Copyright 1998
The Washington Post
The Washington Post
In LeDroit
Park,
Howard Is Teaching by Example
The Washington
Post, December 28, 1998, Final Edition - Financial, Page F04
By Rudolph A. Pyatt Jr., Washington Post Staff Writer
In the book "Washington at Home,"
LeDroit Park is depicted as a neighborhood that conveys a strong impression
of an earlier era in the District's development.
But with the decline of many of LeDroit Park's older residences accelerating
after World War II, the neighborhood fell victim to population turnover,
crime and other social ills by the 1970s, according to the illustrated
history of neighborhoods in the nation's capital.
In an effort to improve the situation, the LeDroit Park Civic Association
tried unsuccessfully several years ago to get Howard University actively
involved in the neighborhood.
Now Howard is responding to its neighbors, taking the lead in implementing
an ambitious but sorely needed community revitalization plan.
Howard's LeDroit Park Initiative represents a major shift from the
university's previous land-banking policy. It is, at the same time, a
tangible example of a dramatic move to more active involvement with the
community under H. Patrick Swygert, who was appointed president of the
university three years ago.
The plan for this new initiative is, without question, the most significant
redevelopment proposal to be unveiled in the District since the master plan
for the revitalization of Pennsylvania Avenue was approved 23 years ago.
City officials should endorse the Howard initiative as a prototype for
revitalization of other neighborhoods.
After buying and holding blighted property near the campus for decades,
Howard is converting its holdings to more productive uses. With Fannie Mae
as a strategic partner, the university is rehabilitating 28 unoccupied
houses and developing housing on 17 vacant lots for sale to home buyers.
That, however, is only the initial phase of a comprehensive plan to
revitalize the historic LeDroit Park neighborhood and others around the
university.
"The LeDroit Park Initiative presents an opportunity to demonstrate in our
nation's capital that sustainable, comprehensive revitalization can be
achieved in an urban area with private and public investment capital,"
Howard University Vice President Hassan Minor Jr. explained in a summary of
the plan.
With support from the Fannie Mae Foundation, the university has developed a
detailed streetscape plan for improvements in public infrastructure and
several new land-use initiatives designed to help LeDroit Park and
surrounding neighborhoods.
Howard intends to have the fence removed from around the McMillan Reservoir
near the campus and convert the area into a park. The plan further calls for
development of a town center containing shops, restaurants and other
amenities.
Howard also wants to build a major office building south of the campus over
a Metro station and develop what university officials envision as an
extension of an arts district the city plans to develop in the Seventh and
Eighth streets corridor downtown. Thus, Howard plans to build a jazz museum,
renovate the Howard Theater and encourage the Smithsonian Institution to
build its National African American Museum in the revitalized district
around the campus.
Earlier, Howard signaled its intention to spur revitalization on Georgia
Avenue, once a thriving commercial thoroughfare, just west of the main
campus. In an attempt to create what Minor described as a "viable and stable
community around the campus," the university bought the former Wonder Bread
Bakery and moved its data center into the building, which also houses retail
shops.
Later, the university purchased a liquor store near the campus and converted
it into a security office, staffed jointly by the Howard and Metropolitan
Police departments. At the same time, the university renovated its hospital
on Georgia Avenue, adding a new emergency room and trauma center.
The idea for this forward-looking strategic plan is Swygert's. But Minor,
project director for the initiative, credits James Johnson, Fannie Mae's
outgoing chairman, for articulating the broad philosophy underlying it.
Fannie Mae, a congressionally chartered stockholder company, is the nation's
largest provider of home mortgages. But Johnson "was talking about a role
[for Fannie Mae] beyond providing mortgages," Minor said, recalling an
address Johnson made several months ago to business leaders and public
officials. "He talked about rebuilding America's communities."
Not only did Howard's revitalization plan "resonate" with Johnson, but "he
gave it his highest support," Minor said last week.
Fannie Mae is providing low-fixed-rate mortgages for home buyers, but the
initiative is also being supported by other lenders, including NationsBank,
GMAC, Riggs, Crestar and Industrial banks.
Bell Atlantic-Washington, D.C. Inc. has agreed, meanwhile, to wire LeDroit
Park, providing state-of-the-art telecommunications access to the university
and the Internet.
The LeDroit Park Initiative is the essence of economic development. Although
spearheaded by Howard University, it is a public-private partnership model
that can and should be replicated in other D.C. communities.
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