Government

Asheville council weighs lease to move APD West to Tanger Outlets

Asheville city council considers a 10-year lease at Tanger Outlets to relocate APD West; plan affects officer safety, parking, and police operating budget.

James Thompson··2 min read
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Asheville council weighs lease to move APD West to Tanger Outlets
Source: wlos.com

The Asheville City Council is considering a resolution on Jan. 13 to approve a 10-year lease with Tanger Asheville LLC for Suite 822 at Tanger Outlets to house the Asheville Police Department West resource center. Council agenda materials describe the move as a response to safety and operational shortcomings at the current West facility, which was built in 1953.

City documents list several issues with the existing building, including large single-pane windows, limited parking and employee-wellness concerns. Those factors are cited as driving the push for a new space that would increase officer safety, expand services available to West Asheville residents and provide a more flexible workspace for West operations. The proposed relocation to the outlet center is presented as a step toward modernizing a long-outdated footprint in the neighborhood.

Financial details in the council packet show Tanger Outlets is donating about $1 million toward uplift costs for Suite 822. The proposed 10-year lease would cost the city more than $800,000 in the first year; city staff propose covering that amount through the police department’s operating budget. Documents flag the temporary-lease status and potential long-term costs as notable drawbacks. The city would not own the property under the proposed arrangement, which leaves unanswered questions about a permanent solution for the West precinct.

For Buncombe County residents, the decision intersects with everyday concerns about public safety, municipal spending and access to police services in West Asheville. A relocated resource center at a mall property could change where people go for community policing services and how visible officers are in retail corridors. Using operating funds for lease costs also has budgetary trade-offs that could affect patrol staffing, program funding or other departmental priorities if the expense persists over time.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

Council members face a classic municipal choice between a faster, donor-subsidized move into a leased commercial space and the uncertainties of a long-term facility strategy that would likely demand capital investment. The documents frame the Tanger option as an immediate improvement to conditions for officers and community-facing services, while noting the temporary nature of the lease as a constraint on long-range planning.

Our two cents? Ask how the lease affects everyday service delivery and what a durable, owned solution would cost down the road. Residents should watch council discussions, press for clarity on parking and hours at the new location, and weigh the short-term safety gains against longer-term budget implications for West Asheville.

This article was produced by Prism’s automated news system from verified source data, official records, and press releases, then run through automated quality and moderation checks before publishing. The system is built and supervised by the people who set the standards it runs under. Read our full AI policy.

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