This post was originally published as an op-ed column in the Durham Herald-Sun
Those of us who are concerned with preservation and historic architecture should be very, very concerned about the state of things in Durham. While the American Tobacco redevelopment and the upcoming Liggett redevelopment would seem to indicate a healthy embrace of Durham’s history and irreplaceable architecture, another story is unfolding outside of the ‘big project’ spotlight. People with the long view of Durham will recognize that Durham has never been hesitant to tear down beautiful or historic architecture; however, we have entered a period of accelerated demolition, the likes of which we have not seen in many years.
East Durham is one of Durham’s most well-preserved historic neighborhoods. It escaped most of the demolition inflicted upon Durham during the 1960s and 1970s while large swaths of ‘in-town’ Durham were destroyed - from downtown to Hayti, from Golden Belt to West End. East Durham’s compact, walkable neighborhoods with magnificent street trees, unmodified Victorian architecture, and a well-preserved neighborhood commercial district at Angier and Driver have been a treasure unknown to most Durham residents. But at present, East Durham is losing both modest and grand historic structures to demolition at a dizzying rate.
Meanwhile, within the loop, 120 West Main St./117 West Parrish St. has come under assault by the city as “unsafe”, a dubious designation for this fire-damaged brick structure. Those with the long view will also recognize the numerous empty, non-historic commercial structures in the city that have sat (and continue to sit) vacant for far longer than this structure has. They will also remember several years ago, when the director of Downtown Durham, Inc. boldly proposed that the entire 100 block of West Main St. should be demolished. That proposal left people aghast, but it now seems that it is simply being played out slowly, one building at a time. The city previously demolished the Woolworth's Building at the end of the 100 block. Now, the city is moving very aggressively to destroy the structure at 120 West Main, which goes through the entire block to Parrish St. If it is demolished, 122 West Main St. ("Mr. Shoe") will be left alone, surrounded by a horseshoe of vacant and/or city-owned land. This structure, owned by a local developer yet persistently unimproved, would seem to be next logical contestant in the demolition derby. City officials and DDI seem, in public statements, to equate the demolition of the 120 West Main St. building with economic development. However, one would hope they had learned from various taxpayer-funded field trips to other cities and existing research that historic preservation is a driver for economic development; vacant land is not.
What would be even more concerning would be if the city were engaged in what would be essentially a ‘back-door’ taking of private property for private development. By demolishing the property and placing a lien on the (then vacant) property for the cost of demolition, the city can reduce the value of the property considerably, and create a substantial debt for the owners owed to the city. If the property owner is unable or unwilling to pay his or her debts to the city, the city can foreclose on the property to recoup its debt.
The ongoing threat of economic hardship in East Durham, and the relatively new threat of economic success in downtown have reached a confluence with an increasingly aggressive Housing Department. For reasons unknown, the Housing Department of Durham seems to see its primary mission as demolition, and it seems increasingly insular and single-minded in completing this mission. One principal in the department repeatedly describes this as "serving the public".
However, history and the neighborhood environment are public goods. The reason that downtown and East Durham were designated National Register Historic Districts was to protect those public goods. The Housing Department's power to ‘serve the public’ by destroying private property comes from police power granted to the government by the public to protect health. But the Housing Department seems to demonstrate little knowledge of the myriad ways that the health of the public is either hurt or bolstered. Nor do they seem to understand that destroying the architectural history of the city diminishes the value of the entire city by damaging those public goods.
We have so little left of what historic architecture this city once possessed; I hope that there are people who will join the fight to save these structures. We need to work towards more creative solutions that alleviate safety issues without destroying public goods. Those solutions can be pursued if city officials are willing to turn off their bulldozers and think outside the box.
Comments
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 11/10/2006 - 9:38pm
i have really been enjoying your blog, especially when you discuss City policy and how things can be made better as well as just preservation in isolation. Just a question, but have you sent email like this to the City Council? I would think they might be more receptive to citizen input than some long-term employees, and in a better position to create change within the various departments... in any case, agreed.
-- a friend of joe's :-)
Submitted by Sven (not verified) on Fri, 11/10/2006 - 9:57pm
Anon
Thanks very much. I wrote this before starting this blog, back in January. Since it was an evolutionary step towards starting this blog, I decided today to add it through the blogging wonder of back-dating.
When it was first published in the H-S back in January, it created quite the ruckus, inciting the anger of the mayor and sending the director of DDI into a hissy fit that intimidated a number of people I used to associate with. Given the quantity of feedback I received, I'm quite sure that the council was aware of it, although I did not send it to them directly.
Given that the exact same scenario has been playing out at Little Five Points, I don't think it made much difference. But I'll keep trying... : )
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 6/4/2007 - 5:44pm
My husband and I purchased a home eight years ago in East Durham (near corner of Taylor and Driver), and we have spent countless weekends, vacations, and tears working on it steadily, as finances allow. While I agree that the use of a bulldozer does not fix the state of the area, in some cases it does temporarily slow much of the street front crime we see daily (i.e. prostitution, drug deals, gang related "hanging out", etc... these abandoned, run down structures breed crime, and as a resident of this particular area of Durham I'm sickened by seeing it as I drive to and from my home. There seems to be an overwhelming pride in regards to Durham's secion 8/low income housing progress - guess where a majority of those properties are? Instead of easily handing out vouchers, and funds to slum lords to make repairs, which may or may not happen, why not invest in potential East Durham residents. Offer low interest home loans for these dilapidated houses, with less credit restrictions so more of the population qualifies. It's human nature to take care of what belongs to you. Many of the homes that are being renovated are being done so for the sole purpose of providing more low income rental housing, most often taking large single family homes and sub-dividing them into apartments. Come back around in five years and see what these properties look like after lack of ownership and care - it's a vicious cycle of neglect! In addition why can't Durham pass some ordinances in regards to general upkeep? If you live in the city limits maybe you should be required to keep your yard clear of trash, and the grass at a reasonable height. Would it be to much to ask to ban indoor funiture from front porches, and expect all vehicles on the property to be properly registered (would mean less junk yard parking lots)? Everyone seems afraid to address some of the real issues that keep Durham down. If you don't confront the crime, gangs, and trash, then "Historic" Durham will continue to trail other well planned urban areas.
Submitted by gary (not verified) on Tue, 6/5/2007 - 2:45am
Anon
Thanks for your insightful comments about East Durham. I agree with almost everything you've written. I think there is a danger of continuing to concentrate low-income rentals in a small area - I would like to see many of the solutions your propose, including the ability to put the worst properties in the hands of homeowners who would repair them.
I do disagree with one statement, which is accepted as a truism by many in the city
"these abandoned, run-down structures breed crime"
I don't think there is any evidence - any - that abandoned structures cause crime. They are definitely associated with crime, because they allow criminals a place to congregate, perpetrate, and degenerate. But I do not believe, and it is incredible that no one has studied this in any robust way - that criminals reform once you tear down a house. They find another spot to go. And because demolition lowers property values, it accelerates housing abandonment, creating new venues for criminals to hang out in. I've lived in the West End for quite awhile and experienced many similar frustrations. I understand that, because our city is unable to keep a neighborhood safe and create policy that promotes neighborhood order, demolition seems the only place you can turn to in order to get rid of the element plaguing your street/block. But it is a Faustian bargain that will lead only to further decline.
Thanks again for your comment
GK