CLARKSVILLE, Tenn. – Austin Peay State University, which turns 90 next year, recently experienced a late growth spurt. Earlier this week, the campus grew by about 10 acres when the school finally closed on property previously owned by the Jenkins and Wynne auto dealership.
The $8.8 million purchase marks one of the largest expansions in the University’s history, and it now connects the 182-acre College Street campus with downtown Clarksville.
In 2013, Don Jenkins, CEO of Jenkins and Wynne Ford-Lincoln-Honda, announced he was relocating his dealership to 2655 Trenton Road, near the 101st Airborne Division Parkway. He quickly received several generous offers for his property on College Street. Individuals from across the country proposed putting luxury condos or retail space on that site, but Jenkins wanted Austin Peay to have the right of first refusal to purchase the land adjacent to campus.
“Austin Peay is landlocked, which has limited our ability to grow,” Dr. Alisa White, APSU president, said. “I am so appreciative of Don Jenkins and the Jenkins family for providing us with this opportunity to purchase the Jenkins and Wynne property so that we can serve more students and connect with the heart of our community, downtown Clarksville.”
Austin Peay now owns the Jenkins and Wynne property, but it will be a few months before the University takes possession of it. Jenkins is still in the process of moving his dealerships, and once that is complete, he will clean the site and remove the large signs towering above College Street. Robinson said he hopes APSU can begin renovation work on the new property this spring.
“The parking lots that were used for vehicle display, we will stripe off and use them for parking,” Robinson said. “And we will use some of the buildings as quickly as we can get the space converted, with minimal renovations.”
Austin Peay hired the Nashville-based firm Tuck Hinton Architects to create a vision for how the new property might be developed. The University will present that vision, which will include graphic renderings, at 11:30 a.m. on Feb. 10 in the Morgan University Center ballroom. The public is invited to attend this event.
Some potential ideas for the property include creating a small green-space corridor between College Street and the new buildings, and turning one of the facilities into a gallery for APSU’s folk art collection. The collection includes 42 folk art carvings, paintings and drawings donated by Ned and Jacqueline Crouch and several sculptures by William Edmondson, the first African-American to have a solo show of his work at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City in 1937. Dr. Joe Trahern donated the sculptures.
“The faculty are really pleased about the acquisition of this property for two principal reasons,” Dr. Tim Winters, APSU professor and faculty senate president, said. “One, it will free up some space in academic buildings, and two, it will add some much-needed parking. I think it will also help to create a stronger bridge between the campus and the downtown business community.”
The purchase fits in with APSU’s new strategic plan, which seeks to increase the number of out-of-state, graduate and international students.
The new property also will allow the University to explore public-private partnerships. Franklin and Marshall College in Pennsylvania recently partnered with the private firm Campus Apartments to create a mixed-use facility offering student housing and ground-floor retail.