Difference between revisions of "Central Little Rock Urban Renewal Project"
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The '''Central Little Rock Urban Renewal Project''' (CLR URP) was begun in 1961 as a joint effort of the [[Urban Progress Association]], the [[Little Rock Housing Authority]], [[Downtown Little Rock Unlimited]] the [[City of Little Rock]], and local architects. The project's roots lay in the [[Main Street 1969 plan]] created by the [[Arkansas Chapter of the American Institute of Architects]] in the spring of 1957. The Central Litle Rock Project became a national model for urban revitalization in the 1960s (then called "slum clearance"), and was bolstered by a $18.8 million loan from the federal Urban Renewal Administration secured in large part by U.S. Senator [[J. William Fulbright]] in June 1962. | The '''Central Little Rock Urban Renewal Project''' (CLR URP) was begun in 1961 as a joint effort of the [[Urban Progress Association]], the [[Little Rock Housing Authority]], [[Downtown Little Rock Unlimited]] the [[City of Little Rock]], and local architects. The project's roots lay in the [[Main Street 1969 plan]] created by the [[Arkansas Chapter of the American Institute of Architects]] in the spring of 1957. The Central Litle Rock Project became a national model for urban revitalization in the 1960s (then called "slum clearance"), and was bolstered by a $18.8 million loan from the federal Urban Renewal Administration secured in large part by U.S. Senator [[J. William Fulbright]] in June 1962. | ||
− | The Central Little Rock project swiftly became a nationally-recognized for leadership in slum clearance in the 1950s and 1960s. The city received $282,928 to engage in urban renewal activities in the [[Philander Smith neighborhood]], $2.2 million for the [[Dunbar neighborhood]], $1.3 million for slum clearance in the [[Granite Mountain neighborhood]], $1.3 million for renewal in the [[Livestock Show Area]], $1.4 million in [[Westrock]], and $2.5 million in the [[East End neighborhood]]. Local dollars supported an additional [[High Street Urban Renewal project]] on 283 acres beginning in 1961. The Housing Authority, led by executive director [[George Millar Jr.]] purchased sixty-five properties in the [[University Park]] neighborhood for another $832,486. In all, fifteen percent of the land area of the city underwent significant renewal activity. Five hundred and eight acres of downtown were demolished, including 471 buildings, which displaced 296 businesses of varying size. [[Raymond Rebsamen]], the president of the organization, claimed the | + | The Central Little Rock project swiftly became a nationally-recognized for leadership in slum clearance in the 1950s and 1960s. The city received $282,928 to engage in urban renewal activities in the [[Philander Smith neighborhood]], $2.2 million for the [[Dunbar neighborhood]], $1.3 million for slum clearance in the [[Granite Mountain neighborhood]], $1.3 million for renewal in the [[Livestock Show Area]], $1.4 million in [[Westrock]], and $2.5 million in the [[East End neighborhood]]. Local dollars supported an additional [[High Street Urban Renewal project]] on 283 acres beginning in 1961. The Housing Authority, led by executive director [[George Millar Jr.]] purchased sixty-five properties in the [[University Park]] neighborhood for another $832,486. In all, fifteen percent of the land area of the city underwent significant renewal activity. Five hundred and eight acres of downtown were demolished, including 471 buildings, which displaced 296 businesses of varying size. |
+ | |||
+ | [[Raymond Rebsamen]], the president of the organization, claimed the group's goal in the Central Little Rock Urban Renewal Project was to have "the first capital city in the national where no child will come out of a slum to go to school." But it also sought to obliterate bad publicity stemming from the [[Little Rock Crisis]] of 1957, which exposed the city as a powerful "symbol of brutality and prejudice for all the world to scorn." | ||
The renewal project included proposals for an Arkansas Exchange market for good manufactured in the south-central part of the country, a sports center (the proposed "Arkansas Sports Center") and marina along the Arkansas River, a downtown local and interurban bus terminal, a convention center, a Variety Lane pedestrian district for retailing in an area bounded by West Capitol, West Eighth, Spring, and Center streets, underground fallout shelters, parking ramps, upscale apartments, and plazas across from the [[new Tower Building]] and along Main Street. The renewal project also had a special committee designated for work on a proposed [[Quapaw Quarter]] of historic homes just south of downtown. The plan included projected razing of 2,292 houses and tenement units. | The renewal project included proposals for an Arkansas Exchange market for good manufactured in the south-central part of the country, a sports center (the proposed "Arkansas Sports Center") and marina along the Arkansas River, a downtown local and interurban bus terminal, a convention center, a Variety Lane pedestrian district for retailing in an area bounded by West Capitol, West Eighth, Spring, and Center streets, underground fallout shelters, parking ramps, upscale apartments, and plazas across from the [[new Tower Building]] and along Main Street. The renewal project also had a special committee designated for work on a proposed [[Quapaw Quarter]] of historic homes just south of downtown. The plan included projected razing of 2,292 houses and tenement units. | ||
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*"More Goes On Than Meets the Eye in Urban Renewal," ''Arkansas Gazette,'' June 27, 1965. | *"More Goes On Than Meets the Eye in Urban Renewal," ''Arkansas Gazette,'' June 27, 1965. | ||
*Bette Orsini, "Renewal in Little Rock: 'Dedicated to People,'" ''Arkansas Gazette,'' October 1, 1965 (reprint from ''St. Petersburg'' (FL) ''Times''). | *Bette Orsini, "Renewal in Little Rock: 'Dedicated to People,'" ''Arkansas Gazette,'' October 1, 1965 (reprint from ''St. Petersburg'' (FL) ''Times''). | ||
+ | *Ray Rebsamen, ''Keep This City Moving'' (Little Rock, AR: Urban Progress Association, 1964). | ||
+ | *Ray Rebsamen, ''Little Rock: Poised for Progress'' (Little Rock, AR: Urban Progress Association, 1960). | ||
*Homer L. Saunders and Robert C. Haring, ''Apartment and Condominium Market in the Little Rock-Central Arkansas S.M.S.A., 1960-1974'' (Little Rock, AR: Metroplan, January 1978). | *Homer L. Saunders and Robert C. Haring, ''Apartment and Condominium Market in the Little Rock-Central Arkansas S.M.S.A., 1960-1974'' (Little Rock, AR: Metroplan, January 1978). | ||
*Bob Stover, "Sweeping 'Renewal' Ending Quietly," ''Arkansas Gazette,'' November 2, 1977. | *Bob Stover, "Sweeping 'Renewal' Ending Quietly," ''Arkansas Gazette,'' November 2, 1977. |
Revision as of 20:43, 14 September 2008
The Central Little Rock Urban Renewal Project (CLR URP) was begun in 1961 as a joint effort of the Urban Progress Association, the Little Rock Housing Authority, Downtown Little Rock Unlimited the City of Little Rock, and local architects. The project's roots lay in the Main Street 1969 plan created by the Arkansas Chapter of the American Institute of Architects in the spring of 1957. The Central Litle Rock Project became a national model for urban revitalization in the 1960s (then called "slum clearance"), and was bolstered by a $18.8 million loan from the federal Urban Renewal Administration secured in large part by U.S. Senator J. William Fulbright in June 1962.
The Central Little Rock project swiftly became a nationally-recognized for leadership in slum clearance in the 1950s and 1960s. The city received $282,928 to engage in urban renewal activities in the Philander Smith neighborhood, $2.2 million for the Dunbar neighborhood, $1.3 million for slum clearance in the Granite Mountain neighborhood, $1.3 million for renewal in the Livestock Show Area, $1.4 million in Westrock, and $2.5 million in the East End neighborhood. Local dollars supported an additional High Street Urban Renewal project on 283 acres beginning in 1961. The Housing Authority, led by executive director George Millar Jr. purchased sixty-five properties in the University Park neighborhood for another $832,486. In all, fifteen percent of the land area of the city underwent significant renewal activity. Five hundred and eight acres of downtown were demolished, including 471 buildings, which displaced 296 businesses of varying size.
Raymond Rebsamen, the president of the organization, claimed the group's goal in the Central Little Rock Urban Renewal Project was to have "the first capital city in the national where no child will come out of a slum to go to school." But it also sought to obliterate bad publicity stemming from the Little Rock Crisis of 1957, which exposed the city as a powerful "symbol of brutality and prejudice for all the world to scorn."
The renewal project included proposals for an Arkansas Exchange market for good manufactured in the south-central part of the country, a sports center (the proposed "Arkansas Sports Center") and marina along the Arkansas River, a downtown local and interurban bus terminal, a convention center, a Variety Lane pedestrian district for retailing in an area bounded by West Capitol, West Eighth, Spring, and Center streets, underground fallout shelters, parking ramps, upscale apartments, and plazas across from the new Tower Building and along Main Street. The renewal project also had a special committee designated for work on a proposed Quapaw Quarter of historic homes just south of downtown. The plan included projected razing of 2,292 houses and tenement units.
In all, more than five hundred acres of the central business district fell under the jurisdiction of the renewal project, and fifteen percent of the city as a whole. Five hundred blocks in the city saw some blight reduction. The CLR URP was the largest demolition and clearance program anywhere in the country in the 1960s.
The Central Little Rock Urban Renewal Project transformed housing in the city. In 1960 Little Rock held only three apartment complexes greater than fifty units in size. Over the next fifteen years the city added seventy-eight complexes this size or larger.
The total cost of the project was around $50 million. The project was occasionally deemed "socialistic," politically corrupt, and a "white preserve" maker by commentators and members of the public. One of its lasting reminders was a hotly contested McDonald's restaurant at the corner of Capitol and Main, which replaced a number of exiting local downtown eateries, including Breier's, Tom and Andrew's, the Courthouse Cafe, Canton Tea Garden, and Buddy's Cafe. The clearance made room for Worthen Bank and Trust Company, Union National Bank, Quapaw Quarter Apartments, the Sheraton Little Rock Hotel, the Camelot Inn, the Federal Reserve Bank, a Continental Trailways bus terminal, Parkview Towers, the One Spring Building, and the offices of the Arkansas Bar Association. Linchpin features of the plan eventually became widely known as the Main Street Mall and the Statehouse Convention Center in downtown Little Rock.
This vast urban renewal project came to an official end in 1977 as the federal government began turning to the Community Development Block Grant program for street improvements and housing rehabilitation in lower income neighborhoods.
References
- "Bright Promise Lies in Central City Project," Arkansas Gazette, June 13, 1962.
- "11 More Properties Acquired for University Park Project," Arkansas Gazette, December 2, 1964.
- Ernest Dumas, "Mid-Little Rock Renewal Plan Wins Approval," Arkansas Gazette, June 12, 1962.
- John L. Fletcher, "Little Rock Leads in New Endeavor of Urban Renewal," Arkansas Gazette, November 19, 1961.
- Hodges, Vines, Fox & Associates, Downtown Little Rock Development Plan, Vol. 2: Land Use Plan (Hodges, Vines, Fox & Associates, January 1982).
- Jimmy Jones, "Downtown Plight: Only Big Business Can Afford Land," Arkansas Gazette, April 12, 1970.
- Jimmy Jones, "LR Held Out Hand and U.S. Filled It With $6,526,897," Arkansas Gazette, December 18, 1966.
- Little Rock Unlimited Progress, Little Rock New Town In-Town: A Downtown Residential Feasibility Study (Technical Assistant Project, Economic Development Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce, 1975).
- "More Goes On Than Meets the Eye in Urban Renewal," Arkansas Gazette, June 27, 1965.
- Bette Orsini, "Renewal in Little Rock: 'Dedicated to People,'" Arkansas Gazette, October 1, 1965 (reprint from St. Petersburg (FL) Times).
- Ray Rebsamen, Keep This City Moving (Little Rock, AR: Urban Progress Association, 1964).
- Ray Rebsamen, Little Rock: Poised for Progress (Little Rock, AR: Urban Progress Association, 1960).
- Homer L. Saunders and Robert C. Haring, Apartment and Condominium Market in the Little Rock-Central Arkansas S.M.S.A., 1960-1974 (Little Rock, AR: Metroplan, January 1978).
- Bob Stover, "Sweeping 'Renewal' Ending Quietly," Arkansas Gazette, November 2, 1977.
- "Outward and Upward for Downtown Little Rock," Arkansas Gazette, March 5, 1973.
- Matilda Tuohey, "Little Rock Has Massive Urban Renewal Program," Arkansas Gazette, February 17, 1963.