In order to make all of North Avenue a viable corridor, 
we must look at the ground zero of reinvestment; Station North. It 
appears the reason it works is due to location location location. 
Nestled in between the already thriving Mount Vernon and Charles Village
 Neighborhoods and just blocks away from Penn Station, how could this 
Artist Enclave NOT be thriving? Businesses are opening up that serve the
 Neighborhood and draw people in from other Neighborhoods while creating
 a welcoming environment in the process. As a bonus, very chain stores 
exist which adds to the unique diversity of Station North.
For a few blocks on North Avenue from Howard St. to 
St. Paul St., there are gorgeous streetscape enhancements done by local 
Community Artists. In addition to well landscaped medians there are also
 sculptures that add to the unique welcoming environment. The only 
problem is these enhancements are only a few blocks long. After that, on
 either side of North Avenue, the vacated blighted landscape resumes. I 
think these streetscape enhancements should be extended eastbound to 
Greenmount Avenue which is the technically the eastern edge of Station 
North and westbound to Pennsylvania Avenue which will help connect 
Bolton Hill, Reservoir Hill, MICA, and University of Baltimore to 
Station North aesthetically. This will give the illusion that the 
reinvestment area that is Station North continues down a much longer 
stretch of North Avenue.
Now lets talk buildings east of Station North. There
 are lots of Row Homes, and Businesses that are boarded up and vacated 
and even if they are occupied they are in a severely distressed state. 
Just east of Station North along North Avenue is the Headquarters for 
Baltimore City Public Schools. This is a major Employer that doesn't 
benefit the area at all. Think about it, shouldn't there by a demand for
 adequate housing and Retail so School System Employees can live near 
their work? One would think so.
Fortunately however, there are plans for major 
redevelopment on the horizon for much of the Barclay Neighborhood. 
Barclay is just above North Avenue and east of Station North. Barclay 
has become blighted with an ever increasing vacancy rate and unhealthy 
living conditions for Residents left behind. Redevelopment was in the 
air for Barclay in the mid 2000s however the economy collapsing has put 
the brakes on these plans. When it comes time to redevelop Barclay 
however, North Avenue must adjust itself to serve the everyday needs of 
the new Barclay Community. This can be done by limiting commercial uses 
only to North Avenue and leaving the remainder of Barclay new and old to
 be solely Residential. 
Another attraction along this area of North Avenue 
is the Greenmount Cemetery. I think this should be treated as one of 
Baltimore's famous public squares. Notice in blighted areas of the City 
like Union Square, Franklin Square, Madison Square etc. the blight stops
 at the area facing the square and some of Baltimore's most sought after
 Row Homes are an island of hope in a sea of blight. That being said, 
the area surrounding Greenmount Cemetery is in very bad shape. However 
there are a few signs of life in the Oliver Neighborhood directly east 
of the Cemetery in the form of newer homes. Older Row Homes however have
 not fared so well. This can be made into an opportunity to attract a 
mixed income community by bringing back the $1 Row House initiative. 
Although they will be symbolically buying these homes for $1 they must 
both occupy the home and qualify for a hefty construction loan to rehab 
their home. This would mark a substantial amount of money being 
reinvested into the Oliver and East Baltimore Midway Communities and 
create a welcoming area on all sides of Greenmount Cemetery.           
Further down North Avenue eastbound on the south 
side lies a community known as Broadway East. This is where the 
population loss of Baltimore is most evident with vacancy rates as high 
as 45% and that's not including vacant lots. Fortunately, Broadway East 
is just north of the Hopkins redevelopment area. This is where a lot of 
redevelopment must occur. I don't see very many of these Row Homes 
surviving which has been true for the actual Hopkins Redevelopment area.
 Although the Hopkins Redevelopment area has Retail/Commercial Space 
Master Planned into it, I would like to limit a redeveloped Broadway 
East to having North Avenue be the sole area for Retail/Commercial 
space. 
In the Broadway East Area of North Avenue there are a
 couple of areas that stand out to me and I think should be target 
areas. First there's the complex that contains the Eastside State 
Complex and Baltimore City Social Services. I think there should be a 
Master Plan of some sort created to redevelop this area and allow for 
higher density. I'm not exactly sure how I would do it but I think this 
can be made into a Mixed Use block that can spur further reinvestment 
along North Avenue. Next there's Harford Heights Elementary and William 
C. March Middle Schools. Both are located in a sprawling building on 
Wolfe St. between Sinclair Lane and Holly Cross Lane. I believe there 
are plans to build a new school that houses grades K-8 according to the 
School Facilities Master Plan. I would build a more compact building 
that would have Holly Cross Lane frontage and would allow for rows of 
new Homes to be built along the east side Broadway between Harford Road 
and North Avenue and additional homes along the north side of North 
Avenue between Broadway and Wolfe St.
The last part of Broadway East is the boarded up 
building once known as "Ashley Apartments." This old Section 8 Apartment
 Building fell into disrepair in the 1990s and the Feds who owned sold 
it back to the City only to have boarded up to rot inside and out. I 
would love to see a rehab of this building similar to that of the 
American Brewery (pictured above.) Instead of housing the Offices of 
Humanim which the American Brewery does, I would turn Ashley Apartments 
into low income Senior Apartments. They will include Apartments spanning
 from Independent Living to Assisted living all the way to Nursing Home 
beds. They will be amenity filled with a 24 hour Police Substation in 
the front to curtail crime and provide safety for its Residents. Seniors
 who need assistance in the area will be first on the list to rent an 
Apartment. The Ashley Apartment Building is an architectural gem that 
must be restored.
North Avenue minus a few blocks in Station North may
 appear to be completely blighted but looking eastward toward it Gay St.
 terminus, I see that there are numerous opportunities to make it the 
spine for reinvestment in Baltimore. Stay tuned for Part II that 
addresses North Avenue west of Station North.

I just wanted to let you know, I really enjoy your blog and a lot of your ideas are very similar to mine. I am glad other like minded people are seeing what could be done with this city and I also like the historical info. you share that I would have never known, keep up the good work!!!
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