Potomac Gardens
Potomac Gardens | |
---|---|
Alternative names | The Gardens |
General information | |
Type | Housing project |
Location | Capitol Hill, Southeast |
Address | 1225 G Street SE |
Town or city | Washington, D.C. |
Country | United States of America |
Coordinates | 38°52′49″N 76°59′21″W / 38.880168°N 76.989270°WCoordinates: 38°52′49″N 76°59′21″W / 38.880168°N 76.989270°W |
Groundbreaking | 1965 |
Completed | 1968 |
Owner | Housing Authority of the District of Columbia |
Design and construction | |
Architecture firm | Metcalf and Associates |
Main contractor | Edward M. Crough, Inc. |
Awards and prizes | Greater Washington Board of Trade Award for Excellence in Architecture (1971) |
Other information | |
Number of rooms | 352 units |
Website | |
Housing Authority of the District of Columbia |
Potomac Gardens, known to some of its residents as "The Gardens", is a housing project located at 1225 G Street SE, in Capitol Hill, Southeast, Washington, D.C., thirteen blocks to the southeast of the United States Capitol building.
The property is owned by the District of Columbia Housing Authority, and its 352-units are divided into family and senior housing. It was constructed between 1965 and 1968. In November 1967, the first families began moving in.
History
Potomac Gardens was designed by the Metcalf and Associates architectural firm, and was built from 1965 and 1968 by Edward M. Crough, Inc. It contained the innovative Potomac Gardens Multi-Service Center, bringing community services into the new public housing project.[1] The Friendship House on Capitol Hill ran the Center with the help of site-coordinator S. Preston-Jones and with additional funding from the Junior League.[2] The chief medical officer in the clinic was Dr. John A. Algee. One of the first managers of Potomac Gardens was Majurial Crawley. During the 1980s, Constance Love was the manager.[3]
In 1971, the Greater Washington Board of Trade, the regional business association, gave its Award for Excellence in Architecture to the builder, Edward M. Crough, Inc., and the architectural firm, Metcalf and Associates, of Potomac Gardens.[4] The Edward M. Crough Center for Architectural Studies at Catholic University is named after Potomac Gardens' builder.[5]
Many of the earliest residents had escaped the harsh life of agricultural work, especially cotton picking, in the South.[6] As part of the City Lights Program funded by the DC Humanities Council, senior residents worked with curators and public historians to create a traveling museum exhibition and a documentary about their historical experiences. Many musicians and bands have emerged from Potomac Gardens, including The East Coast Connection with its single "Summer in the Parks" and, more recently, SouljaGanG Bilal.[7] Potomac Gardens also figures in numerous novels, such as James Patterson's Cross (2006)[8] and George Pelecanos' The Cut (2011).[9]
Former White House aide Lieutenant Colonel Oliver North, USMC, performed some of his court-ordered 1,200 hours of community service there before his Iran-Contra conviction was overturned.[10]
In April 1989, Jesse Jackson along with Mayor Marion Barry visited Potomac Gardens, where they played a one-on-one basketball game.[11] Jackson was considering running for District Mayor, if Barry chose not to run. In 1991, after meeting privately with supporters from around the country at the Omni Shoreham Hotel, Jackson returned to Potomac Gardens by Metro and delivered his formal withdrawal from the Presidential race.[12]
Also in April 1989, Geraldo Rivera featured Potomac Gardens during a segment for a his TV talk show, called “Bloodied Streets and Broken Dreams.” As part of the show, Geraldo referred to that block as the most dangerous in America. [13]
Community life
In 1995, Little Lights Urban Ministries was founded by Steven Park, serving children in Potomac Gardens and the surrounding area.[14] In Faith Forward, Steven and Mary Park discuss their religious conversions and the importance of Potomac Gardens' residents to their religious work.[15] Potomac Garden resident, Khaulysha, was profiled in a June 2014 article on the success of the Little Lights program. [16]
In 2013, Liane Scott brought Grassroots DC to Potomac Gardens to provide training in journalism and media production to residents, who then go on to produce information to educate policy makers and the public about issues and causes vital to the under-served communities of the District of Columbia Metropolitan Area.[17]
The Senior Resident Council was established in 1979 "to foster and improve relationships within the development and with the surrounding community."[18] The Senior Resident Council organizes activities for seniors and provides assistance during emergencies. In the early 1990s, it worked with the group City Lights, and with funding from the DC Humanities Council and National Endowment for the Humanities, to make a video about the lives of seniors in Potomac Gardens. In connection to this project, some of the seniors testified before Congress in support of NEH funding.
Controversy and crime
In 1983, Martha Queen, the ANC representative for the area and herself a resident of Potomac Gardens for more than a decade said: “I like it here,” she says. “I like the people. I don't like the problems. But the people are good people.” But “There's a lot of trespassers here.” Deteriorating conditions in some parts of the complex, Ms. Queen said, gave the impression that the project had been "abandoned" by the city and was ripe for invasion by outsiders. The fence had been installed to halt such trespassers.[19]
The Philadelphia Inquirer wrote about Potomac Gardens in 1989, calling it, "A Place Where The Word Potomac Means Death".[20] The housing project was featured in a 1990 New York Times article on DC's war on drugs, "From the elegant town houses of Capitol Hill, it is but a few blocks to Potomac Gardens, a cheerless housing project where residents smoke crack in the courtyard and shoot up heroin in the hallways. The Shining City on the Hill has become the Dope House on the Potomac." [21]
In 1991, Mayor Sharon Pratt Kelly had fences installed around and within the property, against the wishes of some residents. "It’s disrespectful. We aren’t animals. We don’t need to be caged," one resident told The Washington Post. It took 45 police officers to quell a violent negative reaction.[22] Mayor Kelly was vindicated, at least in the short term: Drug arrests declined dramatically after the fence went up, though crimes did continue.[23][24][25] But much of the drug activity just shifted to other areas, and assaults and robberies remained high—to the point in 1995 that Marion Barry’s administration hired the Nation of Islam on an emergency contract to restore order.[26]
Jesse Jackson used Potomac Gardens as a backdrop for a press conference to announce he would not run for president in 1992, calling it “the urban crisis personified, the epitome of national neglect.”[10]
In June 2010, fifteen individuals were arrested, according to a joint press release issued in conjunction with the U.S. Attorney’s office, the MPDC, the FBI and the U.S. Park Police, who all worked together on the arrests as part of a long-term a task force combating gangs, drugs and violence. The bust yielded heroin, cocaine, guns, scales and other drug trafficking paraphernalia and was described as significant by the MPD1 Commander David Kamperin. [27] In November 2011, a series of violent attacks in the area surrounding the project drew widespread media attention and a response from DC Police Chief Cathy Lanier. [28]The FBI announced in July 2013 that sixteen people had been arrested in drug conspiracy charges, "According to the government’s evidence, the drugs were distributed in the Potomac Gardens and Hopkins housing complexes in Southeast Washington, as well as in Prince George’s County, Maryland, and locations in northern Virginia." [29]
In March 2013, the Huffington Post met with a group of teens and young adults at Potomac Gardens where they discussed their own encounters with violence and the culture of guns.[30]
A series of shootings in Spring of 2015 at Potomac Gardens, including shots fired at EMS and police, prompted renewed concern from area residents. [31]
Proposed redevelopment
Potomac Garden resident Kourtney Mills was profiled in an March 2013 article in Education Week, "Large-scale multifamily public-housing projects like Potomac Gardens have fallen out of favor in the last 50 years as federal and local housing agencies moved to a scatter-site approach aimed at distributing low-income residents throughout mixed-income neighborhoods. "[32]
There has been speculation that the housing project would be redeveloped using federal funds through the HOPE VI or the Choice Neighborhood programs to create mixed-income housing. The 2006 Washington, D.C. city budget included funding for "A joint venture redevelopment between DCHA and a private developer to do a one-for-one replacement of 510 units of public housing located in the present Potomac Gardens and Hopkins Plaza developments. The proposed redevelopment will be a mixed income rental and home ownership containing 510 replacements units out of a total 1,230 units located on the two public housing sites and in the adjoining neighborhood." [33] In a 2010, a team of students from the University of Pennsylvania School of Design proposed a redesign of Potomac Gardens and nearby Hopkins Apartments to deal with "a now outdated model of public housing design, the buildings are conspicuous and isolated from the neighborhood context."[34] On June 7, 2012, the Washington, D.C. Housing Authority issued a statement on potential redevelopment of the housing project, stating "We considered several sites for our HUD HOPE VI applications. We chose Capper/Carrollsburg, which was selected and received a HOPE VI grant for $34.9M. We do not have plans to redevelop Potomac Gardens at this time."[35] Other speculation has circulated that Potomac Gardens was slated to be sold for use as additional U.S. Marine barracks, as the location is one of only a few locations meeting the criteria set forth by the U.S. Marine Corps.[36]
A January 2015 segment on WAMU discussed the future of Potomac Gardens, including redevelopment efforts. [37]
Resources
See also
- HOPE VI
- List of public housing developments in the United States
- Public housing in the United States
References
- ↑ Washington Post. January 26, 1967. Missing or empty
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(help) - ↑ Washington Post. March 21, 1967. Missing or empty
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(help) - ↑ The Washington Post. April 2, 1989. Missing or empty
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(help) - ↑ MacPherson, Myra (November 18, 1971). "Awards for Excellence in Architecture". The Washington Post.
- ↑ Catholic University. "Edward M. Crough Center for Architectural Studies".
- ↑ "In Search of Common Ground". D.C. Humanities Council.
- ↑ "The East Coast Connection - Summer In The Parks".
- ↑ Patterson, James (2006). Cross. pp. Chapter 8, 14.
- ↑ Pelecanos, George (2011). The Cut.
- 1 2 CRAWFORD, CRAIG (October 30, 2011). "One Avenue, Two Faces: White House, Crack House". Craig Crawford's Trail Mix. Retrieved 2014-05-12.
- ↑ Broder, David S. (April 29, 1989). "Jackson Weights Entering Race for District Mayor". Washington Post.
- ↑ Broder, David S. (Nov 3, 1991). "Jackson to Forgo 1992 Run: Decision Relieves Democratic Officials". Washington Post.
- ↑ http://wamu.org/programs/metro_connection/15/01/16/what_does_the_future_hold_for_capitol_hills_potomac_gardens
- ↑ "Little Lights Urban Ministries".
- ↑ Park, Steven and Mary (2013). Faith Forward: A Dialogue on Children, Youth, and a New Kind of Christianity. pp. Chapter 12: Beauty in Brokenness.
- ↑ http://www.thescribblepadblog.com/2014/06/little-lights-urban-ministries-in-dc.html
- ↑ "About Grassroots DC".
- ↑ Anacostia Community Museum Archive Records. Photographic Film Series, C11D3F25.
- ↑ Michnya, Rosa (May 8, 1983). "Fear Stalks a Neighborhood; Residents of Potomac Gardens Worried, Angry as Drug Traffic Increases Slaying, Robberies". Washington Post.
- ↑ http://articles.philly.com/1989-04-25/news/26143431_1_capitol-rotunda-new-breed-african-american-tv
- ↑ http://www.nytimes.com/1990/09/23/magazine/dc-s-war-on-drugs-why-bennett-is-losing.html
- ↑ DePillis, Lydia (March 17, 2011). "Do Fence Me In: Capitol Hill's Potomac Gardens". The Washington City Paper.
- ↑ "Police Seize AK-47 Rifle in Southeast Arrest; Man Also Had Pistol, 37 Bags of Cocaine". The Washington Post. January 10, 1992.
- ↑ "Man Slain in Complex in Southeast; Residents Witness Morning". The Washington Post. September 20, 1991.
- ↑ "Youth, 14, Charged in Hill Slaying. Lawyer Was Killed in Car at Light". The Washington Post. January 19, 1991.
- ↑ DePillis, Lydia (March 17, 2011). "Do Fence Me In: Capitol Hill's Potomac Gardens isn't as danger as it was, but its gates remain". The Washington City Paper.
- ↑ http://www.thehillishome.com/2010/06/potomac-gardens-drug-bust-yields-15-arrests/
- ↑ http://dcist.com/2010/12/housing_project_again_draws_neighbo.php
- ↑ http://www.fbi.gov/washingtondc/press-releases/2013/sixteen-people-charged-in-drug-conspiracy-accused-of-distributing-heroin-and-other-drugs-in-area
- ↑ http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/07/19/gun-violence-dc_n_3618226.html
- ↑ http://www.wjla.com/articles/2015/04/shots-fired-at-police-ems-workers-in-d-c--113469.html
- ↑ http://www.edweek.org/ew/articles/2014/03/26/26wophousing_ep.h33.html
- ↑ http://cfo.dc.gov/cfo/lib/cfo/budget/2006/pdf/capital_appendices/ca06_pdf.pdf
- ↑ Spring Studio 2010 (2010). Choice Neighborhoods: Washington, DC. Philadelphia: PennDesign, University of Pennsylvania.
- ↑ http://sociologyinmyneighborhood.blogspot.com/2012/06/official-statement-from-dcha.html
- ↑ Potomac Gardens Housing Project Again Draws Neighborhood Ire: DCist
- ↑
External links
- DC Home Rule
- District of Columbia Housing Authority
- Potomac Gardens Day at the District of Columbia Housing Authority
- Edward M. Crough Center for Architectural Studies at Catholic University
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