Cooltown Studios
The official blog for crowdsourced placemaking

Friday, April 21, 2006

Beauty replaces blight in the Bronx

Urban Horizons, Bronx, New York City, NY

What if one extraordinary woman wanted to help revitalize an economically-ravaged urban neighborhood, provide truly attractive housing for its residents, and provide a model for environmental stewardship and health?  Then that would be Nancy Biberman, president of WHEDCo (Women’s Housing and Economic Development Corporation), a nonprofit dedicated to bringing economic well-being to places where there is little.

Featured in the NY Times, Nancy’s group is developing Urban Horizons II and The Foyer, a $45 million 174-residence mixed-use complex of two new buildings for people with incomes of $28K-$39K a year, with one-bedrooms renting for $660/mo. including a computer with broadband internet.

It also happens to be a shining example of green building:
- High-efficiency heating, ventilation, and air conditioning systems reduce fuel for heat and hot water by 85%, saving over $600,000 in utility costs per year, and reducing greenhouse gas emissions by the equivalent of 400 cars.
- Building materials free of the volatile organic compounds that exacerbate respiratory illnesses.
- 100 properly planted trees, 1/2 acre of greenroofs

The challenge is that if such a beautiful place can be built in such blight using government subsidies for people on government subsidies, then the same can happen without those subsidies for the creative class/artists/entrepreneurs.  Poverty isn’t debilitating for a city’s health until too much of it is concentrated in one place.


Posted by Neil Takemoto in • Green Development | (0) Comments | (0) Trackbacks | Link
  • Enjoy this post? Share it with others.
  • Digg Favicon
  • Email Favicon
  • Facebook Favicon
  • LinkedIn Favicon
  • StumbleUpon Favicon
  • TwitThis Favicon