Fanning the flames

Sonja Korner had crawled out of bed shortly after 3 a.m. for a quick trip to the bathroom when she noticed how light it was outside her Riverview Drive home. It was Aug. 5, and the early sunrise was actually a fire that had engulfed the house across the street—one of a string of new structures called Grandview, suspended over a slope that drops steeply away from the roadside.

Burning questions: The arson of a West Asheville house, part of Grandview — a new development under construction — has stoked the fires of a neighborhood controversy. photos by Jonathan Welch

“It was too hot to stand here,” Korner recalled, standing on her front porch. She and some neighbors, she said, had watched firefighters battle the blaze, trying to keep it from jumping to the next house.

The fire destroyed the West Asheville house, which was still under construction. “I can tell you right now, [arson is] definitely the case,” Investigator Jeff Tracz of the Asheville-Buncombe Arson Task Force told Xpress. “There’s no other option.” No one was living there, he noted, and the electricity had not yet been connected.

In an Aug. 9 e-mail, fire Chief Greg Grayson told Xpress that the investigation was continuing and that investigators were examining the possibility that the fire had been a cover-up for the theft of copper wire—a growing problem at construction sites nationwide. (He later determined that no copper wire had been installed in the house.)

As to possible involvement by environmentally minded saboteurs, Tracz said that “people in the neighborhood are making the comments and statements about ecoterrorism, but it may not be the case.” And Grayson said that “routine contact with state and federal agencies did not provide any intelligence that indicated ecoterrorist involvement at this time,” said Grayson.

Neighbors did not seem surprised by the arson, and they expressed little sympathy for the developer, BATT Associates.

Like walking on air: Each of these new houses — including the driveways — is suspended above the slope with steel frames. Seven more are planned.

“It’s not totally out of the blue, because of the opposition,” Korner told Xpress. Indeed, the heat has been building on Riverview Drive ever since construction began last September. Many neighboring houses sport signs in their front yards proclaiming, “Hills need trees, not cookie-cutter development.”

The once-wooded slope is now lined with near-identical houses overlooking the rail yard. Propped up on tall, steel stilts, the houses appear to be suspended in the air.

“This is anti-Asheville,” declared neighbor Marston Blow. “It is so profit-driven. It is so obvious.”

Jen Dombrowski agreed, saying, “It is thumbing its nose at Asheville.”

Jonathan Scott, a spokesperson for the Asheville-based BATT Associates, defended the development. “If it is some sort of ecoterrorist group, I think they are picking on the wrong guy,” he said. “The more density we can achieve in the city limits, the less burden we put on our rural areas.” And the unusual construction method, he noted, avoids cutting and grading on the steep slope. Runoff from construction sites is a growing problem locally.

Signing off: Neighbors are steamed about the development, and many have placed these signs in their yards.

In a later e-mail, Scott acknowledged the neighbors’ displeasure. “We live in a community where people have strong opinions about development—and that’s a good thing,” he wrote. “When people exercise their right to free speech without breaking the law or destroying private property, we have no problem with that.”

But Scott also reaffirmed his belief in the project. “When Grandview is completed and the landscaping package is added, I think most everyone in that neighborhood will see what a good thing it is for the overall community.”

Surveying the ashes a couple of days after the fire, a construction worker explained that the site can’t be cleaned up until the arson investigation is finished. Even the steel frame was rendered useless by the fire, he noted, and the framework for the house next door may also have been damaged.

Meanwhile, whatever the motive for the arson, some Riverview Drive residents seem more concerned about the damage they feel was caused by the development itself.

“The fire was violence, but so was that,” said Blow. “He’s had a loss, but so have we.”

Nonetheless, says Scott, BATT Associates intends to complete the 15 houses along Riverview Drive. The price of the houses has not yet been determined.

And though the jury is still out on who set the fire and why, some predict that it will only stoke the growing local tensions between developers and those calling for a moratorium on new construction. “It’s just going to deepen the chasm,” noted Blow.

And Korner observed, “It doesn’t stop anything.”

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3 thoughts on “Fanning the flames

  1. mtndow

    Talk to the canary and the bear, the Masshole and the Floridiot. Who did Enka/Buildmore and Rose-whatever? Did a “Cliff’s” unit get torched also? They’re stealing stuff right out of the driveway, let alone, vandalizing developments.

  2. plan b

    What a waste of an already built house. Picking on this developer is unfortunate.
    And this whole situation is quite Asheville, its almost a perfect snap shot of what’s going on; needed housing development, argument about development fairly low impact hill side development for aesthetic NIMBY reasons, wasteful protesting and eventually thoughtless actions that are in no one’s best interest.
    huh… pessimistic.

  3. Nate

    As a former employee of BATT Assoc. I can assure you that they are thinking more than just themselves.

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