Tag Archives: Seventh

Day 83-Zesta!

day 83I know you’ve always wanted to know what, exactly, is down Zesta Place.  Today’s walk was an exploration of the industrial area surrounding the Jif peanut butter plant on Winchester Road including the intriguingly-named Zesta. (Did someone intentionally name a street that runs by a peanut butter plant after a cracker?)

Apartments located across an industrial property protected by razor wire.
Apartments located across an industrial property protected by razor wire.

But what lies down  Zesta is about what you’d expect in an industrial area.  You’d probably feel more comfortable on this street in a forklift or a semi.  In addition to the peanut butter plant  there are a number of smaller operations and a sprawling industrial gas distributor.

The former Big Ass Fans location on Winchester Road
The former Big Ass Fans location on Winchester Road

Both Zesta and Magnolia feel more like a part of the adjacent industrial operations than public, city-maintained streets (which they are),  and a significant stretch of Montgomery was lined with razor wire fence on one side and barbed wire on the other.  I was actually a little surprised that I received as little attention as I did.  By the time I reached Zesta, I’d actually convinced myself that these were private streets.

Day 35

day 35Today’s walk was through an odd mix of light industrial, commercial and residential along and behind Winchester Road.  The commercial strip stood out; this stretch of Winchester is generally gritty, the kind of place you go to shop for a greasy part in your car,  not where you would go to find a trendy boutique.  The specific section I walked along featured two nightclubs, two “gentleman’s” clubs and a KFC.  The opposite side of the street has some intriguing businesses that look like the kind of nondescript places where people who know something shop for…vintage pinball machines?  I have to remember to take a closer look at those shops when I return to walk through the area on the south side of the street.

Another feature of this area is a named alley. (I love these.  Who wouldn’t want to have an alley named after them?)  But of course, street names have stories and you can learn from this Herald-Leader column that there was a La Flame nightclub along Winchester from the late 1950’s.

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One of the more peculiar sights among the car-oriented businesses was this car with missing and inadequate tires.

This area is surely more interesting at night; I wonder where everyone must park.  Transit in this area is evidently a challenge.  A bicyclist was using the marked bike lane, but minutes later, two vehicles parked in the bike lane so their owners could grab lunch.  Despite the steady number of pedestrians, it’s clear cars own this stretch just out of the sheer number of auto-oriented businesses.

Side note for the geeky: the geographic center of the area I walked today is due south of the center of the area I walked on Day 34; both have the same longitude, to four decimal places!

What works: This short stretch of Winchester has some unique things.

What doesn’t: Parking needs compete with bike lanes.

Day 26

day 26Today’s walk took me east of Castlewood and into what is officially called the “Downtown” neighborhood, into an area bounded by Loudon, Seventh and Limestone.  This is an area that would be easy to label as distressed.  Indeed, there are quite a few boarded-up houses and at least one which had been condemned outright.  But there are interesting things going on as well; one house I passed had chickens in the yard, in another, a whole row of shotgun houses were having work done.

A small grocery store
A small grocery store

There is a very local feel; local grocers, neighbors out on porches and chatting with passers-by.  This was a much more interactive experience than my usual walks…simply being here makes you part of the story.

It’s easy to romanticize things like a healthy mid-day population out on the stoop, but there are other indications of trouble, like the numerous signs on doors advising people that the house is private property, as if the purpose of the door in unusually unclear.  Many residents noted they had cameras as well; spray painted on one structure was this warning for trespassers caught on camera: “You will be shot”.

A tangle of wires feeding shotgun houses
A tangle of wires feeding shotgun houses

Police presence was high, here too.  At one point, just after I started down the long length of True Alley, a police car pulled into the alley and stopped at the entrance, blocking it.   It stayed there as I walked to the end of the alley and headed back.  I really expected that I was going to be asked at the least to explain my presence if not actually detained.  But not so; as I neared the entrance again, the car pulled forward, the officers smiled and waved and passed by, then a LFUCG truck entered the alley behind them.

The good: This area appears to have a strong sense of community

The bad: That’s not enough to make everyone feel safe.