![]() Hill’s business uses vinyl to wrap advertisements around cars. Auto-service stations, animal shelters, banks, day care centers, gunsmiths and pawn shops could be allowed there. ![]() This week, the man who wants to buy that tract and open his business in the warehouse there, Tom Hill, came back before the county, this time asking for commercial zoning, a land-use category designed for customers coming by car to nonresidential areas. OTHER NEWS: Pedal Chic to close award-winning bike shop in downtown Greenville “We don't want to open it up to something that would pollute (the creek),” Barnett said. So far Greenville County leaders have agreed with Phillips and Barnett - they rejected a proposal last month that would have allowed light industrial buildings to go on the property. A small warehouse is there now, but its owners, a national specialty building products supplier, have been trying to sell it for months. She said a 90-degree turn near her home has landed a couple of cars in the woods.Ĭiting these dangers and the area’s quiet character, Phillips and Barnett have since this past fall fought the zoning change that could open the door to future development of a 5-acre tract along Ebenezer Road. In addition to the historic Ebenezer United Methodist Church and Hans & Franz Biergarten, a tree farm and horse pastures are nearby.īut because Ebenezer serves as a cut-through to Batesville Road, allowing motorists on State 14 to avoid an intersection at Pelham Road, it is also treacherous, longtime Ebenezer Road resident Ginger Barnett said. ![]() Ebenezer Road has remained largely wooded and peaceful, a stone’s throw from Rocky Creek – a waterway hidden behind a wall of trees. ![]()
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