Hoover council OKs car wash on Alabama 150, shopping center on Alabama 119

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Sketch provided by city of Hoover

The Hoover City Council tonight approved plans for a second Anthony’s Car Wash along John Hawkins Parkway in western Hoover and a small strip shopping center along Alabama 119 on the east side of town.

The Anthony’s Car Wash is to be built at 2420 John Hawkins Parkway, which is on the west side of Interstate 459 near the entrance to the Medical West freestanding emergency department and The Shoppes at Hoover center that contains Sprouts Farmers Market.

Original plans called for both the car wash and a restaurant on the land across Medford Drive from McDonald’s, but the owner decided to eliminate the restaurant and build only the car wash.

Dr. Peter DeFranco, a resident of the Scout Creek sector of the nearby Trace Crossings community, told the Hoover City Council last month he was very concerned about whether development of the car wash on the slope there would send sediment along creeks into the lakes in Trace Crossings.

When The Shoppes of Hoover were developed, there were serious erosion problems that harmed their lake that still have not been completely rectified, DeFranco said. The Alabama Department of Environmental Management does not have the manpower to regulate problems like this, and guidelines the city has in place are not sufficient, DeFranco said last month.

Tonight, Todd Thompson of the Gonzalez-Strength & Associates engineering firm, representing the developer, told the City Council his company took residents’ concerns very seriously and agreed after meeting with city staff to implement a three-phase erosion control plan.

That plan includes building two oversized sediment ponds, daily street sweeping in the area around the development, sodding of slopes instead of seeding and turbidity monitoring after each rainfall event, with results being reported to the city.

In a separate case, the City Council approved plans for a small strip shopping center on 1.75 acres along Alabama 119 between the Meadow Brook post office and an existing office building, Hoover planning consultant Bob House said.

The plan is to put a 9,200-square-foot building on a triangle of land across from the Old Brook Place neighborhood, said Thompson, whose firm also is handling that development.

119 Partners II, the owner of the property, has an optometrist interested in locating there and plans to build space for several other retail businesses, said Norman Tynes, executive vice president of Harbert Realty Services.

The owners hope to begin construction within six months and have it built five to six months after that, Tynes said last month. “We’d love to have it done by Christmas,” he said.

Residents of Old Brook Place in the past have objected to commercial development on that property, House said. However, no one objected to the new proposal at tonight’s meeting or at the Hoover Planning and Zoning Commission meeting last month.

Thompson said the new shopping center would be 250 feet east of the entrance to Old Brook Place and 400 feet east of the entrance to a nearby apartment complex.

Residents of those communities would not be staring it as they exit their communities, he said.

The City Council tonight rezoned the property from a preferred commercial office district to a community business district to accommodate the shopping center.

Map provided by city of Hoover

Layout provided by city of Hoover

The council also tonight approved numerous funding agreements with organizations that serve the city. The council agreed to:

In other business tonight, the council:

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