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Back to worship 

A Christian church with locations in Louisa County, Pantops Mountain, and Waynesboro has purchased a key site in downtown Charlottesville for a new campus. 

Point Church paid $1.3 million for 105 Ridge St., a structure originally built in the late 19th century for the Mount Zion Baptist Church. The property had previously been listed at $1.875 million. 

“This is an amazing building, and just think of all the life changes that have happened here,” said executive director Chip Measells in a video on the church’s website. “You can’t get any more [central] than where we are.” 

After the Mount Zion congregation moved to a new location on Lankford Avenue in 2003, the building became the home of the Music Resource Center in 2004. Previously, the center offered educational opportunities to teens in a practice space above Trax, a famed nightclub that was demolished soon after the University of Virginia purchased it for hospital expansion.  

Point Church was founded in 2009 and is listed as being a Southern Baptist congregation. Their website states they expect to have the old church ready for worship services in April 2025. The purchase was a strategic one. 

“We want to be at the center of everything that’s happening around our communities that are in poverty, that are struggling with financial hardships, and to do that we need to map the assets and collaborate and coordinate with all the other great work that’s being done,” Measells said. 

One nearby opportunity for collaboration is the Salvation Army at 207 Ridge St. City Council recently granted permission for an expansion project that will allow an increase from 55 shelter beds to 114 beds. That includes seven two-bedroom suites for transitional housing, allowing families to stay together. 

Measells said Point Church has an entrepreneurship academy that lasts 10 weeks and is followed up with Gospel-led mentorship. 

“We are praying that God is going to make an extraordinary impact through this Gospel-centered path out of poverty,” said Pastor Gabe Turner in the video. “We are praying that the poverty level will decrease.”

The Point Church will continue to lease the basement space to the Music Resource Center. They also have a map indicating several satellite locations for parishioners to park. The few spaces close to the church are reserved for drivers with handicap tags. 

Next door, Cushman & Wakefield | Thalhimer is marketing the former Greyhound bus station as a “rare development opportunity” that could take advantage of the new Commercial Mixed Use Corridor zoning. An encampment of unhoused individuals is currently living at the site. 

Elsewhere in Charlottesville, plans to develop a portion of the Hinton Avenue Methodist Church in Belmont with affordable apartments fell through when the Church of the Good Shepherd paid $1.5 million for the property. That purchase allowed the congregation to move out of the space they were renting at 105 Ridge St. from the Music Resource Center.

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Another rabid fox? Reported descriptions don’t match

An aggressive and potentially rabid fox attacking residents in North Downtown has worried people for the past week. Police say a fox acting suspiciously on March 14 was captured and put down, but did not appear to be the same fox originally reported.

“We just want our neighborhood to be safe,” says Sarah Peaslee, who lives on First Street NW, across from one of the two victims who police say was bitten by the first aggressive fox.

The victim was carrying groceries from her car around 6pm March 7 when a fox approached her and bit her leg several times, according to police.

“She yelled and screamed and couldn’t get the fox off her,” Peaslee says. Eventually, a neighbor walking his dog passed by and the dog scared the fox away. The victim was taken to UVA and treated with rabies shots. Peaslee says her neighbor was finally feeling well enough to go back to work March 14.

While police are still searching for the original fox, neighbors speculate that it has died and at least one has reported seeing a fox enter a storm drain near Grove Street. Some are worried that other animals could be feeding on its body and spreading disease, according to Peaslee.

Animal control officer Casey Breeden says she can’t know if the original fox was rabid without testing, but, in her experience, small rabid animals only live about two or three days.

“He just kind of stared at me for a while and then he would fall over,” Breeden says about the behavior of the original fox. “I went down to pick something up and he charged right at me.”

The fox evaded capture, according to police. The second fox’s remains have been taken to the health department for testing.