Baltimore has always been identified with the row house, a major contributor to the health of the city's strong neighborhoods, stretching back multiple generations to the days when African-Americans from the south and waves of Irish German and Polish immigrants poured into the city looking for inexpensive housing near their jobs.
There has been a certain ebb and flow to the Baltimore row house. Stirling Street in East Baltimore — a block home to 1835 gabled roof, brick row houses — was almost razed in the 1960s before its group of Federal style homes was saved through the city's thoughtful architectural preservation policy. Federal Hill and Otterbein were considered pedestrian by most locals before the city's dollar housing program took off there in the 1970s, and renovations and new construction continue today, making the row house heavy area one of the most desirable in which to live and play for young professionals and empty nesters.
But in recent years, in several Baltimore locations where row house rejuvenation never took root — in other words, everywhere but the north-to-south swath of the city, encompassing neighborhoods from Charles Village to Federal Hill, with spur lines jutting into Butcher's Hill, Fells Point and Canton — progress can now be seen.