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City begins acquiring 70 vacant houses

THE BALTIMORE SUN

Moving ahead with what officials hope will be the transformation of a badly blighted section of East Baltimore, the city has begun acquiring properties for a major revitalization effort centered around a biotech park.

As a first step, the city is moving to take control of about 70 vacant houses outside the boundaries of the proposed biopark. These buildings -- mostly along three blocks of North Broadway just north of the Johns Hopkins medical complex in the vicinity of Madison Square and Collington Square -- are scheduled for renovation by private developers, officials say. The houses will be offered first to East Baltimore homeowners displaced by the renewal project. Other buyers would be next in line.

Although Mayor Martin O'Malley signed legislation last week authorizing the city to seize up to 3,000 properties -- many in heavily decayed blocks -- for the biopark as well as hundreds of units of new and renovated housing, the city is pursuing these initial 70 properties under separate "quick-take" authority. Officials estimate it will cost $5 million to renovate the properties, with the money coming from existing state and federal funds, officials said.

Besides providing opportunities for relocation, the acquisitions are "a way to stabilize the surrounding neighborhoods so they don't deteriorate," said Laurie B. Schwartz, interim chief executive officer of East Baltimore Development Inc., the quasi-public nonprofit group set up to oversee the redevelopment.

The rehabbed houses will also help "upgrade Broadway as the major entranceway to the East Baltimore development," she said.

Homeowners in blocks where the vacant houses are being bought welcomed the prospect of renovation of the properties, though at least one community leader remains skeptical.

"It's good news if it happens or happens soon," said Bertha Floyd, whose home in the 1000 block of N. Eden St. sits between two vacant properties that are on the city's acquisition list. "We need people who are concerned about their properties."

Floyd, 76, has owned her home bordering Madison Square since 1951. Indicative of the depressed property values in the area, her home is valued by the Maryland Department of Assessments and Taxation at $15,000.

The properties on each side of hers have been vacant since the early 1990s, she said, adding that she has a file folder full of correspondence with city officials trying to get the houses boarded up so squatters and vagrants couldn't get inside.

"It's a terrible experience," she said of living between two abandoned properties. "You don't want to live like that."

In all, nine vacant houses on Floyd's block are on the city's acquisition list, although officials say the exact number and location of properties are "fluid."

"If they're buying up the properties to renovate, I'd be more than happy to have that happen," said Cassandra Pierce, another homeowner who lives next door to a rowhouse that has been vacant for the five years she has lived on the block.

Pamela Carter, who bought a house in the 1000 block of N. Broadway two years ago, called the acquisition of the houses "a plus."

"Hopefully, it'll motivate people to buy houses," said Carter, 27, a social worker with the state.

But Ornat Erby, head of the Biddle, Broadway, North Avenue and Chester Support Council, worries that the renovations, like the project as a whole, will be of little benefit to residents.

"All of this is strictly for Hopkins," he said. "Before you know it, we'll have gated communities."

Owners of the vacant properties have a mixed reaction to the city's acquisition efforts.

Barbara S. Hawkins recently turned over a rowhouse in the 800 block of N. Broadway that collapsed in a storm for what her attorney said was "zero consideration."

Hawkins, an ophthalmologist at Hopkins who lives in Columbia, bought the vacant building 20 years ago in the hope of renovating it and living near her work. She said she is happy to be rid of the property now, but both she and attorney Leslie Gladstone expressed regret that the city wasn't more supportive of her desire to rehabilitate.

"With owners like Barbara Hawkins, if money was made available at a reasonable rate, that would be much, much cheaper in the long run," Gladstone said.

The city had offered $4,500 as fair market value for another rowhouse in that block but had agreed to hold off on taking title to the property to give the owner time to renovate it himself, according to the owner's lawyer.

Attorney Michael B. Green said he felt the offer was too low -- his client and a partner bought the property two years ago for $15,500 -- but added that the city "has been very cooperative" in delaying its acquisition.

William N. Burgee, director of property acquisitions and relocation for the city's housing department, said the city was willing to let owners rehab the properties on their own but would make sure they moved quickly.

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