Okay, wow, I've got a ton of questions after reading this thread so far! Keep in mind that I am not an engineer, nor do I play one on TV, and I didn't stay anywhere except right here at home last night! ;D
If towers on the northwest side of the city are too close to the John C. Tune airport, how does WWCR get to have theirs behind their studios there? They are just across the Cumberland from John C. Tune. And I am puzzled as to why they are not lit up at night. Do they not meet the height requirement? They may be out of the flight pattern for airport traffic, but I certainly hope no crop duster ever flies into one of their towers! I am assuming that crop dusters would only fly during the daytime, and only on clear days at that.
And while we are on the subject, who owns the towers just southwest of the Briley Parkway/Ashland City Highway intersection? Right there on the corner of that interchange. It is my understanding that WWCR does not own those.
I can see metro eventually wanting to buy some waterfront right of way from WWCR if they ever want to put in a greenway in on the northwest side of town, either connecting to the trails at Bells Bend Park not too far away, or even to the bicentennial greenway at Ashland City. Right now, the railroad between Nashville and Ashland City is still in use, so I suppose metro would opt for riverfront right of way for a greenway instead. As long as WWCR's towers are far enough inland from the river, it should not be a problem for them to sell right of way to metro. (Unless they are concerned with conspiracy theorists staking out the greenway behind their studios! ;D) This land is also in flood plain, so it should not be worth much to anyone except metro.
As for that area around Brentwood, why didn't they put some large culverts (or a bridge) under I-65 when they built that? Did they not plan ahead for flood issues? Or were they just not as environmentally aware back then? I'm assuming that area was very undeveloped when the interstate first came through there 40+ years ago, and was certainly way out in the middle of nowhere when the Blaw-Knox was first erected. (I know a little about flood plains because my backyard sits in one, and it looks like the Florida everglades out there right now!) I can see not allowing a beer seller near a school, particularly an elementary school, but why a gas station? Is it because they would likely be attached to a convenience store, and thus sell beer? All this reminds me of that cockamamie law that forbids underage cashiers to ring up beer purchases at the grocery stores. If they're old enough to work, they're old enough to ring up alcohol sales. Doesn't mean they're drinking!
I can see why Watt doesn't check in here much! He leaves us with more questions than answers! ;D