
For  thoroughfares that run through the outskirts of the City, I find it  best to think of them as small towns and said thoroughfares as the "Main  Street" of those small towns. Enter Liberty Heights Avenue, the perfect  example of a Main Street that runs through a cluster of Neighborhoods  in Northwest Baltimore in a manor that mimics Suburbia. This is the  first in a series of three posts that will tackle Liberty Heights each  post dedicated to a little "Town Centre" that will be developed or  redeveloped to serve the needs of each Neighborhood Cluster. This  particular post is dedicated to Howard Park.   
 
 
Howard Park, as far as Liberty Heights is concerned is the closest  to the City/County Line. Out of the three clusters, Howard Park has the  best "bones" to work with, in other words redevelopment here will  be minimal. The housing stock in Howard Park is also the most suburban  of the three. 
    
 
The "Howard Park Town Centre" got a shot in the arm when it was  announced that at long last the addition of a full service grocer will  be opening by 2013 in the form of a Shop Rite. The Shop Rite will be  located on the site of the former Howard Park Super Pride at Liberty  Heights and Gwynn Oak Avenue which will be torn down to make way for the  Shop Rite. Liberty Heights between Gywnn Oak and Hillsdale will be the  core of Howard Park Town Centre. 
    
 
The Shop Rite will definitely be largest Retail Change to the area  but there should be another redevelopment project across Hillsdale Road.  In my ever lasting crusade to bring new School Construction to  Baltimore City, I'm proposing that Calvin M. Rodwell Elementary be torn  down and rebuilt with the population of itself and two other neighboring  Elementary Schools to cut down on the surplus of capacity City Schools  face.

The front of the "new" Calvin M. Rodwell Elementary (which will be  renamed Howard Park Elementary) will face Liberty Heights Avenue rather  than Hillsdale like it currently does. 
    
 
Aside from the old Super Pride that's shuttered, perhaps the  biggest eye sore in the Howard Park Town Centre is the old Ambassador  Theatre. I don't have much knowledge of this once vibrant epicenter of  Howard Park but what I do know is that it is currently shuttered and  there aren't any plans to revive it. Luckily my plan does include a  revived Ambassador. One shortage that's painfully obvious in all of  Baltimore is the lack of first run Movie Theatres. One should also note  that large Cinema Multiplexes in the Suburbs show the same Movie on  Several Screens. This proves that any new Movie Theatre should have  fewer screens and maximize profits that way. The Ambassador fits the  bill perfectly. Although it's a one screen venue currently, it has a  seating capacity of over 1,000. The inside could easily be renovated to  make way for five to seven screens each with a seating capacity between  100 and 200 per screen. With a smaller foot print, profits can be  maximized without showing the same movie twice while still showing a  good number of first run Movies. Whichever Theatre company takes  over ownership of the Ambassador must restore the Vertical Marquis of  the Ambassador to its former glory. 

    
 The last large piece of the Howard Park Town Centre includes what  looks like a vacated iHop from the color scheme outside. This will not  torn down but it will be backfilled by a Sonic. Judging by the  volume of business at the only area sonic in Randallstown, I think this  will be a winning venture. 

    
 Those are the biggest changes put forth in my Howard Park Town  Centre Plan. I think these additions will encourage better  Retail options than what is currently there. Additional Banks, Dry  Cleaners, a Subway, Starbucks, and Sit Down Restaurants. In addition  existing store fronts will be upgraded to include better signage and  elimination of metal pull down gates and bars on windows to make for a  more pleasing atmosphere. 

    
Well that's my plan for the Howard Park Town Centre, the new Shop  Rite makes for an excellent building block to set other things in motion  and hopefully such a synergy can be acheived. Stay tuned for future  posts regarding Liberty Heights as this is the first in a series.
 
5 comments:
My family moved to the neighborhood in 1946, I grew up there and still live there. What you describe as "Howard Park Town Centre" was Gwynn Oak Junction, where the streetcar lines running on Liberty Heights and Gwynn Oak avenues intersected. The surrounding neighborhood was developed around 1920 as a streetcar suburb. Gwynn Oak Junction (and others, such as Liberty Heights and Garrison) typically had a Reads drug store, small clothing stores, a bowling alley, grocery stores (we had both an Acme at Liberty Heights and Woodbine, and an A&P on Gwynn Oak Avenue), medical offices, two movie theaters (the Gwynn was across the street from the Ambassador), a ballet school, beauty and barber shops, a bank, etc. What you describe as an iHop was a Roy Rogers. Before that, I think there was a residence on that site. I'm excited about seeing the Junction redeveloped, and marvel at seeing the open space there now that demolition is complete. I hope you'll post photos as the work continues.
I'm glad to meet somebody who has watched Howard park and the Junction evolve from 1946 into what it is today. It sure sounded like a great place in its heyday and I hope with the ShopRite arriving that it will spur new activity in the Junction.
I have lived in Howard Park my entire life. The plan sounds absolutely lovely. Many of my neighbors have been working toward this goal for many years with many questionable stumbling blocks in our way... I could never understand why more focus was not pleased our community. This is a section of the "hallway" leading into Baltimore City. It is a crystal clear reflection of Baltimore City. The area is beautiful, has a lot of potential and a lot of perks. We would like to see our historic structures remain and quaint business establishments govern the junction. area. It is good to know that others share our vision but, it is our hope that action is truly taken to make thus dream a reality... Thank you for your wonderful blog. : )
Does anyone have an update on the Liberty Heights area? Did the grocery store get developed? Has there been any other growth?
For what it's worth, the "IHOP" that previously had been a Roy Rogers was, before that the "Mayfair" drive inn restaurant (1964-1972) & before that "Gibson's". On that corner was a Police call box for the NW District. Across the street was a former residence used as a doctor's office by Dr. Thomas Abbott.
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