City Auditorium brouhaha

Yesterday the Oregon Hill-based opposition to VCU’s proposed 100,000-square-foot addition to the 117-year-old City Auditorium building was dealt another blow. The project moved another step toward happening, as the State Secretary of Administration, Viola O. Baskerville, signed off on the plan.

Scott Burger at the Oregon Hill community blog comments on the controversy.

State official OKs proposed expansion of Cary St. facility into Richmond’s Oregon Hill. VCU has approval from the state to move/demolish the 2 stables and to build a 125,000-square-foot student rec center in their place…

Click here to see the entire post. If you look around on the site there is plenty of background material on this situation.

In spite of how inevitable this new construction project seem, or how much the students might need the facility, the citizens of Oregon Hill who oppose it have some valid points. In many ways that old blue collar neighborhood, which is between the Fan District and the James River, has been treated like Richmond’s redheaded stepchild for a long time.

So, I wonder if there isn’t something VCU could do to recognize that the residents of Oregon Hill will be intruded upon to some extent by this rather large development. Would it help if those who live in the neighborhood were issued some sort of pass from VCU that would allow them to use the athletic/recreational facilities the burgeoning university wants to establish on their Northern border?

Maybe that suggestion would do little to make those who oppose the project feel better. So, maybe there’s a better idea. Still, wouldn’t it be constructive for VCU to clearly demonstrate it recognizes that when it takes something away from them, it owes its neighbors something to smooth their ruffled feathers?

Posted in VCU, Hub's Blurbs, The Slant

3 Comments.

  1. Supposedly VCU will pay for more traffic lights and have passes for some community members. In my opinion, these tokens are not nearly enough.

    You gotta remember, Trani already promised before not to encroach on the neighborhood and has now gone against his word. He cannot be trusted.

    VCU is hellbent on bulldozing more Richmond history (so much for the open Downtown Development Plannig charettes’s suggestions) and chipping away more of the neighborhood. Its sad, because we are hearing about some good development plans by private Cary Street developers, for a change.

    VCU is in land-banking, empire-building mode. It owns parking lots all over Grace and Broad that would make great student rec center sites. Remember, years ago Oregon Hill residents helped suggest to Trani that he redevelop Broad Street instead of tearing up more of the neighborhood. That argument still applies and has more weight from the success that VCU has had on Broad Street.

    This VCU project will come at a huge cost to state taxpayers and students. The cost of “reconstructing” (notice how that was changed from moving) the one stable, demolishing the other, cleaning the ground that includes the underground storage tank, putting a monstrous addition to the very beautiful City Auditorium should make everyone think twice about this.

    It would nice if VCU took our residents’ advice and helped continue the Belvidere Greenway up to Monroe Park and into Carver and northward. It would be nice if VCU partnered with the City to create a modern streetcar styled circulator transportation system. It would be nice if VCU did more to discourage bad student behavior (unruly parties, grafitti, littering, etc), instead they point to the Fan’s Party Patrol (they want City taxpayers to pay for these problems).

    In short, VCU seems to be more about press releases and corporate interests than caring about the community and listening to citizens.

    Scott Burger @ September 29th, 2007 at 3:45 pm

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