COMMERCIAL APPEAL (Memphis)
7.16.06Winchester Park fires at
blight
Planning sessions will arm Intown for
upgrades, development that stays
By Amos Maki
Celestine Hill has been living in the Downtown
neighborhood known as Winchester Park for more than 50 years.
When she moved there to be closer to her job at the Memphis Mental
Healthcare Center, it was a working-class area where neighbors looked
after each other and kept well-manicured lawns.
Now, neighbors spend much of their time watching the steady parade of
strangers that float in and out of the area -- which is riddled with
overgrown, trash-strewn lots -- at all times of the day and night.
"It's gotten worse," said Hill, who lives in a Habitat for Humanity
of Greater Memphis home on Jones Avenue. "It used to be a nice, clean
neighborhood.
"We didn't have too many homeowners but it was nice because everybody
lived like neighbors," she said. "Over the years the neighborhood
declined."
Beginning Monday, a host of local and national architects, city
planners, developers and residents of Winchester Park will begin
planning what they hope is the neighborhood's rebirth.
The Knight Program in Community Building at the University of Miami's
School of Architecture is holding a weeklong charrette -- a
collaborative planning process -- for the area bordered by North
Parkway, Interstate 240, Jefferson Avenue and Danny Thomas Boulevard.
The goal is to improve the area, which planners refer to as Intown, for
residents and pave the way for new, sustainable development near one of
the city's growing employment and economic development centers.
The neighborhood serves as a crucial link between St. Jude Children's
Research Hospital and Le Bonheur Children's Medical Center.
A $1 billion expansion is under way at St. Jude, and Le Bonheur is
embarking on a $235 million expansion. Both organizations interact
regularly, with patients and doctors zipping back and forth between the
sites.
The 1.3 million-square-foot University of Tennessee-Baptist Research
Park is planned for the Medical Center. The six-building research,
incubator and commercial center dedicated to the biotech industry will
take about 10 years to complete.
"The neighborhood has been forgotten for many years," said Carissa
Hussong, executive director of the Urban Art Commission, which is
sponsoring the charrette. "That's partly a result of its location, which
is also one of its assets and why so many people are really interested
in the neighborhood.
"With the infusion of so many jobs because of the major investments
by these medical institutions," she said, "it makes sense that we look
at this community now as a residential community that's supporting the
growing needs of the surrounding medical facilities in a way that
creates a sustainable neighborhood."
The charrette is one piece of a larger public-private effort to
revitalize the Medical Center.
Two housing projects on the northern and southern end of the district
-- Lamar Terrace on Lamar and Dixie Homes on Poplar -- are being
transformed into mixed-income residential neighborhoods with the help of
two Federal Hope VI grants.
Planners think they create a mixed-income neighborhood in Winchester
Park, one that might attract highly-paid doctors and support staff.
"The best communities have a mixture of incomes and a mixture of
backgrounds," said Russell E. Bloodworth Jr., executive director of
Boyle Investment Co. and one of the 12 Knight Program Fellows who will
conduct the charrette.
The first three days of the charrette will feature stakeholder
meetings with developers, property owners, architects and others. But it
is by no means an exclusive affair. Neighborhood residents will be
active participants in the planning.
"People are excited," Hussong said. "They care about their community
and would like to see it come back to the way it was before."
The general public will be able to chime in during a session on July
17.
Elizabeth Plater-Zyberk and Charles Bohl will lead the effort.
Plater-Zyberk is a founder of the Congress for New Urbanism, which
advocates inner-city neighborhoods that are walkable, diverse and
accessible to shops, parks and jobs. Plater-Zyberk is also dean of the
University of Miami School of Architecture and will speak at 5:30 Monday
at the Memphis College of Art in an event sponsored by the Memphis
District Council of the Urban Land Institute.
Bohl is director of the Knight Program of Community Building at the
University of Miami.
"My hope is that it will cast a strong, sustainable vision for what
the area should be and a strategy to get it there," Bloodworth said.
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