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Wrecking Crew To Demolish Piece Of Port Tampa's History
By DULCINEA CUELLAR dcuellar@tampatrib.com
Published: Mar 25, 2006

William "Dick" Carter remembers attending Port Tampa City Council meetings in the small white-stucco building at Interbay and West Shore boulevards.

"We had lots of meetings in that old building," said Carter, 78, who served on the council for two years before the town was annexed by Tampa in 1961. "It was very small ... but it served its purpose."

Crews are set to begin demolishing the former city hall, administration building and city library Tuesday because of mold and asbestos. 

Lisa Wilson remembers going to story time at the library in the mid-1970s.

"We would all sit in a semicircle and listen to the storyteller," she said. "There are so few buildings left of our history and our sense of community; it's so sad.

"It's very unfortunate it couldn't be used as anything else," the 35-year-old Port Tampa resident said.

The demolition will be completed by Wednesday at a cost of $11,326, including asbestos abatement, according to Kimmins Contracting Corp.

The city has no plans for the property, said Randy Crowder, real estate contract specialist.

Jill Buford, president of the Civic Association of Port Tampa, said she hoped the city would do something with the building, which had been left to rot.

"Now it's a big box of mold," she said. "For the old-timers, it's just another piece of old Port Tampa being removed."

The 1947 building, 8611 Interbay Blvd., isn't a designated historical structure.

But Carter's wife, Ethel, said it has sentimental value for her and other longtime residents.

"And I took my granddaughter there for story time," she said.

 

IN CASE YOU MISSED IT

Port Tampa: Builder irks neighbors

By Times Staff Writer
Published March 26, 2004

PORT TAMPA - Residents are asking city officials for help with a new housing development they say has run amok.

One of the developers called the charges "petty."

The project under construction is tentatively called South Tampa Square, which will include 41 single-family homes and 45 townhomes near the old Port Tampa landfill.

According to a March 18 letter from Port Tampa Civic Association president Scott Davis to Mayor Pam Iorio, workers clearing land have blocked a drainage ditch, which left standing water "now covered with mold." They piled up dirt and brush, and damaged Wall Street and surrounding properties with heavy equipment. In addition, vehicle batteries and car tires have been dumped on site and someone is building bonfires nearby.

Davis wrote that the developer, Port Tampa Communities, has broken a promise to be a responsible neighbor and has "exhibited a reckless disregard for our neighborhood."

The response: Yes, it's ugly. But it's temporary.

"We're in the middle of open heart surgery," said Chris Kirschner, an architect and partner in Port Tampa Communities. "It's pretty bloody."

The site was used as a neighborhood dump, a playground for off-road vehicles and the site of paint ball battles, Kirschner said. In the past few months, 40,000 cubic yards of muck and 3,000 tires have been hauled away, and 80,000 cubic yards of clean fill dirt has been brought in, he said.

He said the ditch is no longer blocked and the other problems will be remedied within a few weeks.

[Last modified March 25, 2004, 14:08:18]

 

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