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Can a Park Prevent Gentrification?


But what does that mean, exactly?
One answer comes from a soon-to-be-built park in Washington, D.C. Constructed on an abandoned bridge across the Anacostia River, the 11th Street Bridge Park will link upscale Capitol Hill with Anacostia – a historically African-American, predominantly low-income neighborhood east of the river. When it is completed in 2023, the park will offer playgrounds, gardens, performance spaces, an environmental education center, public art and a boat launch.
And Building Bridges across the River , the nonprofit behind the bridge plan, is channeling the resources raised for the park to promote truly equitable development, especially in long-neglected Anacostia and its surrounding neighborhoods. The strategies used by Building Bridges and its partners – engaging the community, building trust, backstopping existing residents and businesses – offer a model for the Biden administration and others working to rebuild from the wreckage of the last y ....

New York , United States , District Of Columbia , Anacostia River , Capitol Hill , Scott Kratz , Frederick Douglass , Marion Barry , Harriet Tregoning , Sheldon Clark , Vaughn Perry , Brenda Richardson , Kristina Noell , Skyland Workforce Center , Douglass Community Land , President Biden , Street Bridge Park , Building Bridges , Councilman Marion Barry , Bridge Park , Building Bridges Across , High Line , New York City , Douglass Community Land Trust , Bridges Across , Anacostia Business Improvement District ,

By the People, for the People, but Not Necessarily Open to the People


By the People, for the People, but Not Necessarily Open to the People
“It breaks my heart”: Increased security in the capital over the years has made public spaces less public, and the storming of the Capitol means that will probably continue.
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A crowd-control fence around Capitol Hill was reinforced with concrete barriers last week.Credit.Brendan Smialowski/Agence France-Presse Getty Images
WASHINGTON The seven-foot-tall metal fencing that has sealed the perimeter of the U.S. Capitol grounds and fortified the Supreme Court across the street is temporary. But it portends lasting change likely to come: In the capital city, there will be more hardening, more barriers, less openness, less access. ....

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