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CALENDAR - THIS WEEK
Beginning Computer Classes for Adults
Tue Oct 7 10:30 am
Have computer questions and don't know where to begin? Come by the library and we'll help you get started! East End Libr...
Robert Grey townhall meeting at Peter Paul
Tue Oct 7 6:15 pm
A townhall meeting with mayoral candidate Robert Grey will be held on Tuesday Oct.7 from approximately 6:15–8PM at the...
open mic @ Poe's Pub
Tue Oct 7 8:30 pm
acoustic open mic at Poe's Pub on East Main, hosted by Jim Daab. Sign up is at 8:30, music starts at 9, goes until clos...
Unity Civic League
Thu Oct 9 6:30 pm
@ St. Peter's Development Center 22nd and X Street Call 643-9353 or willieand@aol.com for more info.
2nd annual Long Walk to Freedom
Sat Oct 11 7:30 am
@ Richmond City Jail (1701 Fairfield Way)
Union Hill clean-up
Sat Oct 11 8:45 pm
Meet up at the little take out place on the corner of Jefferson and 22nd Street, then break up into groups to clean up a...

CLASSIFIEDS
10 NEWLY REMODELED TWO-BEDROOM HOMES FOR RENT- ALL NEW APPLIANCES, FIXTURES, HARDWOOD FLOORS, AND LARGE BACK YARD. AVAILABLE FOR MOVE-IN NOVEMBER 1ST BUT WE ARE PRE-LEASING NOW! E-MAIL RBRYAN@FRENCHCC.COM FOR MORE INFORMATION, OR CALL 804.343.4201.
Two bedroom apartment for rent. 2123 E. Marshall St. $650.00/mo + utilities. Recently remodeled with updated kitchen and bath. Great location and lots of parking. Bill Hartsock, 216-3100
For Rent. 618 N 35th. 4 bedroom 2.5 bath, 2,300 SF. Leasing for $1,250 a month. Call Matt for details 804-306-9019.
512 Chimborazo Blvd, 3br 1.5 bth, 1980 sqft, hardwood floors, granite countertops, stainless steel apps, must see! $259,950
902 n 36th st. good rental invest. or starter home. double fenced in lot. solid house. 94k. 783.7994
Broyhill Entertainment Center; classic & heavy piece, dark finish. $1000 vcstrader@yahoo.com
FOR SALE: 2 doors, circa 1860. $50 each. One is a solid four panel, the other has four glass pane upper and 2 solid panel lower. Would sell for $100-150 at Caravati's or Cox's. Call 649-1913 or email at info@mysterydinner.com
YOUR MESSAGE HERE - Fabric signs, banners & wall hangings for INDOOR use, hand made locally & personalized. $ 50. & up. 804 304 3345. Near Carytown
AGAINST THE GRAIN FURNITURE Discover Northside's furniture secret: beautifully handcrafted right here in Richmond by local folks who love filling your custom orders. AgainstTheGrainVA.com ATGVA@comcast.net 5522 Lakeside Ave 855-1186 Workshop:855-1672
KIDZ -R- COOKIN' We offer 15+ holistic & healthy cooking programs for children ages 5-15 yrs. We bring the kitchen to you! We create unique programs for schools, churches, community centers, troops, and any special event www.kidzrcookin.info 804.651.2974
Need estate sale services? Have items to consign? Since 1999, Susan's Selections has conducted in-home estate sales. Our consignment store at 8008 Staples Mill Rd is open Mon to Fri 10am-6pm, Sat 10am-4pm, Sun 1-4pm. 232-6480 or Roy@SusansSelections.com.
chihuahua lost clay st church hill 10/3/08 blackish dark blue color with white spot on neck and white underneath. approx 7 lbs and 1 yr old. name is inki. please call 869 6690
Free talk to groups on family quilts based on my years of repair. This is not an appraisal or a buy/sell event. Your group, your location. Prefer daytime metro but eves & weekends are fine. Call Custom Crazy Quilts & Repair, 804 304 3345
Missing Chihuahua 1 yr old approx 7 lbs dark blueish with white spot on neck. name is inki. missing from clay st. 10/3/08 4:00 a.m. please call 869 6690 if found
STOLEN-Lhasa Apso, grey/white male, from Petsmart on Libbie/Broad Sat. 9/27. Suspect is man in sky blue pickup truck. Had a blond and white shepherd with him and a chameleon. Reward offered for info leading to the return of the dog. Contact 254-0800 ASAP.




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"Media Pleasures"

comment   post to delicous
December 28, 2006

Fairmount in USA Today

A photo of of Augustine Carter and Mayor Wilder graces the USA Today article As older cities shrink, some reinvent themselves.


augustine carter and doug wilder

Augustine Carter (in a New Visions Civic League sweatshirt) and Mayor Wilder in front of one of the new Better Housing Coalition houses on Short Q Street.


RICHMOND, Va. — A triangular island at the intersection of 23rd and Q streets is paved with bricks and landscaped with dogwood and liriope. The carefully designed patch of green replaced an abandoned house. As modest as it is, the tiny Q Street Park is a powerful symbol of change in the blighted Church Hill neighborhood.
It’s not simply a physical transformation but a dramatic switch in mindset. Richmond’s population has lost 56,000 since its peak in 1970, when it had 250,000 residents, and the city is finally coming to terms with it. Green space is replacing boarded-up houses. Small single-family homes are rising where crowded cinderblock apartment buildings once stood. Singles and couples are moving into rehabilitated homes that once housed families of eight.

Slowly, old American cities that have been in a downward population spiral for a half-century or more are reinventing themselves as, well, smaller cities. They’re starting to adopt — many, like Richmond, do it unknowingly — tenets of the burgeoning, European-born “Shrinking Cities” movement. The idea: If cities can grow in a smart way, they can also shrink smartly.

[...]

The Better Housing Coalition, a non-profit group, builds affordable housing to revive neighborhoods. It built about 75 houses in Church Hill. Through grants and various incentives, working-class families can afford to own them.

Mary Thompson grew up in a family of eight and moved here as a teenager 54 years ago. She raised five children and thought about moving many times as family homes around her became drug houses and bordellos. “One day you look up and there’s a lot of blight,” Thompson says. “It can happen overnight.”

She hung in there. Now, the dilapidated eyesore at the intersection is gone, the quaint Q Street Park in its place. That prompted the homeowner across the street to repaint his house. Teachers and police officers are moving into the neighborhood. There are more singles and one-child families.

The new look in some Richmond neighborhoods is a sign that the city may be finding its niche. “We just pray that we get good families,” says Augustine Carter, 78, a retired hospital worker who lives here.

Even the new park gets a mention!

See also: Fairmount gets some good words (8/5/06)

Posted at 11:27AM under Fairmount, real estate, redevelopment | Tags:

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