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After board declares them unfit, city posts ‘Danger’ signs on four Applewood buildings

Posted at 12:55 pm March 28, 2013
By John Huotari 2 Comments

Applewood Apartments Danger Signs

The Oak Ridge municipal staff has posted yellow “Danger” signs on units at four Applewood Apartment buildings on Hunter Circle.

A few days after a city board declared them unfit, the Oak Ridge municipal staff posted yellow “Danger” signs on four Applewood Apartment buildings on Hunter Circle, officials said.

Posted on Tuesday, the placards say the 48 apartment units have been deemed unfit for human occupation or use, said Denny Boss, Oak Ridge code enforcement supervisor. The notices cannot be removed until the structures are repaired or demolished.

Joe Levitt, the Knoxville attorney who owns the apartments, disagrees that they are dangerous.

“The buildings are in satisfactory engineering and architectural condition,” he said Thursday. “There’s no question about that.” [Read more…]

Filed Under: Government, Oak Ridge, Top Stories Tagged With: Applewood Apartments, code enforcement, Corum Engineering, danger, danger signs, demolition, Denny Boss, Hunter Circle, Jim Odle, Joe Levitt, Kathryn Baldwin, Oak Ridge Board of Building and Housing Code Appeals, Oak Ridge Community Development, Tennessee Court of Appeals, unfit, unfit for human occupation or use

Board reaffirms decision to declare four Applewood buildings ‘unfit’

Posted at 12:19 pm March 22, 2013
By John Huotari 6 Comments

Applewood Apartments Board Hearing

Jim Odle of Odle and Young Architects in Knoxville shows a picture of a repair during a Thursday code enforcement hearing on four Applewood Apartments buildings. Also pictured at front center is Joe Levitt, owner of the apartment complex.

With no objections from members, a city board on Thursday reaffirmed a decision from more than two years ago to declare four Applewood Apartment buildings unfit for human occupation and use, and declare them nuisances.

Joe Lee, a member of the Oak Ridge Board of Building and Housing Code Appeals, said the board’s November 2010 decision on the four buildings on Hunter Circle has already been upheld by the Anderson County Chancery Court and the Tennessee Court of Appeals.

It wasn’t immediately clear what might happen next, including whether apartment owner Joe Levitt, a Knoxville attorney, might appeal the decision, and whether the city might issue an order to vacate the buildings. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Government, Oak Ridge, Top Stories Tagged With: Anderson County Chancery Court, Applewood Apartments, code enforcement, demolition, Hillside Road, Hunter Circle, Jim Odle, Joe Lee, Joe Levitt, John Russell, Kathryn Baldwin, Ken Krushenski, nuisance, Oak Ridge Board of Building and Housing Code Appeals, Oak Ridge Community Development, Odle and Young Architects Inc., repairs, Tennessee Court of Appeals, unfit for human occupation and use

Board will consider ‘unfit’ designations for four Applewood buildings

Posted at 7:33 pm March 20, 2013
By John Huotari 3 Comments

A Tennessee appellate court has sent an order to demolish four Applewood Apartment buildings back to a municipal board, and that board is scheduled to consider “unfit for human occupation and use” designations—but not demolitions—during a Thursday afternoon meeting.

The Oak Ridge Board of Building and Housing Code Appeals had ordered the four buildings on Hunter Circle demolished on Nov. 11, 2010. The order was upheld by the Anderson County Chancery Court, but Applewood Apartments owner Joseph J. Levitt Jr., a Knoxville attorney, appealed. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Government, Oak Ridge, Top Stories Tagged With: Anderson County Chancery Court, apartment complex, Applewood Apartments, code enforcement, demolitions, Hillside Road, Huff Management Company, Hunter Circle, Hunter Ridge, Joseph J. Levitt Jr., Ken Krushenski, Mark Watson, Oak Ridge Board of Building and Housing Code Appeals, Tennessee Court of Appeals, unfit for human occupation and use

City doesn’t plan to appeal Applewood demolition decision

Posted at 5:56 pm November 5, 2012
By John Huotari 4 Comments

Note: This story was updated on Nov. 7 to include links to the opinion.

The city’s top legal official on Monday said he doesn’t plan to appeal an appellate court decision that sent the order to demolish four Applewood Apartment buildings back to a municipal board.

“I don’t want to hold this up by appealing this any further,” Oak Ridge City Attorney Ken Krushenski said. “We’re going to do what the Court of Appeals said.”

The Oak Ridge Board of Building and Housing Code Appeals ordered the buildings demolished on Nov. 11, 2010. The order was upheld by the Anderson County Chancery Court, but Applewood Apartments owner Joseph J. Levitt Jr., a Knoxville attorney, appealed.

In a three-judge opinion filed Oct. 30, the Tennessee Court of Appeals in Knoxville said the Board of Building and Housing Code Appeals “acted without material evidence to support its decision to demolish the buildings.”

The appellate court said the board may only order demolitions when repair costs exceed 50 percent of property values. However, no evidence was presented at the 2010 Applewood hearing about the original condition or value of the buildings, or the repair costs, the court said.

The city won on all other issues, Krushenski said.

“As far as we’re concerned, everything else is over with,” he said.

Krushenski said the Board of Building and Housing Code Appeals will now have an evidentiary hearing that will be limited to the building and repair costs. He said the board will be able to consider demolition orders if repair costs exceed more than 50 percent of building values. A hearing date hasn’t been set yet.

In its opinion, the Court of Appeals said board member Joe Lee “moved to order the demolition of the subject buildings because he believed that (Levitt) had already been given an adequate amount of time in which to repair the buildings.

“While (the) owner’s continued noncompliance may have been infuriating to the board, the board did not have the power to order the demolition of property simply because owner failed to follow directions,” the court said.

The other issues reviewed by the court ranged from the constitutionality of administrative warrants used to inspect Applewood buildings to Lee’s alleged bias against Levitt.

Levitt could appeal the court’s decision to the Tennessee Supreme Court. He wasn’t available for comment late Monday afternoon

There are total of 10 Applewood Apartment buildings that have been ordered demolished. Krushenski said the other six demolition cases are pending in Anderson County Chancery Court.

The Oak Ridge City Court has ordered that three more buildings be repaired. That order has been appealed to Anderson County Circuit Court, Krushenski said.

The city has fought a code enforcement battle against the 13-building apartment complex on Hillside Road and Hunter Circle for several years. City officials say they want the buildings repaired, while Levitt says he has made repairs.

You can read the opinion here.

Filed Under: Government, Top Stories Tagged With: Applewood Apartments, Joseph J. Levitt Jr., Ken Krushenski, Oak Ridge Board of Building and Housing Code Appeals, Tennessee Court of Appeals

Board orders home demolition, clean-up

Posted at 10:18 am October 12, 2012
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Lawton Road House Fire

A city board on Thursday ordered the demolition of a Lawton Road duplex that burned in July. (Photo by Tom Scott)

A city board on Thursday ordered the demolition of a burned duplex on Lawton Road and the clean-up of a duplex unit on Bettis Lane.

The Oak Ridge Board of Building and Housing Code Appeals also agreed to dismiss the case against a Tuskegee Road warehouse if the owners install boards known as fascia, maintain the property, and paint the building within 30 days.

The Lawton Road duplex burned in July. The fire was caused by a window-mounted air conditioning unit that overheated and caught fire, board members learned Thursday. The owners are reportedly interested in selling the property to the city.

The city staff reported that the Bettis Lane duplex unit is abandoned and neglected, and a city inspection found debris, spoiled food, and roaches inside, said Matt Widner, who works in Oak Ridge Codes Enforcement. The board ordered the unit cleaned within 30 days.

The board had discussed the case against the Tuskegee Drive warehouse in meetings in June and September. They could hear it again in 90 days if the owners don’t follow the board order.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Government Tagged With: Bettis Lane, demolition, Lawton Road, Oak Ridge Board of Building and Housing Code Appeals, Tuskegee Road

City board considers home, warehouse demolitions, repairs

Posted at 9:17 am October 10, 2012
By John Huotari 3 Comments

Lawton Road House Fire

A city board on Thursday will consider whether to demolish a Lawton Road duplex that burned this summer. (Photo by Tom Scott)

A city board on Thursday will consider ordering the demolition of a Lawton Road duplex that burned this summer.

The board will also consider ordering the repair or demolition of a warehouse on Tuskegee Drive that has a deteriorated exterior and exposed or open roof.

The Oak Ridge Board of Building and Housing Code Appeals will also consider whether to declare one abandoned unit in a duplex on Bettis Lane to be unfit for human occupation or use, and to order that it be repaired.

The board meets at 3 p.m. Thursday in the Municipal Building Training Room.

A meeting agenda said the Bettis Lane duplex unit has been neglected, is extremely unsanitary, and insects and rodents have been observed.

The owners of the Lawton Road duplex are interested in selling their property to the city, the agenda said.

The board is re-hearing the case of the Tuskegee Drive warehouse. Ceiling and roof sheeting and rafters are deteriorated and have been repeatedly exposed to moisture, and there are electrical system hazards and general fire safety violations, the agenda said.

Filed Under: Government Tagged With: Bettis Lane, demolition, Lawton Road, Oak Ridge Board of Building and Housing Code Appeals, repair, Tuskegee Drive

City demolishes West Outer Drive home for code violations

Posted at 11:58 pm July 17, 2012
By John Huotari 6 Comments

West Outer Drive Home Demolition

A contractor demolishes a West Outer Drive home that city officials allege has had code violation problems for a decade. (Photo submitted by City of Oak Ridge)

Demolition work started Monday at a West Outer Drive home that Oak Ridge officials say has had code violation problems for a decade.

“The owners refused to comply with repeated requests to bring the property up to code,” a city press release said Tuesday.

It said the Board of Building and Housing Code Appeals declared the home at 759 W. Outer Drive unfit for human occupation and ordered it demolished in June 2011.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Government Tagged With: code enforcement, home demolition, Oak Ridge Board of Building and Housing Code Appeals, West Outer Drive

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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...]

Public Notice: NNSA announces no significant impact of Y-12 Development Organization operations at Horizon Center

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

ADFAC seeks contractors for five homes

Aid to Distressed Families of Appalachian Counties (ADFAC) is a non-profit community based agency, … [Read More...]

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