Dirt and excitement are in the air at the groundbreaking for Audi Wesley Chapel, which will open later this year off S.R. 56, a mile or so east of the Shops at Wiregrass. (Photo by Stephen John Photography)
A high-tech concept in luxury car sales is coming to Wesley Chapel. Dimmitt Automotive Group has broken ground (and has already begun going vertical; see photo below left) on its new Audi dealership, a 40,000-square-foot, state-of-the-art facility off of S.R. 56 in Wiregrass Ranch, thatâs considered Audiâs most innovative retail experience yet.
Audi Wesley Chapel is expected to open in the fall of 2017 (âprobably in November,â according to Dimmitt CEO Scott Larguier). The project, referred to as Audi Terminal, will be a modern, open-area facility (rendering, bottom right, from the Dimmitt Automotive Group) thatâs designed to be fully client-centric.
âFrom the moment you enter the showroom, youâll notice that the entire facility is designed with the customer experience at its core,â Larguier explained during the buildingâs May 22 groundbreaking ceremony, which included members of the Dimmitt family, Bill, JD and Quinn Porter and Scott Sheridan of Locust Branch, LLC (which is developing the Porter Family Trust property in Wiregrass), Pasco County Commissioner Mike Moore and Greater Wesley Chapel Chamber of Commerce CEO Hope Allen, as well as more than a dozen WCCC business members.
According to a Dimmitt press release, the Audi Terminal will âcapture customersâ imaginations before they even walk in the door. Its stunning architecture will look like a modern art building. Inside, customers will be greeted with exciting Audi automobiles, iPads and luxury lounges filled with sleek leather club chairs.â
Larguier explained that the high-tech building is reflective of the high-tech luxury Audi vehicles that will be on display and sold inside.
What customers wonât see are sales desks and phones. âItâs the perfect union of elegant interaction and advanced technology,â Larguier said.
Audi Wesley Chapel is the latest example of Dimmitt Automotive Groupâs commitment to an elevated car buying experience. The Dimmitt family already features Cadillac, Land Rover, Jaguar, Toyota, Aston Martin, Bentley, Rolls-Royce and McLaren dealerships.
Everyone on hand praised not only the Porter and Dimmitt families, but also Pasco County for bringing yet another luxury brand to âthe Chap,â as Allen loves to call it. Audi will open just a few months after Lexus of Wesley Chapel, which is being opened by the Williams Auto Group.
This rendering of the recently-opened Sarasota DDI is nearly identical to what will will be built at S.R. 56 and I-75 in Wesley Chapel, which the major exception being I-75 passes over the intersection, while in Wesley Chapel S.R. 56 passes over I-75
A diamond could be a commuterâs best friend, according to the Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT).
A diverging diamond, that is.
That was the message delivered by Ryan Forrestel, PE of American Consulting Professionals, LLC, as he presented what he feels will be the solution to the snarled mess that is the S.R. 56 interchange of I-75 to the Greater Wesley Chapel Chamber of Commerce (WCCC) on May 23, during a meeting at the Mercedes-Benz of Wesley Chapel dealership located just a few hundred feet from where the construction of the diverging diamond interchange (DDI) will begin.
Forrestel, the consultant design project manager for the $24.1-million Diverging Diamond Interchange project, told a group of roughly 20 representatives from affected businesses like Havertys, Tampa Premium Outlets, Chick-Fil-A, Florida Hospital Center Ice and others that it will be a good news, bad news proposition.
The good: engineers say the DDI is going to make traffic smoother and more efficient and in the long run yield improved results for local businesses.
The bad: during the long-awaited construction beginning in fall of 2018, the already-congested interchange is likely to become even more clogged.
No one, however, was surprised.
âI think this is a good opportunity for us,ââ said Stacey Nance, the general manager of TPO, located just west of the DDI. âIs it going to be cumbersome? Absolutely it is.â
Forrestelâs presentation seemed to assuage some of the concerns of representatives from those local businesses, many of whom are concerned that shoppers already are avoiding the area because of the traffic.
Ryan Forrestel
The project, moved up twice from its original 2024 and then 2020 start dates, is expected to expedite traffic through the much-maligned interchange, which handles roughly 100,000 vehicles a day and connects many of the residents of Wesley Chapel, Lutz and Land OâLakes to Tampa.
Forrestel said he will have the DDI plans drawn up by January, and then in June of 2018, bidding will begin to find the company to build it.
Construction should start by the fall of 2018, and Forrestel said it could tentatively take anywhere from 18-36 months to build.
âWe havenât gotten that far yet,ââ Forrestel said. âThatâs just a safe range.â
The timing of the construction is a concern to local businesses, as it will likely conflict with the busiest shopping time of the year.
âThe fear was starting in the fall,â Nance said. âIf there is any concern, itâs that it is hitting us all at prime time.â
Forrestel said the current LOS, or Level of Service, of the interchange is âF,â and âit is only going to get worse before it gets betterâ as development continues on the north and south sides of S.R. 56, both on the west and east sides of the interchange
Much of the traffic is caused by morning commuters trying to get on I-75 southbound, and evening traffic trying to exit northbound, which can back up two miles from where I-75 splits to S.R. 56.
âOn the northbound off ramp and southbound on ramp, weâre making a lot of changes,ââ said Forrestel, who said he drives past TPO every morning and sees the eastbound traffic backing all the way up to Old C.R. 54 (or Wesley Chapel Blvd.).
As part of the DDI project, however, that mile-long backup during peak morning hours is projected to be reduced to 300 feet once a second lane is added to the exit for people getting on I-75 southbound.
The other change, which Forrestel describes as minor but really important, is widening the northbound off ramp. He said the original design had four lanes, with a center lane serving as a shared lane for travelers going east or west. But, they found that it created confusion for drivers and had a significant impact on the traffic, so the exit will be widened where the barrier wall on the east side of the ramp ends, and will now be five lanes.
Three of those northbound exit lanes will be dedicated to go west (turn left onto 56), and two lanes will be dedicated to go east (or right onto 56).
âIt will be a significant improvement,ââ Forrestel said.
The first DDI in Florida was recently completed in Sarasota â at the University Pkwy. exit (No. 213)Â â and has drawn positive reviews (including from Neighborhood News editor Gary Nager, who will provide a video tour of the Sarasota DDI in the episode of WCNT-tv that will premiere on YouTube and Facebook on Friday, June 9), after nearly four years of construction that involved rebuilding everything. Forrestel said that the Wesley Chapel DDI project will involve no expansion of the overpass, although it will be reconfigured, so it shouldnât take nearly as long to complete.
The median on the bridge, as well as the current walkways, will be eliminated to create an additional westbound lane, and the bridge (which is technically two bridges) will be connected. Pedestrians will be able to cross right down the center of the bridge.
Forrestel added there will be plenty of signs directing drivers. The fourth eastbound lane on S.R. 56 is being pulled back 500 feet, so signs can alert commuters much sooner about the interchange directions.
âAll of these changes will be improving the efficiency of the interchange dramatically,â Forrestel said.
The real key to making it all work, however, remains the DDIâs signature crossovers, where the east and westbound lanes appear to cross over. Though other solutions were considered for the interchange â like a flyover similar to what was built an exit south at Bruce B. Downs Blvd. â the DDI was chosen for its ability to handle large swaths of traffic from both directions.
âHuge left turns lanes work best for the DDI,â Forrestel said. âIn some places, they are a great solution; in other place they are a terrible solution.â
The Wesley Chapel interchange, however, it is expected to move more cars through the interchange in a free-flowing manner, as the left turn lanes will no longer be crossing in front of other traffic and only entail two phases of lights.
Forrestel showed a video of a DDI in Atlanta (which can be seen at youtu.be/gY8xU-UAQWs) which has fewer lanes but otherwise resembles the one coming to Wesley Chapel.
Forrestel said the timing of the lights will be adjusted to accommodate the busier traffic in the morning and evening.
The scope of the DDI project takes into account a model that projects traffic out to 2038 and considers the lengthening of S.R. 56 (one of the signs at the interchange will point you to Zephyrhills, in fact) as well as projected land uses in the Wiregrass Ranch area.
Local businesses asked that they be kept updated so they can inform customers of the construction. âWe want everybody to be prepared,ââ said WCC CEO Hope Allen.
Devon Arthurs walked into the Green Planet Smoke Shop in New Tampa at around 5:30 p.m. on May 19, held three hostages and then surrendered to police before revealing that he had shot his two roommates back in the apartment they shared at the Hamptons in Tampa Palms.
Things got stranger from that point on.
According to a Tampa Police Department (TPD) report, the 18-year-old Arthurs ended up telling officers he fatally shot Jeremy Himmelman, 22, and Andrew Oneschuk, 18, because they disrespected his recent conversion to Islam. Arthurs claimed the three men previously shared neo-Nazi beliefs (a claim denied by the family of the two victims in a Tampa Bay Times story).
Stranger still, when police took Arthurs back to the apartment, a fourth roommate, Brandon Russell, was outside the door crying.
Russell, a Florida National Guardsman, was the one who leased the apartment, according to a federal complaint filed on May 20.
Police found Himmelman and Oneschuk dead inside, with gunshot wounds to the upper body and head. After being read his Miranda rights, Arthurs voluntarily agreed to speak with law enforcement officials and confessed to the shootings, providing specific information about the weapon he used and the exact location of the shot placement on each victim. Arthurs told authorities that Russell had nothing to do with the shootings, but that he had participated in online neo-Nazi chatrooms âwhere he threatened to kill people and bomb infrastructure.â
TPD obtained a search warrant for the residence, and discovered a cooler in the garage (beneath the apartment) âcontaining a white, cake-like substance that two FBI and TPD bomb squad technicians immediately recognized âŠas HMTD (an explosive also known as hexamethylene triperoxied diamine).â
Other explosive precursors were found in the garage, including one in a package addressed to Russell. Electric matches and empty 5.56-caliber ammunition casings with fuses that could be used to detonate destructive devices were discovered. âI know that the HTMD found in the garage combined with the amount of ammonium nitrate and nitro methane also found in the garage would constitute a âbomb,â FBI special agent Timothy Swanson wrote in the complaint.
Inside Russellâs bedroom, officers found Nazi and white supremacist propaganda, and a framed photo of Timothy McVeigh, the man executed for killing 168 people in the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing.
The complaint says Russell admitted to being a national socialist (more commonly known as Nazism), and that he had manufactured the HTMD. He also confessed to being a member of the group called Atomwaffen (German for atomic weapon). The Southern Poverty Law Center listed the Atomwaffen as one of 99 active neo-Nazi hate groups.
Russell said when he was in an engineering club at USF in 2013, he used HTMD to boost homemade rockets and send balloons into the atmosphere for testing.
âBased on my training and experience, HMTD is too energetic and volatile for these types of uses,â Swanson wrote in the complaint.
He also wrote that he received confirmation from ATF Explosive enforcement officer Kevin Miner that the HTMD is an explosive, and that probable cause existed that Russell was intending to assemble a destructive device.
Russell was arrested on an FBI warrant May 21 in Key Largo and charged with possessing an unregistered destructive device and unlawful storage of explosive material.
Why Russell was released and ended up in Key Largo two days after the shooting is unclear.
Arthurs was charged with two counts of first degree murder, three counts of armed kidnapping and two counts of aggravated assault.
According to police reports, Arthurs walked into the Green Planet Smoke Shop at 15352 Amberly Dr. in Tampa Palms and pulled a handgun from his waistband. He ordered a store employee and a customer to the floor, asking, âWhy shouldnât I kill you?â
Another customer entered the shop a few minutes later and was also ordered to the floor. Arthurs told the hostages that he had already killed someone and that he was upset because of the American bombings in the Middle East.
When TPD contacted Arthurs, one hostage managed to escape, and police convinced him to allow the other two to leave as well.
After surrendering, Arthurs made several references to Allah, according to the report.
âI had to do it,ââ he told officers. âThis wouldnât have had to happen if your country didnât bomb my country.â
Arthurs claimed he shot his roommates to prevent them from committing planned acts of domestic terrorism.
The Wesley Chapel softball team won almost as many games this season (19) as it had in 10 previous seasons (22), setting a school record. (Photo courtesy of Steve Mumaw)
The Wesley Chapel High (WCH) girls basketball team won eight more games this season than it did last season. The WCH football team, just two years removed from an 0-10 season, went 7-2. The Wiregrass Ranch High (WRH) football team made the playoffs for the first time since 2010.
However, when it came to the 2016-17 school year, there werenât any high school teams in Wesley Chapel that turned things around quite like the WCH softball team did.
Buoyed by a bevy of youngsters and first-year coach Steve Mumaw, the Wildcats did the improbable this spring â they beat softball powerhouses Pasco, River Ridge and Land OâLakes in one of Tampa Bayâs toughest districts, won 19 games and made it to the Class 6A Regional semifinals before losing 4-2 to the eventual State champion Gators.
âNow that itâs over and the tears are gone, we can reflect,ââ said Mumaw. âLand OâLakes won the State championship, and we were pretty close to (beating) them. It could have been us.â
Depending upon how many players return âthe new Cypress Creek Middle/High School zones are expected to claim at least a few players â the Wildcats have the makings of what could be a state contender the next few years.
That was hardly imaginable before 2017. Although they showed signs of promise last year, winning seven games in their best season ever to that point, the previous eight years had yielded records like 2-22, 2-21, 2-20, 1-22, 1-15 and 0-24. At one point, WCH lost 27 straight games and 43 of 44 over a three-span.
Things changed this spring with the infusion of some key freshmen, who meshed instantly with a talented crop of sophomores.
âWe had high expectations,ââ said Mumaw, who has had two stints as the baseball coach and one as the athletic director at WCH. âI wouldnât say we expected to get to the point we did, but we knew we were going to be a much-improved team.â
An Ace In The Circle
You donât win in softball if you donât have a good pitcher, and the Wildcats have a very good one in Jordan Almasy. The newcomer went 13-6 in the circle this year, including a complete game shutout over the Gators during the season, and striking out 130 batters in 116 innings.
Catcher Neely Peterson and pitcher Jordan Almasy confer during a game this season. (Photo courtesy of Steve Mumaw)
âShe was tremendous,ââ said Mumaw. âShe was the reason we were what we were at the end of the season. The way she could just take another team and kind of dominate them was a key.â
The Wildcats got strong seasons from returning players like the coachâs daughter, senior Dana Mumaw (a .286 batting average and 16 RBI), as well as from sophomores Payton Hudson (.328), Ashley Nickisher (.367, 15 RBI) and Neely Peterson, who set a school record for home runs (3) and RBI (20), while hitting a team-high .443.
Peterson has to share both of those new school records with one of the talented freshmen who helped drive the Wildcats, Anna Margetis, who also added a .338 average to her exploits, and fellow frosh Morgan Herndon batted .370.
Herndon wasnât even a starter at the beginning of the year, and came on late, as did so many of the Wildcats. Peterson, who hit in the middle of the lineup, was walked 17 times, as teams avoided her this season. But, once the rest of the lineup came around, that became a dangerous proposition. After driving in just one run during a nine-game stretch in the middle of the season, Peterson took advantage of a hot lineup, driving in 13 runs over the last 10 games.
âWhen they had to throw to her later in the season because girls were on base, she always came up with the hit to drive them in,â Mumaw said.
She wasnât alone. In fact, after a season in which a school-record five players had 10 or more RBI, this spring, the Wildcats doubled that with 10 players with double figures in RBIs.
Mumaw says it was a complete team effort.
âIt was enjoyable,ââ he said. âI wouldnât say I did a better coaching job or anything, they did it all. I just had to stay out of their way.â