Westwood Heights to celebrate community’s
revitalization
Community event to take place August 7
SEATTLE—July 20, 2007—Seattle
Housing Authority and its partner organizations have played a
significant role in transforming what was once one of the city’s
most undesirable places to live into a neighborhood that is
beautiful, vibrant and diverse.
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Ten years ago, Roxbury House and Roxbury
Village in West Seattle were among the city’s most
undesirable places to live. Poorly designed and infested by
gangs and crime, the neighborhood was unattractive and
unsafe.
Today, things are dramatically different. Reborn as Westwood
Heights, the neighborhood is much more appealing and
measurably safer. |
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Westwood Heights East Addition, before renovation |
In celebration of the dramatic
changes that have taken place in the neighborhood in the last
decade—including the recently completed renovation of six adjacent
fourplexes—the Housing Authority is sponsoring a community block
party. Westwood Heights residents and their friends and neighbors
are all invited on Tuesday, August 7, from 4 to 6 p.m. along
27th Avenue SW between Roxbury and Cambridge Streets. A brief formal
program will be followed by entertainment. Refreshments will be
served.
One reason that Roxbury House and Village functioned poorly as
housing in the past was bad design. The site’s layout housed
together populations with diverse needs and challenges—seniors and
young residents with disabilities in apartments, and large families
in townhouses—despite their unique requirements. In addition, the
layout of the grounds in the Village and the adjacent Roxhill Park
inadvertently created small areas isolated from the rest of the
community that fostered gang activity.
At the same time, the buildings were falling apart. Rot and asbestos
contamination in Roxbury Village contributed to high maintenance
costs and the closing of many units, while Roxbury House had
infrastructure problems and a poorly designed commons area that was
unsafe for residents. Both properties lacked appropriate
accommodations for residents with disabilities. Clearly something in
the neighborhood needed to change.
The opportunity for change came in 1998, when Seattle Housing
Authority received a $17 million HOPE VI grant from the federal
Department of Housing and Urban Development to revitalize the
community by creating two safe, secure, livable, well-planned
communities, one for seniors and the other for families.
Roxbury House was renovated inside and out, renamed Westwood
Heights, and designated solely for senior residents. This
distinction allowed specially-designed services to be put in place
for both residents and other seniors in the area. Where Roxbury
Village once stood, Westwood Court and Longfellow Court were
developed by Seattle Housing Authority and the Lutheran Alliance to
Create Housing (LATCH). Together they contain 45 one- to
five-bedroom townhouse rentals serving households with a range of
incomes.
Once the two revitalized Roxbury properties were complete, Seattle
Housing found that residents were leery of renting in the new
facility because of the reputation for crime and drug use in the
adjacent block. Seattle Housing then set out to put a stop to
illegal activities in the privately-owned properties on 27th
Avenue across from Westwood Heights.
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Housing Authority staff contacted the
property owners individually, and over time purchased
buildings along the entire block. In many cases, when
squatters occupying units discovered that the Housing
Authority was taking over management of the buildings, they
chose to move on. Better tenant screening, lease enforcement
and upgrades to the buildings and landscaping have helped
turn the block around. |
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Westwood Heights East Addition, after renovation |
The Housing Authority also worked
with the Seattle Police Department and neighborhood organizations to
help transform the 13-acre park to the north with a new ball field,
playground, wheelchair-accessible concrete picnic pads and trails
and bridges.
The successful revitalization efforts of Seattle Housing Authority,
its community partners and the federal government have transformed
the Westwood Heights neighborhood for the better, and as you’ll see
at the August 7 block party, the results are worth celebrating.
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