renewburgh

"structures to be demolished"

source: newburgh free library

 

"There are those who would claim that the Urban Renewal projects have caused the deterioration in Newburgh. However, it is the history of the older communities throughout the nation that as transportation methods changed, and as population shifted from area to area, certain ares which had been popular at one time have become extinct, and the Water Street area is no exception . . . the Water Street area has ceased to be of importance and must undergo a radical change in order to again take its proper place where it can pay its own way in the community." (Flynn 11)

    The answer to Newburgh's woes lay in the wrecking ball. According to the city council and the 1967-1969 Comprehensive Development Plan for the City of Newburgh, the city's antiquated buildings and streets designed for trolleys and horses needed to make way for the car-driven economy. The "slums" of Water Street had to disappear. The images above outline the urban renewal area, which was approximately twenty blocks along the river, and four blocks deep.


 

water street before renewal . . . water street after renewal

photo credit: detroit publishing co., 1906 (first image)

 

    After all was said and done, the city had completely leveled Water Street and, in effect, took down the entire waterfront. The city demolished more than 700 properties in the heart of the city, disconnecting it from the waterfront. Is it the renewal itself that's responsible for Newburgh's continued woes, or the fact that for 30 years nothing replaced what the city had destroyed? Had planners' ambitious visions for the site (discussed in the "20/100 vision" section) come to fruition, perhaps the city would have suffered less.


 

making newburgh look like one big happy family

source: newburgh free library

 

 

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