As the recession has wore on, it has become increasingly
clear that the interest in the Biotech Park has waned, start up
companies have gone belly up or have downsized the amount of Office and
Lab Space needed. This was a major blow to the redevelopment efforts of
Johns Hopkins to build a new sustainable Community in East Baltimore. On
the Residential side however we have seen more sign of progress despite
a rock economy. To redevelop the new East Side, block after block of
vacant row homes have been or will be demolished to make way for new
mixed income housing that was aimed at workers of all levels at the
beleaguered Biotech Park. With the Biotech Park looking like less and
less of a Reality the question arises; Could living near Hopkins be
enough to attract new Residents to Baltimore's New East Side?
East Baltimore had always been a working class
Neighborhood. Small two story Row Homes were built to house workers from
the Factories and the Docks both South and East. Bethlehem Steel was a
major Employer of East Baltimore as was the American Can Company and the
Breweries on Brewers Hill. Johns Hopkins and Church Hospital at the
time occupied small spaces in the Neighborhood and their staffs were a
fraction of the number employed by Hopkins today. In short, Hopkins
workers didn't make up a large percentage of the East Baltimore
Workforce.
As the 20th Century wore on East Baltimore began
changing, White Flight and Blockbusting changed Neighborhoods from White
to Black almost overnight, industry in America as a whole began drying
up which made this once proud working class Community fall into Poverty,
Public Housing High Rises were being erected between Downtown and
Hopkins, and just as quickly as middle class Blacks began settling into
East Baltimore, they began fleeing just like their White predecessors
had as crime had begun to spillover from Neighboring Public Housing
Developments. Poor Blacks in the area did not have the resources to move
out of their once tidy row house Community so they were forced to stay
in their constantly shrinking increasingly violent Neighborhoods where
by the end of the 20th Century, boarded up row houses were beginning to
outnumber occupied ones.
One fascinating detail of this all too common story
of urban decay is the tremendous growth of Johns Hopkins Hospital during
this time. As East Baltimore's row homes were being abandoned, Hopkins
was acquiring land to expand their Hospital to offer more Patient beds,
build new departments of growing Medical Fields where they hired the
best and the brightest Doctors, and classrooms for Med Students,
Interns, and Residents to become the best Doctors they could be. This
expansion led to Patients coming to Hopkins and only Hopkins from around
the Country and around the World to be seen by Doctors at Hopkins
because they knew they were getting the best treatment in Medicine. This
propelled Hopkins to become one of Baltimore's largest private sector
Employers bypassing Bethlehem Steel.
The growth of Hopkins and the decay of the
surrounding East Baltimore Community seemed to contradict one another.
If the Neighborhood was decaying so much how could an institution like
Hopkins grow with such surroundings? On the flip the question was asked,
why weren't efforts being made to make more of the Hopkins Staff into
East Baltimore Residents? The answer was and still is crime. The Hopkins
Campus is heavily guarded day and night by Security and Police Forces
alike. However. if somebody gets lost trying to find Hopkins or an exit
from Hopkins, well that's a different and often scarier story. Hopkins
workers for the most part have the means to live elsewhere, therefore
they do.
In the early 2000s, Biotech Parks were sweeping the
nation by storm. It seemed that every Hospital and/or University wanted
to add one to their campus(s.) On the West Side, University of Maryland
had wanted to add one (pictured above) and took the bold step of crossing MLK Boulevard into
Poppleton, a West Baltimore Neighborhood that has seen the same crime
and blight that East Baltimore has. Hopkins also wanted in. Only
difference with Hopkins is that they wanted to use their Biotech Park as
a springboard for full scale redevelopment of 1000+ row homes in East
Baltimore north of Hopkins.
Neighborhoods south of Hopkins such as Washington
Hill, Butcher's Hill (pictured above), Historic Jonestown, and Patterson Park had begun
to see new signs of life partly due to the dismantling of the public
housing high rises and new mixed income Town Homes that risen up in
their place. These Neighborhoods have also provided a link from Hopkins
to the Harbor as well as Downtown. Suddenly Hopkins and East Baltimore
didn't seem so far from Downtown and the Harbor.
As the Master Plan for the Biotech Park and the
redevelopment of the 1000+ vacant row homes north of Hopkins began to
take shape, the recession hit. Today, the housing market is beginning to
pick up some steam but there are those who say the entire New East Side
is in Jeopardy because the Biotech Park part of the plan is in lingo.
I'm sorry but isn't John Hopkins Hospital one of Baltimore's largest
Employers with a infinitely growing staff? On that same note aren't
people in general moving back to Cities because they're sick of long
commute to and from work? The answers to both questions is yes.
The idea of actually having a thriving safe
sustainable Community surrounding Hopkins is a relatively new idea. Most
of the reasoning of it being so new is because Hopkins was so much
smaller and employed so few people when East Baltimore actually was a
thriving Community. The thinking has to be; Biotech Park or not, The
Neighborhoods surrounding Hopkins can and should be desirable simply
because Hopkins is such a huge institution that it's a magnet that draws
Residents to it.
Neighborhoods south of Hopkins have fared much
better than those north of it so full scale redevelopment or even small
scale redevelopment isn't needed like it is north of the Hospital. That
being said, Baltimore's new East Side should continue to build and reach
its goal of 1200-1500 new and rehabbed homes. The only real question is
what to do with land that had been set aside for the Biotech Park. I'm
sure there are uses for it such as Community space, additional housing,
or the land could be banked in case the demand for a Biotech Park
resurfaces. I also don't see the Hospital's expansion stopping anytime
soon so the Biotech Park land could also be used by the Hospital.
Living close to where you work has begun to be the
new way of thinking. In order for Hopkins to continue to thrive and
attract World Class Doctors and Researchers alike, the surrounding East
Baltimore Community must in turn thrive as well. That is why the full
scale redevelopment of the area north of the Hospital is crucial to its
future. Living near Hopkins has always been enough to sustain
Baltimore's new East Side and always has been. It's only been recently
that people are starting realize it.
1 comment:
Hi! My name is Anhchi Ha, and I just wanted to say that I think your blog is really interesting. I came across your blog when I was researching blogs about Baltimore for inspiration. I'm actually writing a blog on Federal Hill for a class, and I gained a lot of insight on how to write a blog about the area from your blog.
But I was wondering, do you come across any struggles writing about the area?
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