Broadway Overlook is the redeveloped evolution of Broadway Homes, a dangerous Public Housing High Rise, it stands to reason that before Broadway Overlook, Broadway Homes was also treated to a nice view of Downtown. How could a public housing development get such a great view of the City? The answer is more than half a century old so allow me to take you back in time.
Living close to Downtown meant something completely
different after World War II. That being said, Downtown was completely
different after World War II. As Retail, Offices, and the Industrial
Harbor were fleeing Downtown for the suburbs or in the case of the
Harbor, disappearing forever. This made Downtown into a ghost town.
Meanwhile, Neighborhoods that hugged Downtown were overcrowded. The
wartime Jobs that accelerated the great migration from the rural South
had evaporated but the new Citizens who had come for work didn't leave
the City. At the same time for those who could afford it, the flight to
the suburbs was in full swing. This made for an eroding tax base and an
increase of poverty Citywide.
Neighborhoods that hugged Downtown had the most
poverty and the oldest and most obsolete housing stock. At the same time
it was the most overcrowded part of the City. In short everything
surrounding Downtown was slums. Obviously something had to be done. The
story of Baltimore's plight as a rust belt City is echoed all across
large Cities in America. That is why HUD decided to dedicate a large sum
of money to build new High Rise Apartments in poverty stricken
overcrowded Cities across the Country. These new Buildings would have
the amenities so desperately needed in these slums such as
Refrigerators, Heat,and Indoor Plumbing. Given their proximity to
Downtown, those living on the top floors could be treated to the same
views as those living in a luxury Downtown penthouse.
And so it came to be that East Baltimore between
Downtown and Hopkins went from having overcrowded slums to having clean
"modern" public housing complexes of some of which were high rises. For
the first Residents of Broadway Homes & all new developments for
that matter, their new community was a dream come true. These new
buildings allowed them a higher quality of life that they were proud of.
HUD had devoted a large sum of money for the demolition of the slums
and construction of the high rises but how much were they continuing to
give to maintain these larger than life structures? They didn't allocate
any money for that. Maintenance fell on the City's back. Since Broadway
Homes was a public housing development, it was pretty low on the City's
bucket list because it didn't produce as much of a tax base than say
Roland Park. Maintenance was non existent as the buildings fell into
disrepair almost as quickly as they were built. Residents were simply
forgotten and left behind.
If you were left behind by the Government that was
supposed to protect and defend you, how would you feel? If you answered
angry and betrayed, you would feel exactly how Residents of Broadway
Homes felt by the 1970s. Given the increasingly decaying buildings and
the decreasing Police presence, crime, drugs, and violence replaced the
memories of a healthy peaceful Community that the Broadway Home's first
Residents remember. The high rises, although they looked very plain,
were designed in a complicated manner which allowed criminals to hide
out after the commission of a crime and others used that advantage to
terrorize Residents.
Elsewhere in Baltimore, Downtown began to make a
turn for the better. The Central Business District began
to re-centralize itself with the creation of Charles Center and
eventually the redefinition of the Harbor from an industrial port to a
tourist magnet. Eventually living in and around Downtown was and still
is a sought after address. For the majority of Baltimore's history this
has been the case, it was only after World War II that Downtown had
become a ghost town. The success of Downtown did spread but only to
certain Neighborhoods, remember so many of the Neighborhoods that hug
Downtown contain public housing developments some of which were high
rises and pretty much all of which were decaying. This contained
gentrification to the southeast below Pratt St.
Broadway Homes and other public housing developments
like it were supposed to provide a long term solution to the
overcrowding and decaying slums hugging Downtown. By the 1990s it was
apparent that Broadway Homes could not be revitalize in its current
form. The same was true for all public housing high rise developments in
the City as well as Cities across the Country. That's when Maryland's
own Senator Barb stepped in and sponsored a bill known as HOPE VI. HOPE
VI allocated federal funds to demolish and redevelop failing public
housing high rises in urban areas and replace them traditional lower
density housing. These mixed income communities would help break up
large concentrations of poverty and attract outside investment. Although
Broadway Homes wasn't the first development in Baltimore on the list,
it was on it and the Feds realized its state of decay and provided funds
for its demolition and redevelopment.
Now that Broadway Homes had been demolished, the
time had come to rebuild and rebuild they did. The actual Broadway Homes
site was given to Hopkins who swapped it for undeveloped parcel
directly adjacent to the original Broadway Homes. Along Broadway, there
Apartments were built which is what the old Church Hospital was
converted to. Along Fayette St. between Broadway and Caroline St. are
new Mixed Income town homes with a mix of public housing units, market
rate rentals, and market rate home ownership. In the first few years of
Broadway Overlook, the average median income of the area sky rocketed.
Perhaps that great view of Downtown had something to do with it?
Broadway Overlook and other HOPE VI developments
have begun the natural process of revitalizing all of East Baltimore
between Downtown and Hopkins. The question remains; should the public
housing units be converted into market rates due to the increasing
popularity of the area and view of Downtown? Simply put, No. There are
plenty of other developments in East Baltimore that can be rehabbed or
redeveloped for Market Rate, and they also have great views of Downtown.
1 comment:
You've got a lot of info about the city here -- it's something for me to keep in mind if I ever visit.
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