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Dover Development wins national preservation award for Alexander Inn

Posted at 11:26 am July 15, 2016
By John Huotari 1 Comment

Alexander Guest House Front Entrance Sept. 23, 2015

The front entrance is pictured above at the Alexander Guest House, which converted the historic but long-vacant Alexander Inn hotel into a beautifully restored assisted living center. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

 

Rick Dover and Dover Development of Knoxville have won a national preservation award for their work to convert the historic Alexander Inn, a dilapidated, vacant two-story hotel in Oak Ridge, into the Alexander Guest House, a beautifully restored assisted living center.

Knox Heritage, which played a key role in the project, announced the award on Friday. Also playing a key role was the East Tennessee Preservation Alliance.

Dover Development won the Chairman’s Award for Achievement in Historic Preservation from the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation, or ACHP, a press release said. Members of the ACHP are appointed by the president of the United States.

It’s one of the highest awards given for historic preservation, the press release said. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Business, Business, Community, Federal, Front Page News, Government, Knoxville, Nonprofits, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge Office, Slider, U.S. Department of Energy Tagged With: ACHP, Advisory Council on Historic Preservation, Alexander Guest House, Alexander Inn, Chairman’s Award for Achievement in Historic Preservation, Dover Development, East Tennessee Preservation Alliance, Guest House, historic preservation, Kim Trent, Knox Heritage, Manhattan Project, Mick Wiest, Milford Wayne Donaldson, National Building Museum, national preservation award, National Register, Oak Ridge Heritage and Preservation Association, Oak Ridge Office of Environmental Management, ORHPA, Preservationist of the Year, Rick Dover, Sue Cange, U.S. Department of Energy, Warren Gooch, World War II

Manhattan Project Park program: Oak Ridge, past to present, at Alvin K. Bissell Park

Posted at 9:49 am July 15, 2016
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Bridge-in-A.K.-Bissell-Park

Alvin K. Bissell Park in Oak Ridge is pictured above. (Submitted photo)

 

During a walk this month, the National Park Service will discuss how and why Oak Ridge was developed and how people were encouraged to stay during World War II. The free walk will be led by a ranger at Alvin K. Bissel Park at 10 a.m. Thursday, July 28.

The walk will begin at the Secret City Commemorative Walk, and it will end at the International Friendship Bell.

The walk will also feature Shigeko Uppuluri, who will discuss her role in bringing the Friendship Bell to Oak Ridge. She will discuss the history and meaning of the bell.

The Secret City Commemorative Walk is located at the end of the parking lot next to the Oak Ridge Public Library at 1401 Oak Ridge Turnpike, near the intersection of Oak Ridge Turnpike and South Tulane Avenue. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Community, Federal, Government, Top Stories Tagged With: Alvin K. Bissell Park, American Museum of Science and Energy, Friendship Bell, Hanford, International Friendship Bell, Los Alamos, Manhattan Project, Manhattan Project National Historical Park, National Park Service, Oak Ridge, Secret City Commemorative Walk, Shigeko Uppuluri, World War II

Oak Ridge, AC added to state blight elimination program; loans of up to $25K per home

Posted at 11:22 pm July 11, 2016
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

TDHA Perrey Oak Ridge Gooch Blight Elimination Program July 11 2016

Oak Ridge and Anderson County have been added to a state blight elimination program that could allow the city to accelerate its efforts to remove blighted and abandoned homes and replace them with new affordable housing, or possibly green space. Ralph Perrey, left, executive director of the Tennessee Housing Development Agency, makes the announcement in Oak Ridge on Monday, July 11, 2016. Also pictured is Oak Ridge Mayor Warren Gooch. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

 

Oak Ridge and Anderson County have been added to a state blight elimination program that could allow the city to accelerate its efforts to remove blighted and abandoned homes and replace them with new affordable housing, or possibly green space. Loans of up to $25,000 per home are available.

The Blight Elimination Program allows qualified nonprofits and land banks, like the one in Oak Ridge, to apply for loans of up to $25,000 to acquire blighted, abandoned homes, demolish them, turn the property into green space, and maintain the vacant lots. The “greened” lots can then be turned into new affordable housing or converted into other uses meant to stabilize neighborhoods, with the uses approved by the Tennessee Housing Development Agency.

The $25,000 per demolition will be fronted by the THDA. The work could start with the Oak Ridge Land Bank Corporation, THDA Executive Director Ralph M. Perrey said during a Monday afternoon press conference in Oak Ridge. The press conference also included Oak Ridge City Manager Mark Watson, Oak Ridge Mayor Warren Gooch, and Katie Moore, East Tennessee THDA representative.

The Blight Elimination Program has $10 million in funding available in Tennessee on a first-come, first-served basis. Much of it is likely to be used in Memphis in Shelby County, one of six other counties previously approved for the Blight Elimination Program, Perrey said.

But Memphis isn’t the only place that needs help, he said.

“I think a fair amount of that can be put to work here,” Perrey said in Oak Ridge on Monday. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Front Page News, Government, Oak Ridge, State, Top Stories Tagged With: affordable housing, Anderson County, BEP, blight elimination, Blight Elimination Program, blighted home, Community Development Block Grant, demolition, Hardest Hit Fund, HHF, Kathryn Baldwin, Katie Moore, Manhattan District Overlay, Manhattan Project, Mark Watson, MDO, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge Land Bank Corporation, Ralph Perrey, Tennessee Housing Development Agency, THDA, U.S. Treasury, Warren Gooch, World War II

ORHPA hosts presentation on growing up in Oak Ridge

Posted at 11:32 am July 2, 2016
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Ed Westcott and Ray Smith

Ed Westcott, right, was the only official photographer in Oak Ridge during the Manhattan Project in World War II, a top-secret project to build the world’s first atomic bomb. Westcott is pictured above with D. Ray Smith, Y-12 National Security Complex historian and newspaper history columnist. (Photo courtesy D. Ray Smith)

 

The Oak Ridge Heritage and Preservation Association will host a presentation on growing up in Oak Ridge on Thursday, July 7.

“Join us and reminisce on how it was growing up in the Secret City through photographs from renowned Manhattan Project photographer Ed Westcott,” a press release said. “Don and Emily Hunnicutt will be the speakers.”

The “Growing Up in Oak Ridge” presentation is at 7 p.m. Thursday, July 7, at the Midtown Community Center (Wildcat Den) at 102 Robertsville Road. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Community, Front Page News Tagged With: D. Ray Smith, Ed Westcott, Emily Hunnicutt, growing up in Oak Ridge, Manhattan Project, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge Heritage and Preservation Association, ORHPA, Secret City, World War II

Learn about secrecy, security, spies at Turnpike Gatehouse on July 8

Posted at 12:01 pm June 29, 2016
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

The Oak Ridge Turnpike Gatehouse is pictured above on the west end of town. (Submitted photo)

The Oak Ridge Turnpike Gatehouse is pictured above on the west end of town. (Submitted photo)

 

Learn about secrecy, security, and spies in a program presented by the Manhattan Project National Historical Park in Oak Ridge on Friday, July 8. The program will start at 3 p.m. July 8 at the Oak Ridge Turnpike Gatehouse on the west end of town.

“The program will give visitors some insight to what life was like in Oak Ridge during the Manhattan Project, with all the security, the need for secrecy, and the worry of spies,” a press release said.

It’s free and open to the public. Parking is limited, so please try to carpool if possible. The gatehouse is also at a trail head for the North Boundary Greenway, and visitors can go for a self-guided hike after the program.

Visitors that are taking the U.S. Department of Energy public tour are encouraged to attend the program after the tour. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Federal, Front Page News, Government, Top Stories, U.S. Department of Energy Tagged With: American Museum of Science and Energy, atomic weapons, Hanford, Los Alamos, Manhattan Project, Manhattan Project National Historical Park, Oak Ridge Turnpike Gatehouse, secrecy, security, spies, U.S. Department of Energy, World War II

Scottish professor visits Children’s Museum for Weinberg research

Posted at 10:18 am June 24, 2016
By Kay Brookshire Leave a Comment

Sean Johnston and Alvin Weinberg Papers at Children's Museum

Professor Sean Johnston, a professor of science, technology, and social studies from the Dumfries Campus of the University of Glasgow in Scotland, searched through the papers of Alvin Weinberg, former director of the Oak Ridge National Laboratory, as part of a two-year project funded by the British Academy titled “Trusting the Technological Fix.” (Submitted photo)

 

The Children’s Museum of Oak Ridge is well known as a center of play and learning for the young and young at heart. The museum’s lesser-known collections of historic papers recently brought a senior academic historian from Scotland to Oak Ridge for several days of research.

Professor Sean Johnston, a professor of science, technology, and social studies from the Dumfries Campus of the University of Glasgow, searched through the papers of Alvin Weinberg, former director of the Oak Ridge National Laboratory, as part of a two-year project funded by the British Academy titled “Trusting the Technological Fix.”

His visit highlights the value of the collections the museum began gathering in the 1970s to tell the cultural and social history of the area for its Regional Appalachian Center.

“Not only was Weinberg the prominent head of the national laboratory (1955-73), and very much a member of the establishment, but he was somebody who was curious and worried about the wider social implications of nuclear technology,” Johnston said. [Read more…]

Filed Under: College, Community, Education, Front Page News, Nonprofits, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Top Stories, U.S. Department of Energy Tagged With: Alvin Weinberg, American Museum of Science and Energy, big science, children's museum, Children's Museum of Oak Ridge, Clinton Laboratories, Eugene Wigner, Howard Baker Center for Public Policy, Margaret Allard, Oak Ridge Associated Universities, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, ORAU, ORNL, ORNL archives, Regional Appalachian Center, Rhonda Bogard, Sean Johnston, selma shapiro, technological fix, Tim Gawne, University of Glasgow, World War II

Secret City Festival hosts Willow Run Rosies 

Posted at 12:07 pm June 22, 2016
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Eight of the 13 Rosie the Riveters are shown here along with Heritage Exhibit participant Tom Walker, Oak Ridge Heritage Room organizer Bobbie Martin, and Interpretive National Park Ranger Veronica Greear. The Rosies are, from left to right, Bette Kenward, Barb Matthews, Vikki Toth, Chris Brown, Patsy Kemner, Kate Weise, Susie Sweeney, and Alison Beatty (down front). (Photo by M. McBride)

Eight of the 13 Rosie the Riveters are shown here along with Heritage Exhibit participant Tom Walker, Oak Ridge Heritage Room organizer Bobbie Martin, and Interpretive National Park Ranger Veronica Greear. The Rosies are, from left to right, Bette Kenward, Barb Matthews, Vikki Toth, Chris Brown, Patsy Kemner, Kate Weise, Susie Sweeney, and Alison Beatty (down front). (Photo by M. McBride)

 

This year’s Secret City Festival hosted 13 members of the “Willow Run Rosies” from the Historic Willow Run bomber plant in Ypsilanti, Michigan. Wearing Rosie-The-Riveter costumes, these ladies helped re-create the spirit of the many Rosies who powered the American war effort during World War II.

The Rosies were part of a 20-person group from Michigan.

The Willow Run Rosies chatted with festival visitors in the Oak Ridge Heritage and Preservation Room on Saturday during the city’s two-day festival. Each year, the Oak Ridge Heritage and Preservation Association sponsors a heritage room during the festival, featuring exhibits on the history of the super-secret Manhattan Project and its “Secret City” of Oak Ridge.

Tens of thousands of “Rosies” came here during World War II, as part of President Roosevelt’s massive effort to build an atomic bomb in time to end the war. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Community, Front Page News, Nonprofits, Top Stories Tagged With: Alison Beatty, B-24 Liberator Bombers, Lloyd and Betty Stokes, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge Heritage and Preservation Association, Ray Smith, Secret City, Secret City Festival, Willow Run bomber plant, Willow Run Rosies, World War II, Y-12 National Security Complex

Oak Ridge Symphony to celebrate National Park Service centennial during season opening

Posted at 3:48 pm June 17, 2016
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Oak Ridge Symphony with Dan Allcott

The Oak Ridge Symphony Orchestra is pictured above with conductor Dan Allcott. (File photo by ORCMA)

 

The Oak Ridge Symphony Orchestra will celebrate the National Park Service’s centennial, its 100th anniversary, during a season-opening concert in September.

The Manhattan Project National Historical Park, a new national park that includes Oak Ridge, is partnering with the Oak Ridge Civic Music Association, or ORCMA, for the special celebration of the National Park Service’s 100th anniversary. The centennial will be celebrated Saturday, September 24.

It’s the 72nd season-opening concert for the Oak Ridge Symphony Orchestra.

The September concert, titled “Pride of Place,” will celebrate Oak Ridge’s scientific heritage with an exciting world premiere by East Tennessee composer Mark Harrell commissioned by the JAZ Fund to honor the post-World War II generation of scientists in Oak Ridge, a press release said. The concert will conclude with Peter Boyer’s powerful and moving “Ellis Island: The Dream of America” for narrator and orchestra. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Community, Entertainment, Federal, Front Page News, Government, Music, Nonprofits Tagged With: 100th anniversary, centennial, Dan Allcott, Ellis Island: The Dream of America, Manhattan Project National Historical Park, Mark Harrell, National Park Service, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge Civic Music Association, Oak Ridge High School Performing Arts Center, Oak Ridge Symphony Orchestra, ORCMA, Peter Boyer, Pride of Place, World War II

Amateur Radio Club demonstrates World War II-era military radio at Secret City Festival

Posted at 10:25 pm June 16, 2016
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Sterling Edmunds of the Roane County Amateur Radio Club explains historical communication to visitors during the Secret City Festival. In the background are working, restored military “morale” radios and receivers from WWII and the Cold War. (Submitted photo)

Sterling Edmunds of the Roane County Amateur Radio Club explains historical communication to visitors during the Secret City Festival. In the background are working, restored military “morale” radios and receivers from World War II and the Cold War. (Submitted photo)

 

By Kathryn King

The Oak Ridge Amateur Radio Club demonstrated World War II-era military radio communications Friday and Saturday as part of the Secret City Festival. The group also hosted communications as part of the National Parks on the Air Program, celebrating the centennial of the National Park Service and the newly established Manhattan Project National Historical Park. A special event radio call sign, N4M, was issued for this event. The concurrence of these three events represented a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for local amateur radio operators.

Approximately 200 people visited the exhibit, which, along with live, on-the-air radio operations, also featured replays of historic broadcasts, such as news programs from World War II, including the announcement of the existence of Oak Ridge and the Manhattan Project. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Clubs, Community, Front Page News Tagged With: amateur radio, Garret Scott, Kathryn King, Manhattan Project, Manhattan Project National Historical Park, military radio communications, National Park Service, National Parks on the Air Program, Oak Ridge Amateur Radio Club, ORARC, Secret City Festival, World War II

State housing grant of $500,000 will be used to renovate more than 60 homes

Posted at 3:32 pm June 9, 2016
By John Huotari 1 Comment

THDA Check Presentation to Oak Ridge June 8 2016 Slider

The Tennessee Housing Development Agency awarded the City of Oak Ridge a $500,000 grant on Wednesday, June 9, 2016, that will be used to renovate more than 60 single-family homes. Pictured above are THDA Executive Director Ralph M. Perrey, third from left, with other state and Oak Ridge officials. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

 

The $500,000 state housing grant that Oak Ridge received Wednesday will be used to renovate more than 60 homes, officials said.

The HOME Program grant is from the Tennessee Housing Development Agency, or THDA. It’s funded by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development and administered in part by the THDA in Tennessee.

“The HOME dollars will be of good use in making these homes safe, sound, and affordable,” said Ralph M. Perrey, THDA executive director.

The city plans to use the money to renovate 63 owner-occupied, single-family homes in the Manhattan District Overlay zone. Oak Ridge created the zone, which includes so-called “legacy homes,” mostly in the center of the city, to improve the development that is carried out in its oldest neighborhoods, a press release said.

The HOME grant money will allow Oak Ridge to replace electrical wiring systems and wall insulation, and install double-paned windows for the targeted homes, which date back to the World War II era, when the city was involved in the Manhattan Project. The city’s work under the HOME grant will be carried out in conjunction with Make Oak Ridge Energy Efficient, or MORE2, a project that is performing energy retrofits for 229 homes in the designated neighborhoods, the press release said. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Front Page News, Government, Government, Oak Ridge, Slider, State Tagged With: Chuck Fleischmann, City of Oak Ridge, energy retrofits, HOME Program, HOME Program grant, housing grant, legacy homes, Manhattan District Overlay, Manhattan Project, Mark Watson, Ralph M. Perrey, Tennessee Housing Development Agency, Tennessee Valley Authority, Tennessee Valley Authority Extreme Energy Makeover Program, THDA, TVA, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, Warren Gooch, World War II

DOE: Oak Ridge’s Building K-27 being torn down quickly

Posted at 1:46 am June 7, 2016
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

K-27 Demolition

Crews are moving at an impressive pace on Building K-27, completing more than 65 percent of the demolition since February. (Photo by DOE)

 

In February 2016, demolition crews started tearing down the K-27 gaseous diffusion building.

Now, only months later, the Oak Ridge Office of Environmental Management and its contractor UCOR have already completed demolition on more than 65 percent of the four-story, 383,000-square-foot facility, the U.S. Department of Energy said.

K-27 is the last of five large gaseous diffusion facilities to be torn down at the East Tennessee Technology Park, or ETTP, which was formerly known as the Oak Ridge Gaseous Diffusion Plant and often referred to as the former K-25 site.

“Due to the heavy contamination and state of the 1940s facility, K-27 was one of the environmental management’s highest cleanup priorities,” the DOE Office of Environmental Management, or EM, said in a May 31 newsletter. “The progress taking down the facility moves EM closer to fulfilling its Vision 2016—the removal of all five gaseous diffusion buildings from the site by year’s end. It is not only a significant goal for EM and Oak Ridge, but it will also mark the first time in the world that a uranium enrichment complex has been cleaned and removed.” [Read more…]

Filed Under: East Tennessee Technology Park, Front Page News, Oak Ridge Office, U.S. Department of Energy Tagged With: atomic weapons, Building K-27, demolition, DOE, East Tennessee Technology Park, Environmental Management Waste Management Facility, ETTP, gaseous diffusion, K-25, K-25 site, K-27 Building, K-29, K-31, K-33, Manhattan Project, Oak Ridge Gaseous Diffusion Plant, Oak Ridge Office of Environmental Management, OREM, UCOR, URS | CH2M Oak Ridge, Vision 2016, Wendy Cain, World War II

Secret City Festival to feature World War II re-enactment

Posted at 10:46 pm June 3, 2016
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Secret City Festival World War II Re-enactment 2015

A Flak 88 firing during a Battle of Normandy re-enactment at the 2015 Secret City Festival in Oak Ridge. (Photo by Rob Welton)

 

The Secret City Festival next week will feature a World War II re-enactment.

The re-enactment of the Battle of Bloody Gulch will be at 2 p.m. Saturday, June 11, at Alvin K. Bissell Park in central Oak Ridge. It’s presented by NSPS, or National Strategic Protective Services.

Here is some of the equipment scheduled to be involved, according to a press release:

  • Returning from the 2015 reenactment, the only fully live firing German Flak 88 in the United States, which will perform firing demonstrations.
  • Authentic Allied vehicles including jeeps, armored halftracks, scout cars, and anti-tank artillery.
  • Authentic Axis vehicles including a German Stug III Ausf G assault tank, Panzer III command tank, a Sd. Kfz 251 halftrack, and a M3 Antitank Gun just to name a few.
  • Static display pieces include a 1940 Ford 20mm gun truck with gun, a Russian 1944 T34 main battle tank, a 1943 British 25 pound field howitzer with limber, and more.
  • Re-enactors representing American infantry, German Wehrmacht, assault troops, Fallschirmjagers, and more.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Community, Front Page News, Meetings and Events, Top Stories Tagged With: Alvin K. Bissell Park, Americans, Battle of Bloody Gulch, Flak 88, Germans, Secret City Festival, World War II, World War II re-enactment

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Classifieds

Availability of the draft environmental assessment for off-site depleted uranium manufacturing (DOE/EA-2252)

The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) announces the … [Read More...]

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AVAILABILITY OF THE FINAL ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT FOR THE OFFSITE HOUSING OF THE Y-12 DEVELOPMENT … [Read More...]

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