407 Ottawa in Durham NC was recently saved from death-by-backhoe when neighbors bought off the wrecking company with $900 in cash. Obviously the city doesn't give two craps about historic preservation; at least this neighborhood does.
These people care so passionately about the preservation of their
neighborhood, they are willing to personally sacrifice to ensure its
viability – a viability that is still threatened on all sides. One
neighbor has called up the trustee and offered to pay him $10,000 for
the house – primarily to prevent it from being torn down. (I'm sure she
doesn't really want another house.)To be clear, these weren't
city bulldozers this time. But the city – council- needs to do more to
protect the integrity of the historic areas of our city. This portion
of Cleveland-Holloway is not yet a local historic district, although
they are working hard to become one.And that's just it – the
citizens, all of whom have jobs and lives to live are required to fight
tooth and nail to simply keep the neighborhood they have. The onus is
on them, rather than the city making proactive efforts to have
preservation be a priority. The departments will say "we can't do
[whatever]" – and it's true, because the leadership of this city does
not promote historic preservation. My understanding is that the mayor's
appointee position on the Historic Preservation Commission has sat
vacant for – a year? Members of the council want to eliminate property
tax reductions for individual local landmarks. The Historic Commission
has been disempowered by a city finding that, if NIS deems a property
unsafe, demolition permits can be issued without the consent of the HPC.Why
must citizens like those in Cleveland-Holloway swim upstream constantly
to save their neighborhoods? Why is the quickest and easiest way for a
property owner to deal with fines from code enforcement to proceed with
demolition? Why isn't the city leadership their partner, by creating
city policy that protects these resources – rather than making the
barriers to preservation ever-harder to overcome?
note: apologies to the kind folks at Endangered Durham for using the image without their permission. It has now been removed.