| Different Strokes
Two blighted neighborhoods settle on distinct solutions to the same problem.

Story from the magazine
by Allen Freeman / Nov. 1, 2002

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Inn on Ferry Street, Detroit (Glen Calvin Moon)
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A setting worthy of a Henry James novel, Washington
Park in Bridgeport, Conn., was the very model of a modern urban
neighborhood. Families of factory managers, bankers, and merchants
lived in three dozen high-style Victorian houses surrounding a
five-acre landscaped square, thus living out an 1851 vision of
P.T. Barnum, the circus impresario, one-term mayor of the coastal
city and developer of Washington Park.
A century after Barnum's plan was fully realized
in the 1890s, the square and surrounding blocks had become a crime
zone that Bridgeport police attempted to contain. Dealers peddled
crack in daylight, street gangs battled over turf, absentee landlords
allowed once-grand properties to fall apart, and tenants, many
of them immigrants in search of a better life, were trapped in
an urban nightmare.
Two miles from downtown Detroit, a similar
fate seemed to await four imposing houses and two carriage barns,
c. 1890, located just off Woodward Avenue near the Detroit Institute
of Arts. Although structurally sound, the mansions and outbuildings
on Ferry Street had been spottily maintained for 30 years or so,
and the severe blight just two blocks away seemed contagious.
There was talk of demolishing the six buildings for a parking
lot.
Bridgeport's Washington Park and Detroit's
Ferry Street houses have in common middle-to-upper-class origins,
inner-city decline, recent rehabilitation, patchwork financing,
and a certain vision and dogged determination on the part of their
restorers. They also share, along with other
recipients listed here, 2002 National Trust Honor Awards given
on Oct. 10 at the National Preservation Conference in Cleveland.
In Bridgeport, Washington Park resident Robert
Halstead set up a nonprofit partnership that received deeds from
the city to 10 houses scattered around the square. "So much affordable
housing has been torn down in Fairfield County," Halstead says.
"There's a big shortage of places to live for people like health
care and construction workers, secretaries, and waitresses, and
the tax credit funding was available."
Sixty percent of the project's development
costs came from Connecticut low-income housing tax credits, and
the city channeled $457,000 in federal Community Development Block
Grant funds into the project; the balance came from conventional
financing. Today, thanks to an investment of $5 million, all 35
units in the 10 houses are rented to low-income tenants. (Architects
David Barbour and Mark Halstead designed the renovations.) The
park itself, with its Victorian bandstand, playgrounds, and basketball
courts, has changed into a place where mothers come to watch their
children at play, joggers stride through without fear of being
mugged, and young men compete in basketball leagues. With the
Washington Park project leading the way, two more housing rehabilitation
projects have begun nearby, and a former ghetto is becoming a
neighborhood again.
In Detroit, the developers of the Inn on Ferry
Street have invested $8 million in the cluster of six buildings,
creating a 42-room inn that will accommodate visitors to nearby
arts institutions, Wayne State University, and the Detroit Medical
Center. Behind the restored Queen Anne and Romanesque revival
facades are period rooms outfitted with designer lighting, silk
draperies, and a mix of antiques and reproductions.
It took the University Cultural Center Association,
the Detroit Institute of the Arts, financial consultant Zachary
Associates, and restoration architect Elizabeth Knibbe of Ypsilanti,
Mich., a decade to find financing and complete the inn. Traditional
mortgagors shunned the project, so the project's managers set
up a for-profit subsidiary and lined up 23 funding sources, including
foundation grants, loans and grants from the city, and preservation
tax credits.
"We looked at a variety of redevelopment options,"
says Sue Mosey, president of the Ferry Street Development Co.
and owner of the inn. "The area is redeveloping into a neighborhood
of mixed incomes, and the nearby cultural institutions needed
a good place for visitors to stay."
Poster cities in the 1990s for disinvestment,
Bridgeport and Detroit today find themselves hosts to high-profile
bellwethers of urban rejuvenation.
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