The Environmental Journal of Southern Appalachia

Displaying items by tag: knoxville housing

Wednesday, 22 January 2025 12:24

Play real simcity with Knoxville plan for housing

61441676 2534604046552233 8039343196519530496 nA streetscape of downtown Knoxville. City leaders want input into how the city will spend federal housing dollars.  Thomas Fraser/Hellbender Press

KNOXVILLE — The City of Knoxville will host a public meeting at 6 p.m. Jan. 28 at the City’s Public Works Service Center, 3131 Morris Ave., to present information and data gathered about the city’s housing and neighborhood development needs that will be used to draft the 2025-2029 Consolidated Plan.

All attendees will have the opportunity to ask questions and provide feedback.

Every five years, the city’s Housing and Neighborhood Development department creates a Five-Year Consolidated Plan to outline how the city plans to allocate federal funds to meet local priorities in the categories of affordable housing, homelessness, economic development and other community development activities that serve low- and moderate-income households. Those annual funds come from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD)’s Community Development Block Grant, HOME Investment Partnerships, and Emergency Solutions Grant (ESG) funding sources.

This meeting continues a community engagement process that began in 2024 with public meetings and consultations with service providers and community groups. More than 600 residents have been involved thus far.

Residents will be able to review the draft Consolidated Plan in April and provide additional feedback before the plan is submitted to HUD by May 15, 2025.

In addition to commenting in person, residents may provide feedback via email to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or in writing to Linda Rust, City of Knoxville Housing and Neighborhood Development Department, P.O. Box 1631, Knoxville, TN  37901.

Published in Event Archive
Wednesday, 17 February 2021 15:08

Demand exploding for suburban Knoxville homes

KNOX NEWS: As city swells, huge demand for houses in Knoxville area may cue more urban sprawl

Demand is far outstripping supply in suburban areas of Knoxville such as Farragut, where bidding is fierce and apartment complexes are sprouting to meet housing needs.

According to the article: “While normally there would be 12,000–14,000 houses for sale in Knoxville, right now there’s only about 1,900. The demand is even higher in Farragut.”

Don’t expect the proliferation of far-flung apartment buildings and subdivisions — and their accompanying public infrastructure needs — to subside anytime soon, at least based on this article.

Published in Feedbag