Dogan-Gaither Flats
Dogan-Gaither Flats
Awards Category : : Renovation / Restoration
This adaptive reuse preserved and enhanced the mid-century design elements of this motel with roots in the Civil Rights era, while making carefully considered updates to meet new programmatic needs.
Located within a quickly changing warehouse district, the existing mid-century motel embodies an important part of the African-American business history in Knoxville. Built in 1963 as the Dogan-Gaither Motor Court, its adaptive reuse as permanent supportive housing to parolees will provide a source of redemption in an area with a rich African-American history in Knoxville. The Jessamine address was the second location of the important motel that hosted patrons such as Ray Charles and Cab Calloway, after being forced to move from its original location at East Vine Avenue as part of the “Downtown Loop” urban renewal project that would become James White Parkway in the early 1960s. In 1959, the original Dogan-Gaither location was listed in a publication for “Negro travelers,” the Newark-based Nationwide Hotel Association Directory and Guide to Travelers; similar to publications such as the famous Green Book guide for traveling African-Americans.
The new development, known as Dogan-Gaither Flats, will provide counseling, accountability, work placement, and transitional skills training to males returning to Knoxville from incarceration in the 16 dual-occupancy one-bedroom unit apartment development.
The building was in a state of disrepair as it sat abandoned for many years prior to the renovation, and the original floor plan layout had been almost completely rearranged. The design team carefully studied the existing conditions and what little historic documentation existed for clues to the original grain of hotel units and fenestration patterns. Many of the original openings had been filled in over the years, and as part of the renovation were reactivated and repurposed for new programmatic needs. Necessary structural and envelope updates were made to ensure a long-lasting and sustainable building, new gathering spaces were created, and most of the impervious surface surrounding the building was replaced with landscaped green spaces. The architecture plays a key role in the redemptive story of its inhabitants.
Building Area: 10,558 sf
Cost per square foot: $224/SF
Construction Cost: $2,367,446.00
Date of Completion: Original: 1963, Renovation: 2022
Client: Fourth Purpose Foundation and Laurens Tullock, Tullock Consulting
General Contractor: Elite Diversified Construction, Inc.
Electrical Consultants: Civil Engineering: Will Robinson & Associates - Will Robinson, P.E.
Landscape Architecture: Hedstrom Landscape Architecture - Andrew Spatz, ASLA
Structural Engineering: Mallia Engineering Co. - Maurice Mallia, P.E.
Mechanical Engineering: Engineering Service Group, Inc. - Nate Valukas, P.E.
Electrical Engineering: Engineering Service Group, Inc. - Ed Henderson, P.E.
Engineering Consultants:
Other:
Photography Credits:
1 - Keith Isaacs
2 - Historic Photos - McClung Collection
3 - Google Maps with architectural firm graphic overlay
4 - Upper left: photographer unknown, upper right: Architectural firm, bottom: Keith Isaacs
5 - Architectural Firm
6 - Architectural Firm
7 - Architectural Firm
8 - Top images: Architectural Firm. Bottom: Keith Isaacs
9 - Top images: Architectural Firm. Bottom: Keith Isaacs
10 - Top and right images: Architectural Firm. Bottom: Keith Isaacs
12 - Keith Isaacs
13 - Keith Isaacs