Tue
Jul 21 2009
02:48 pm
By: michael kaplan
What was once the 11th Street Espresso House, this Victorian house on the edge of World's Fair Park has been "newly renovated" into a 5-bedroom house and available for purchase from its owners, Kinsey Probasco Hays, at $359,900. An internet search turned up this tribute:
"11th street is a great place to sit alone and drink coffee and have a tasty, healthy sandwich, or meet up with a dozen freaks on certain nights. There is always interesting art displayed in the beautiful Victorian-era house located on the site of the 1982 World's Fair. The owner is charming and loving and welcomes people from any walk .."
The house was sold to KPH by the city in 2005 for $30,797.
The green house next door, once a crafts gallery, is available for $375,000.
|
Topics:
|
|
Discussing:
- Alcoa Hwy construction to extend to 2030 (2 replies)
- Smith & Wesson noise problem (3 replies)
- Are Chat bots a waste of time? (1 reply)
- Musicians dropping out of President's Freedom Concert Series (1 reply)
- It's time for new blood in Congress, Barnett in - Burchett out (1 reply)
- Burning Down The House... (2 replies)
- Behind Lege Lies (1 reply)
- Peace (1 reply)
- Speak your truth, fight and believe. (1 reply)
- Large banks have too much AI data center debt? (1 reply)
- GOP misleading on federal health care funding (1 reply)
- Feds indict civil rights group (3 replies)
TN Progressive
- Alcoa property taxes will probably not go up (BlountViews)
- Smith & Wesson not a good fit for Blount County (BlountViews)
- Pellissippi Parkway extension delayed again (BlountViews)
- Blount County early voting record turnout (BlountViews)
- WATCH THIS SPACE. (Left Wing Cracker)
- America As It Is Right Now (RoaneViews)
- A friend sent this: From Captain McElwee's Tall Tales of Roane County (RoaneViews)
- The Meidas Touch (RoaneViews)
- Massive Security Breach Analysis (RoaneViews)
- (Whitescreek Journal)
- My choices in the August election (Left Wing Cracker)
- July 4, 2024 - aka The Twilight Zone (Joe Powell)
TN Politics
- Stockard on the Stump: Don’t bet your life savings on a gubernatorial debate (TN Lookout)
- Trump couldn’t send troops to the polls without approval of Congress under Dem bill (TN Lookout)
- More Americans are hungry in the face of federal cuts, rising grocery prices (TN Lookout)
- 60-day clock starts for negotiations with Iran over strait, nuclear future (TN Lookout)
- Feds seek dismissal of xAI lawsuit in Memphis and Mississippi (TN Lookout)
- FEMA nominee pressed on whether Trump favors disaster funding requests from GOP states (TN Lookout)
Knox TN Today
- Play catch with Lady Vols softball players (Knox TN Today)
- Norris Lake at Oak Grove + Beaver Creek + West Hills picnic (Knox TN Today)
- Dishing It Out: Million Dollar Spaghetti (Knox TN Today)
- Close to Home, Far from Ordinary: East Tennessee ghost stories and local legends (Knox TN Today)
- William Carder, Powell, crowned Tennessee’s Best Bagger (Knox TN Today)
- Bisky is a special resident at Zoo Knoxville (Knox TN Today)
- Dining Duo gives statistics plus two favorite pizza eats (Knox TN Today)
- Hiking with Harrington: Rich Mt. Road (Knox TN Today)
- Plant flowers like wildlife depends on it. They do! (Knox TN Today)
- 6/19 HEADLINES: News and events from Knox, World, USA, Tennessee & Historic Notes (Knox TN Today)
- Unmasking bright futures for pets at Mask-Fur-Ade 2026 (Knox TN Today)
- Belmont Blooms (Knox TN Today)
Local TV News
- Knox County juvenile center employee sues, claiming age discrimination (WATE)
- Former ORNL employee pleads guilty to acting as a foreign agent (WATE)
- Jellico board votes down Bitcoin mine zoning ordinance despite resident frustration (WATE)
- Man pleads guilty after 2023 overdose death in Monroe County (WATE)
- Man dead after truck drives into Tennessee River in Downtown Knoxville (WATE)
- United Way of Greater Knoxville annual report highlighes $8.3 million rasied, challenges in 2025 (WATE)
News Sentinel
State News
- Isaiah Rashad’s ‘awful’ press tour to make a stop in his hometown of Chattanooga - Chattanooga Times Free Press (Times Free Press)
- What’s going there? Developer still deciding what to place at old church site - Chattanooga Times Free Press (Times Free Press)
- Teen charged in connection with disappearance of Collegedale man - Chattanooga Times Free Press (Times Free Press)
- Daughter of Chattanooga woman who joined ISIS rescued, awaits fate outside a Syrian detention camp - Chattanooga Times Free Press (Times Free Press)
Wire Reports
- US push to get Iran talks started hits an early bump due to intense fighting in Lebanon - AP News (US News)
- Live updates: Israel and Hezbollah agree to renew ceasefire after conflict threatens to derail US-Iran talks - CNN (US News)
- Income needed to afford a median-priced home has nearly doubled since 2020, report finds - Fox Business (Business)
- Micron Stock Faces Tough Earnings Test. What History Says Happens Next. - Barron's (Business)
- Global stock markets mixed as investors assess durability of U.S.-Iran peace deal - CNBC (Business)
- Matt Dunlap Wins Democratic House Primary in Maine’s Swing District - The New York Times (US News)
- Obama Presidential Center Opening: See the Celebs Who Attended - Business Insider (US News)
- Murdoch Paper Humiliates Trump With Scathing Weakness Verdict - The Daily Beast (US News)
- What's open and closed on Juneteenth 2026? Find out if banks, USPS and stores are operating. - CBS News (Business)
- What's open and closed on Juneteenth 2026? Find out if banks, USPS and stores are operating. - CBS News (US News)
- US export ban on Anthropic’s AI models further strains alliances - Al Jazeera (Business)
- Why did the newly refurbished Reflecting Pool turn green? The quiz knows - NPR (US News)
- SpaceX stock sinks another 7%. The IPO honeymoon is over - qz.com (Business)
- Warsh wants markets to guide the Fed, not the other way around - Yahoo Finance (Business)
- Proposed immigrant detention center site in Salt Lake City to be offloaded, newspaper reports - KSL News (US News)
Local Media
Lost Medicaid Funding
To date, the failure to expand Medicaid/TennCare has cost the State of Tennessee ? in lost federal funding. (Source)
Search and Archives
TN Progressive
Nearby:
- Blount Dems
- Herston TN Family Law
- Inside of Knoxville
- Instapundit
- Jack Lail
- Jim Stovall
- Knox Dems
- MoxCarm Blue Streak
- Outdoor Knoxville
- Pittman Properties
- Reality Me
- Stop Alcoa Parkway
Beyond:
- Nashville Scene
- Nashville Post
- Smart City Memphis
- TN Dems
- TN Journal
- TN Lookout
- Bob Stepno
- Facing South

I think they're a bit crazy
I think they're a bit crazy of they think those houses are worth that. Sure, they're nice but as others have pointed out, the community isn't there. Sad to see the Coffee House go.
if they go for that price,
if they go for that price, it's likely for commercial use. they'd make nice offices, hotel rooms or beds/breakfast. hey, they could become the convention center hotel ...
devolpment
My vision would be to devolope residential on both sides of what
was once 10th Street.North of the museum & the 7 houses.
Also condos in the L&N building.
Devolope smart parking:
Underneath for the new devoplopment.
For the Candy Factory residents & those attending
events @ the museum parking garage between the
Candy Factory & the museum.
Plant trees where parking for Candy Factory residents
is now.
Make the 1st floor of the Candy Factory into a
grocery store/pharmacy serving downtown & Fair site residents.
Of course the Candy shop remains.
Downtown residents would connect to the store thru the 42 bus
line.
The Butcher Shop would be the maintinace/office for the property.
If there are enough elementary school age children,downtown,
in the Fort & on the Fair site put a charter elementary school
in the Foundry.
It would be done by the 50th anniversy of the Fair.
I've changed my mind a few times on the 7 houses
All those years ago Mark Siegle & his band of merry pranksters
fought to preserve the 7 houses.
At first, I thought festive retail,the term used back then for Fair site devolopment,was the way to go.
Put upscale dress shops,mens shops,children shops,shoe stores in the 7 houses.
Didn't work out.
As the years past,I thought an art colony with coffee shops
& bookstores was the way to go for the 7 houses.
Didn't work out.
I now believe it's a good thing the 7 houses,built around
hundred years ago,are being returned to their orginal purpose.
People's homes.
Hopefully,the 3rd times the charm for devoloping the 7 houses
& when the 50th anniversery of the World's Fair rolls around
the 7 houses are in a vibrant neighborhood.
Seven isolated houses don't
Seven isolated houses don't make a vibrant residential neighborhood. The Victorians are separated from Fort Sanders by a rather unfriendly edge along 11th Street and and from the park by a steep hill along World's Fair Drive. That street itself contains only two buildings: the Knoxville Museum of Art which closes at 5 pm (except Fridays) and a residential condo (the Candy Factory) that generates little pedestrian traffic.
Furthermore, the sale of these houses doesn't preclude their use as game-day or rental-by-room residences which, again, doesn't necessarily produce a vibrant neighborhood. Their use as commercial property might, however, make a difference.
The 11th Street Espresso House was a thriving business serving the university community and others who considered it a "third place." Subsidized by the city with its below-market rent, there were issues of poor maintenance that could easily have been overcome had the city been intent on developing and promoting the area.
Thanks for the update. I
Thanks for the update. I drove by those houses the other day and wondered what had become of them. I'm still a little steamed that these houses and the Candy Factory were changed to residential. I always thought the more places to visit around the fair site the better. Ah, what did I know.
As we argued at the time,
As we argued at the time, the properties at the edge of World Fair Park should have stayed in the public domain. Imagine the Candy Factory, renovated, as a new central library, and the gently restored Victorians as galleries and shops. Together with the museum, it would all add up to a wonderfully vital arts district, somewhat removed from the commercial bustle of Gay Street but still close enough to downtown to be conveniently accessible.