Memory Lane Museum in Danger?

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
10 years ago
9,137 posts

The story below appeared in the Sunday, February 23, 2014 edition of The Charlotte Observer :

Merchants concerned about planned N.C. 150 widening

  • JEFF WILLHELM - jwillhelm@charlotteobserver.com
    Alex Beam in his Memory Lane Museum on NC150 west of Mooresville. The state plan to widening N.C. 150 in the Lake Norman area is worrying longtime businesses such as Big Daddy's Seafood Restaurant & Oyster Bar and Memory Lane Museum, because a median along the route from Mooresville to Denver would prevent left turns. Business owners complained to State Rep. Robert Brawley, R-Mooresville, who recently went to the secretary of the Department of Transportation with the concerns.

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    A meeting on the widening of N.C. 150 will be held at 6p.m. Tuesday at Living Waters, 761 River Highway (N.C.150).

MOORESVILLE Visitors from as far away as Hawaii and California have stopped by Memory Lane Museum this year to view its automobiles dating to 1904 and race cars from throughout the history of NASCAR.

But owner Alex Beam worries about whether theyll bother to visit after the state widens N.C. 150 and puts a median along the 13.5-mile stretch from Mooresville to the four-lane N.C. 16 Bypass in Catawba County.

Memory Lane is 1.5 miles west of Interstate 77 Exit 36, which is how most car aficionados get to the museum. The median will prevent motorists from turning left into Memory Lane, forcing them to drive 1.5 miles west to Doolie and Perth roads to turn around, Beam said.

Beams private museum has become a Mooresville tourist attraction since it opened in 2001, drawing visitors from every state and numerous countries. Cars on display were used in such movies as Days of Thunder, The Color Purple, Leatherheads and Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby.

Beam and several other N.C.150 business owners said the median will curtail trade at the 60 or more businesses that operate from Sams Club west to the N.C.150 bridge on the Iredell-Catawba county line. They want the state to build a left-turn lane as part of the $117million project to turn two-lane N.C.150 into a four-lane highway divided by a median.

Right-of-way acquisition is expected to begin in 2017, and construction is due to start in 2019, state Department of Transportation officials have said.

Concerned businesses include such longtime establishments as Big Daddys of Lake Norman Restaurant and Oyster Bar and newer ones such as Point Blank Range, an indoor firearms range near Beams museum.

It just doesnt make any sense, Eric Taylor, operations manager at Point Blank Range, said Thursday. I cant imagine a reason why this would be a good idea.

Point Blank Range gets 70percent of its business from Lake Norman-area residents who use Exit36 and turn left into the range, Taylor said.

Car washes, flower shops, people cant turn left into, Beam said of the planned median.

Beam and other business owners complained to State Rep. Robert Brawley, R-Mooresville, who took the issue to N.C. Secretary of Transportation Tony Tata.

As a result, officials from the state highway division that includes Iredell and Catawba counties have agreed to listen to the concerns at a community meeting at 6p.m. Tuesday at Living Waters, a Foursquare Gospel church beside Beams museum.

Just look at what happened to a small retail center at nearby Brawley School and Oak Tree roads when the state installed medians on both roads as part of Brawley School Roads widening, Brawley said. Two eateries in the shopping center closed..

Living Waters pastor Roy Young said he, too, favors the state adding a left-turn lane along the corridor. His church opened in 1996 and has 55 members.

But based on current and projected traffic volumes and crash data, a center median is likely in order to provide better safety and traffic operations, DOT spokeswoman Jordan-Ashley Baker said Friday in an email reply to the Observer. The specific locations of median breaks, turn lanes, signals and other details have not been determined, as the planning and design work for the project is just starting.

At a public workshop in November on its N.C.150 widening plans, the state included a corridor map in some of its exhibits that showed a study area and a typical cross-section, she said.

The typical was included to show a likely road segment, two lanes in each direction with a center median, Baker said. Some attendees believed the typical cross-section displayed would be what would be used the entire length of the project. This is not the case. There will be turn lanes at appropriate locations to provide left and U-turns along the corridor.

Beam and other business owners said they hope to get across the message Tuesday that peoples livelihoods are at stake.

There are so many different places where there should be left-turn lanes; they just need to put one all the way down, Beam said.

Marusak: 704-358-5067; Twitter: @jmarusak



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"Any Day is Good for Stock Car Racing"

updated by @dave-fulton: 12/05/16 04:00:58PM
Tim Leeming
@tim-leeming
10 years ago
3,119 posts

I am not a resident of North Carolina or the Mooresville area but I do visit Memory Lane every chance I have. Memory Lane is an important part of Mooresville, as it is to me personally. I would call upon the North Carolina DOT to give serious consideration to requiring folks to go down the road to make a U-turn to come back to the businesses who will suffer from the median planned. Why not a center turn lane all the way down? Is that too complicated because it's common sense?




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What a change! It's been awhile since I've checked in and I'm quite surprised. It may take me awhile to figure it our but first look it's really great.

Jan Woodberry
@jan-woodberry
10 years ago
171 posts
We are all hoping for a better solution which won't affect Memory Lane and other businesses.
Leon Phillips
@leon-phillips
10 years ago
626 posts

Plese put in a turning lane i hope they will