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Western
Coconut Grove leaders eye revitalization
Miami
Today News - July 8, 2004
Western
Coconut Grove leaders eye revitalization
By Samantha Joseph
Developers and public agencies in
western Coconut Grove want to build
homes, encourage business growth and
draw former residents back as part of a
campaign to revitalize South Florida's
oldest community.
The area's main economic development
group, the Coconut Grove Collaborative,
has applied to the city of Miami for a
$500,000 grant to renovate 50
storefronts. The group also intends to
add public parking by fall and to build
13 affordable homes by March.
A Boca Raton financial institution
planning to open a Grove branch in
November is a partner in the effort.
Pointe Bank is committing nearly $1
million for affordable homes in the West
Grove and has pledged to finance $1.45
million in mortgages.
Coconut Grove dates to the 1830s, when
seamen from the Bahamas established the
state's first township.
The western part of the area is
poverty-stricken, according to public
records. One-fourth of all residents in
the neighborhood between Bird Road and
McDonald, Marler and Brooker streets
have less than $12,000 annual incomes.
Residents who have found success have
been leaving in recent years, weakening
the West Grove's economy and future,
said Jihad S. Rashid, chairman of the
economic development group.
To buck the trend, promoters plan a Come
Back Home to the Grove campaign for
October. The effort will encourage
homeownership by creating affordable
housing and financing through public and
private ventures.
A City of Miami plan for the area
outlines public ventures to rehabilitate
existing housing and provide social
services to residents and incentives for
businesses.
"This is a place where there can be
some pride," Mr. Rashid said.
A wave of investors in western Coconut
Grove is breathing life into Miami-Dade
County's oldest neighborhood and pumping
up real estate prices.
In addition to fresh funds, the area has
a new name. Now called the Village West
Island District, its property values are
approaching those of surrounding
upper-middle-class and affluent
neighborhoods.
Land prices have quadrupled in the past
two years, according to Mr. Rashid.
Modest lots that in 2002 brought $35,000
now sell for $150,000, he said.
Homeowner Jason Bush said a house he
bought for $100,000 four years ago is
now worth three times that.
Developers echo similar stories of
escalating land values.
"When I first started in 1994, I
never paid more than $10,000 for a
lot," said Andy Parrish, a
developer whose company, Wind &
Rain, has built affordable housing in
the Grove for about two decades.
"Land here was so undervalued back
in 1994, it was probably one-10th or
less the value of all the property in
Coconut Grove on a per-square-foot
basis."
The Village West Island District,
commonly known for years as the West
Grove, dates to about 1834 and sits
between Bird Road and McDonald, Marler
and Brooker streets.
About half of its residents are of
Bahamian ancestry, and many are
descendants of the island seamen who
settled Coconut Grove.
The district borders Cocowalk, an
upscale shopping center, and downtown
Coconut Grove, where Realtors say small
residential lots can cost $300,000.
Just blocks from Coral Gables'
multimillion-dollar homes are
dilapidated Village West Island
residences. Public records show that one
of every four Village West residents
earn $12,000 or less annually.
A June 10 draft of the City of Miami's
consolidation plan cites the disparity
between the district and the plush
communities it borders. "Although
millions have been spent trying to
revitalize the West Grove, it still
contrasts sharply with its affluent
neighbors," according to the
report.
But district leaders say land scarcity
in Coral Gables and the more affluent
parts of the Grove have led developers
to turn their attention to the
once-overlooked community.
"Everywhere you look in the West
Grove there are new things going
on," said Beame Architectural
Partnership vice president Hobi
Linhares.
Mr. Rashid agreed. "Already, people
from outside are looking at this area
and making moves at a rapid pace,"
he said. "The rapid growth is like
an explosion."
A boom is especially noticeable in an
estimated $10 million in residential
construction, he said. The newcomers
"think they've discovered a new
area," Mr. Parrish said.
But the growth is worrisome to some who
fear that interest from outside
developers will change the face of the
historic community.
"There's a lot of resistance to
change. Some of it is a fear that
improvements will bring increased costs
and taxes," said Richard Shepard,
director of the University of Miami's
Center for Urban and Community Design.
"There is some truth to that."
As head of the outreach arm of the
university's School of Architecture, Mr.
Shepard directs students designing
affordable single-family housing that
reflects the community's Bahamian
heritage.
"Here's a neighborhood that has its
own history, and that's quite evident.
This is very special in this country
where so much history is forgotten
because people move about so much,"
Mr. Shepard said.
Miami officials acknowledge the concern,
saying that displacement of original
residents is the biggest fallout of
efforts to redevelop the area.
City Commissioner Johnny Winton, who is
credited by residents with leading the
multimillion-dollar effort to
rehabilitate the West Grove, said last
month that small developers are
instrumental in revitalizing low-income
neighborhoods. He said small-scale
investors refurbishing single-family
homes and small storefront properties
accounted for about 80% of development
in the community.
In the new Village West Island District,
developers have invested $200 million on
Grand Avenue in the past five years, Mr.
Rashid said.
Boca Raton-based Pointe Bank intends to
open a branch in the neighborhood by
October. The bank will refurbish and
occupy property that once was a tavern
at Grand Avenue and Douglas Road.
But what concerns longtime West Grove
supporters is large-scale development
they fear will turn the historic
community into a replica of its more
flashy neighbors.
"Downtown Coconut Grove is paying
the price for its rapid growth,"
said Mr. Rashid. "It couldn't
sustain the development because it was
all focused on glitterati and tourism.
It wasn't residential-friendly, didn't
have a strong local base and wasn't
pedestrian-friendly."
To avoid a repeat, Mr. Parrish said,
homeowners should hold onto their
property despite attractive offers to
sell.
"What would happen is that their
houses would be bulldozed and big
'McMansions' would be built," he
said. "That's the shame of an area
that has waited nearly 50 years to see
any development at all. When it happens
overnight, you don't get a good result
at all. If homeowners refuse to sell,
this will be a huge success. We might
still get a good result in the
Grove."
Fears of losing residents to rapid
development are not lost on Pointe Bank,
which is teaming with the Coconut Grove
Collaborative to finance nearly $1
million in affordable housing.
"We're pretty keen on this,"
said Gordon Fales, Pointe Bank's vice
president of business development who
has worked on other community
redevelopment projects in Coconut Grove.
Like others with a stake in the
neighborhood, Pointe Bank officials have
encouraged development and architecture
reminiscent of the area's Caribbean
heritage. They suggest architecture with
porches, shutters and other features
that resemble Bahamian homes.
Mr. Bush, who first visited Coconut
Grove as part of his studies at UM,
helped design and build a single-family
home that reflects the area's character.
He said the experience and his exposure
to the Grove's history led him to
purchase his first home in the
community. Today, he works as an
architect at Devon Construction in the
Grove.
"There's a lot of new people taking
an interest in the area," he said.
"It's contagious in a good
way."
©
Miami Today News as appeared in South
Florida Community Development Coalition
http://www.floridacdc.org/articles/040729-1.htm
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