.com/staff/ed-richter/" rel="nofollow - Staff Writer
MIDDLETOWN —
In the coming months, the banks of the
Great Miami River in Middletown
will be bustling with construction and other activities to draw people to the
river.
Last month, the MetroParks of Butler
County announced it would use half of a $2 million state capital improvements
grant to construct the River
Center, just south of
where the AK Steel Pavilion is located in J. Knight Goodman Bicentennial
Commons along the river.
MetroParks said the more than $1
million, 3,100 square-foot facility could have its grand opening in 2016. The River Center
is being planned to accommodate users of the Great Miami River Recreation Trail
as a hub to get drinking water, hold meetings and education sessions as well as
the location of a future ranger sub-station and rest station for path users.
In the city’s 2004 master plan, that
included a strategic plan for downtown Middletown,
it envisioned a Riverfront District that transitioned from the existing
industrial area to a residential use after the Downtown Core District was
revitalized. The plan noted the Riverfront District would be ideal for
residential development overlooking the river to connect people to the river,
bike path and downtown. It also said green space or an expanded Smith Park
would be preferable to its current use.
While the city has envisioned in its
long-term planning that the area near the riverfront could evolve into a
mixed-use zone complete with residential and commercial uses, a number of
challenges remain, said city Planner Marty Kohler. The city has rezoned part of
the area along the river, but there are portions that are still zoned as an
industrial area, he said. In addition,
the city is currently working to remediate the former Wrenn Paper site of
various environmental issues.
While the city will be reviewing the 2004
master plan, Mayor Larry Mulligan believes the River Center
project will present future development opportunities.
“Certainly, I’d love to see more
development there and create additional uses to allow more connectivity with
the trail and the river,” Mulligan said.
He said development along the riverfront is
similar to the ebbs and flows of the river itself. Mulligan said the city needs
to recognize that it’s an asset along with the natural beauty of its wetlands.
However, he said the city also needs to be
cognizant that it has limited resources to bear, which have to be leveraged
with other partners, such as Metro Parks. Mulligan also said the city is
working in partnership with other communities to expand the opportunities the
bike path could bring.
“We’re open to looking at things,” he said.
In the past, Middletown has worked to develop the
riverfront but hopes to turn it into the Riverfront District in the mid-1980s
were never realized.
According to the Journal-News archives, the
Lake Middletown
project involved widening the Great Miami River on the north and south sides of
the Ohio 122
bridge to create a 100-acre lake in the river. But those plans never really
lived up to what was expected in terms of residential and other private
development.
The project, which some called “Lake Mistake,”
was about 95 percent completed when the Army Corps of Engineers shut it down in
1990 after a temporary levee was removed on the north side of the bridge
allowing pooled water from the excavation area to mingle with flowing river
water. Levees on the north and south sides of the bridge were to have stayed in
place until contaminant testing of the excavation area was completed.
After a four-year delay imposed by the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, and after a consent decree was agreed to and
fines were paid for when the city worked on the lake without the needed permit
from the Army Corps of Engineers, the project was finished in 1995. At that
time, water freely flowed under the first bridge overpass on the Middletown side of the
river, according to newspaper articles published at the time.
The news accounts also noted that city
leaders did not count on the 1993 collapse of the low-level dam north of Middletown, which has
allowed large quantities of sediment to float downriver and fill in the lake
between 1995 and 1996.
One city official at the time said the dam
break and the legal issues with the EPA is what killed the project. Little has
changed along the banks of the river since the AK Steel pavilion, the bike path
and Bicentennial Commons projects were completed.
Mulligan would not draw any comparisons to the current efforts with the Lake Middletown
project.
“It’s ancient history, and it is not
worth rehashing history,” he said.
Interest in the riverfront is not limited
to the downtown core. One entrepreneur, who is a lifelong outdoorsman, wants to
take advantage of his business’ upriver location and create a niche side
business using the bike path and the Great Miami River
as its launching pad.
James Zickgraff, who recently opened
Jimco’s Drive Thru near the corner of Carmody
Boulevard and Germantown Road, said he wants to start a
kayak rental and livery business in addition to his combination car wash, drive
thru and pizza business.
If he can get approvals from the Miami
Conservancy District who controls the riverbanks and flood control areas and
the Middletown Planning Commission in April, he’d like to start his kayaking
venture this spring.
“I’m a big outdoorsman,” he said. “I’ve been
kayaking this river for the past seven years.”
Zickgraff, who left his refrigeration
mechanic job with Kroger after 12 years to follow his dream of owning a
business, said he believes he can make a living with his business. He said once
the kayaking operation begins, he will have invested more than $25o,000 in his
business.
“This is what I’m going to do,” Zickgraff
said. “I’m really excited about this.”
His plan would enable people to take a
four- to five-hour kayak trip from near Chautauqua Dam in southern Montgomery County,
or a two-hour trip from Franklin back to his
store in Middletown.
Zickgraff said if that works out, he can see other kayaking opportunities
starting in Middletown and going further south
to Hamilton.
“I think this is going to be great because
there is not a lot of access to the river,” he said. “There is just so much
room to grow.”
The bike path access is next to his
property and on the other side of the levee. There is already a gravel service
drive used by the Miami Conservancy District for maintenance that could be used
to pick up the kayaks. Zickgraff said he had an informal conversation about his
idea with someone from MCD, but no formal arrangements or use agreement have
been worked out to execute his proposal.
“We’ll have to work with them,” he said. “We
want to be a good steward and neighbor to the river.”
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