Harbor Town, Memphis

Harbor Town is a new urbanist-style neighborhood in Memphis, Tennessee. Harbor Town sits atop 132 acres on a sandbar in the Mississippi River known as Mud Island. It was developed in 1989,[1] and was a collaborative effort of Memphis developer Henry Turley, RTKL of Baltimore, and the Looney Ricks Kiss architectural firm from Memphis. The Henry Turley Company stated that the neighborhood intends to "emphasize the human rather than the automobile."[2] Nowadays Harbor Town is considered dense and walkable, known for its traditional row houses, shops, parks, and marina.

Harbor Town, Memphis, May 2018
Wolf River Harbor, 2006

Geography

Harbor Town is located just northwest of Downtown Memphis, Tennessee on Mud Island along the Mississippi River.

Mississippi River Flood of 2011

Harbor Town was closed to everyone except residents for a short period of time in May 2011 when the Mississippi River reached a level of 48 feet, 14 feet above flood stage.[3] A 5-foot-high emergency levy was built in the afternoon and evening of May 9, 2011, in the west lane of Island Drive. The east lane remained open in the event that Mud Island had to be evacuated, since Mud Island Drive (the road north of Harbor Town and the only other land access to Mud Island) was under water. Some homes along Wolf River Harbor had to be evacuated but no major damage was reported.

Notable Residents

Among Harbor Town's current and former residents are politicians Harold Ford, Jr., Harold Ford, Sr., Lewis Unglesby, and Myron Lowery. There are many former and current Memphis Grizzlies players and coaches, including Shane Battier, Brian Cardinal, Jake Tsakalaidis, Dahntay Jones and past Grizzlies Head Coaches Marc Iavaroni, Hubie Brown and Mike Fratello. Other present or past residents include Wayne Jackson of the group The Memphis Horns, French opera singer Marie Stephane Bernard, and local entrepreneur Dean Jernigan.

See also

References

  1. "Projects". www.lrk.com. Retrieved 2022-07-01.
  2. "Harbor Town". Henry Turley Company. Retrieved 2022-07-01.
  3. "May 11, 2011: Historic Mississippi River flood takes everything from some". localmemphis.com. May 11, 2021. Retrieved 2022-07-01.

35.1714°N 90.0514°W / 35.1714; -90.0514


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