MOBILE, Ala. — Part of downtown Mobile known as ‘Automobile Alley’ is being reborn.
Ten years ago downtown Mobile was a much different place than it is today. Back then it was filled with boarded up and crumbling buildings. Blight was around every corner. Businesses couldn’t be convinced to open up shop in the city’s core, no matter how many tax incentives the city tried to bait them with.
Many locals I’ve spoken to agree on one thing, a memorable turning point from then to what downtown has become today, was the restoration and reopening of the Buick Building, about five years ago, on a part of Saint Louis Street known as ‘Automobile Alley.’ Nicknamed for its numerous auto dealerships, showrooms and body shops starting in the 1920s.
The start of a downtown Mobile revival that continues today, of restoring old, historic buildings and adapting them to fit modern day needs while keeping the character of the old intact. Another great example of this can be found at the old Nash/Ford Automotive Building, abandoned for decades. It now houses Mobile Antiques after a thoughtful and careful restoration which kept the structure’s original character intact. Like its original concrete floor with chips, dents and all.
Other projects in the works include the original home of the Mobile Press-Register and the Kittrell-Milling Motor Company Building next door.
The Wheeler Building was the first headquarters of the Mobile Press-Register, then the Adams Motor Company and a Chevrolet dealership. Most recently it was a storage facility. Soon it will start the restoration process and by next year it will be a mixed-use commercial and residential space.
That’s according to Stephen McNair, of McNair Historic Preservation, who’s one of the peope leading the way on these projects by using the federal Historic Tax Credit program. This program encourages investment in historic redevelopment while providing a 20 percent income tax credit for historic income-producing buildings.
“The Historic Tax Credit program takes an underproducing or a vacant building and puts it back on the tax rolls and creates jobs in terms of temporary construction jobs and then the permanent jobs of the tenants in the building,” explained McNair. “The risk for these projects far outweigh the benefits of the credits for the developers,” he added.
“It’s about preserving a building and putting it back into service,” said McNair.
Could all of this development be part of a new prime time for downtown Mobile that the city hasn’t seen since the 1940s? Time will tell and I’ll be following up with these projects and exploring more in the coming weeks/months.