Birmingham City Council Approves Carraway Hospital Rezoning
The Birmingham City Council approved the rezoning of Carraway Hospital and several adjacent properties Tuesday, clearing the way for Corporate Realty’s long-planned mixed-use redevelopment of the abandoned campus.
The hospital, at 1600 Carraway Boulevard, has been closed since 2008 and has fallen into disrepair. District 3 Councilor Valerie Abbott likened the building to one in “a third world country that’s having a civil war,” adding that “the only thing that could be worse is if there were bodies hanging out the windows.”
Corporate Realty announced plans to redevelop the property last year. The development will include retail, dining, residential, office and entertainment spaces. The project had received unanimous approval from the Druid Hills and Norwood neighborhood associations last year, but progress on the project was paused earlier this year due to COVID-19.
Several residents of surrounding Druid Hills and Norwood neighborhood spoke in favor of the rezoning at Tuesday’s meeting. Barbara Gowdy Thomas, a longtime Norwood resident, said the neighborhood had “been waiting a long time to see something positive return to the Carraway site.”

James Clark, the Norwood neighborhood association’s president, said the new development would improve property values for residents. “The people making the money will be the longtime homeowners,” he said, adding that the development would give him the opportunity “to walk to a restaurant, or to pick up my groceries closer to home.”
District 5 Councilor Darrell O’Quinn called the project “a major step forward for the city” and part of an overall trend of development that “all adds up to a tremendous transformative change in the city of Birmingham.”
The Birmingham Business Journal reported last week that the development could receive up to $17 million in city incentives, likely in the form of tax abatements.
Holy white smoke, we have a new pope!
White smoke streamed from a chimney atop the Sistine Chapel, signaling to the world that the 133 cardinals inside have elected a new pope. But we don't yet know his identity.
The story of Lilly Ledbetter’s fight for equal pay comes to the big screen
Lilly Ledbetter's journey began in 1979 at the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. plant in Gadsden. Her experience working there led her to the U.S. Supreme Court.
Ivey overhauls Birmingham Water Works Board amid cries of racial discrimination
The bill redistributes power from Birmingham city officials — who currently appoint a majority of the nine-person board — to the governor, the lieutenant governor and the surrounding four counties that are also in the board’s jurisdiction. It also reduces the number of board members to seven.
As Pynk Beard, Grammy-winning songwriter Sebastian Kole turns the page
Grammy-winning songwriter Sebastian Kole has accomplished a great deal in his career. As his alter ego Pynk Beard, though, he could achieve much more. The Birmingham native is stepping out from behind the scenes and into the spotlight to bring his brand of country music to the masses.
Americans are already seeing Trump’s tariffs kick in. They sent in receipts to prove it
There's new tariffs on almost everything that is imported. Some of that increased cost is being eaten by exporters in other countries, but a lot of the higher prices are being picked up by Americans, who are seeing it in their receipts.
Medicaid payments barely keep hospital mental health units afloat. Federal cuts could sink them
Patients seeking mental health care are more likely to be on Medicaid than patients in more profitable areas of care, such as cancer or cardiac treatment.