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Jul 28, 2021 18 tweets 7 min read Read on X
Take any major U.S. city and you're likely to find a historically Black neighborhood demolished or cut off from the rest of the city by a highway.

The legacy of this racist transportation policy continues to define urban landscapes. [THREAD] bloom.bg/3zJrbo2
This map shows the Rondo neighborhood in St. Paul, Minnesota.

In the first half of the 20th century it was home to most of the city's African American residents.

It was a key area to do business, meet, shop and socialize during segregation and the Jim Crow era.
Construction of I-94 through Rondo began in the mid-1950s.

"As someone who was there ... it was a surreal experience to see it street by street. It's something I've never forgotten," said Marvin Anderson, a Rondo resident and co-founder of ReConnect Rondo.
By the 1960s, the neighborhood's business core was gone, replaced by newly constructed I-94.

Homes that had been a short walk to the shops now overlooked a six-lane highway shuttling commuters between Minneapolis and St. Paul.

The neighborhood was split in two.
Highways like Rondo's were part of a nationwide effort to build the interstate highway system, sometimes in concert with federal urban renewal programs that sought to demolish neighborhoods considered "blighted" in the name of revitalizing cities.
What follows are demographic maps of six other U.S. cities in the 1950s that show examples of how highways devastated established Black communities and hubs across the U.S.
The Black Bottom neighborhood in Detroit was destroyed to make way for I-75 and I-375.

Centered on Hastings Street, Black-owned businesses lined the streets. Ella Fitzgerald performed in its clubs

Today, few traces of the neighborhood remain aside from historical markers.
Proposed plans originally routed a riverfront highway along the historic French Quarter of New Orleans, but that was stopped by local activists.

Later, I-10 was built through the Tremé neighborhood, uprooting historic oak trees and hundreds of Black residents and businesses.
Urban renewal and the US-27 and Riverfront highways cut off and destroyed Black businesses and homes around the 9th Street neighborhood of Chattanooga.

Communities walled off this way became what are known as "border vacuums," with much less access to resources and jobs.
The West End area of Cincinnati was home to around 25,000 predominantly Black residents who were forced to relocate in the 1950s and 1960s to make way for I-75.

The neighborhood was flattened in the name of urban renewal and rebranded as Queensgate.
Established in the early 1900s, Independence Heights was a Black enclave of home- and land-owners, later annexed by the city of Houston.

Hundreds of Black residents in the community were displaced in the 1950s and 1960s by highway construction.
In segregated Miami, Overtown was the historic center of Black life.

It became known as the "Harlem of the South" for its lively cultural and intellectual scene where renowned personalities such as W.E.B. Du Bois, Josephine Baker and Billie Holiday spent time there.
But in the 1960s, around 20 square blocks in the heart of Miami's Overtown neighborhood were destroyed by a new highway interchange.

Hundreds of homes and businesses were demolished and around 10,000 people were relocated and displaced in the process.
As many of these highways near the end of their lifespans, a national reckoning with structural racism has put them in the spotlight, and has elevated plans, dreams and fights to reconnect what was divided.

There are many ideas for how to do that.
In Rondo, Minnesota transportation officials are considering ideas for upgrades to the aging highway, including a plan to bury it under a 22-acre land bridge topped with new development designed for community members.

@ReConnect_Rondo hopes to restore land that was taken away.
But residents who remember well the recent history of highways fear further infrastructure changes could bring further displacement.

Meanwhile, some communities are simply fighting to keep more highways from being built that repeat the mistakes of the past.
It is not only the physical infrastructure that needs repair, but also the social and economic fabric.

Many groups are calling for policies such as land trusts, affordable housing funds, or programs to support Black-owned businesses in conjunction with highway revision plans.
Read more about this history and the debates on how to move forward in cities across the U.S. in the report by @rachaeldottle, @mslaurabliss and @pabloroblesg: bloom.bg/3zJrbo2

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More from @CityLab

Mar 8, 2022
Protesters against gender violence have left their imprint on Mexico City's streets and monuments.

On #InternationalWomensDay, they are expected to do it again.

@riostlorena reports: trib.al/9GobLCW Image
Last September, in the middle of a roundabout along Mexico City's Paseo de la Reforma, feminist activists installed a wooden carving of a woman raising her fist to the sky.

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In early 2022, there's no sign that cutthroat bidding and rising prices won't continue trib.al/nS39ovW
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Eric Adams, the new mayor, has vowed to prioritize the issue trib.al/6n6t8mH
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Jul 27, 2021
The massive Art Deco "Guardians of Traffic" sculptures are the inspiration for Cleveland's new baseball team name.

What's the backstory? [THREAD] bloom.bg/2WgGIx5
Why name a sports team after sculptures on a bridge?

It's not completely unprecedented for a ballclub to look to transportation infrastructure for inspiration — see, most famously, the Brooklyn "Trolley Dodgers." bloom.bg/376ELFE
The late 19th century dawn of professional baseball, and Cleveland was an emerging U.S. transportation and industrial hub.
Read 8 tweets
Apr 30, 2021
1/ When people moved out of expensive cities, where did they go?

A year of migration data reveals trends and interesting surprises: bloom.bg/3xCC4YB
2/ After much speculation about emptied downtowns and the prospect of remote work, a year of @USPS data gives the clearest picture yet of how people moved.
3/ There is no urban exodus — perhaps it's more of an urban shuffle.

Despite talk of mass moves to Florida and Texas, data shows most people who did move stayed close to where they came from.
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Mar 15, 2021
1/ Flooding is a rising threat across the United States, with homeowners facing as much as $19 billion in damages every year.

What puts a neighborhood at high risk? Geography is key, but new data reveal another factor, too: race.

Read the report: bloom.bg/38HXubN
2/ When appraisers mapped cities for the federal Homeowners' Loan Corporation in the 1930s, they assigned grades to neighborhoods based on several factors, race high among them.

Black and immigrant neighborhoods were deemed undesirable, marked by yellow or red lines.
3/ These historically redlined neighborhoods suffer a far higher risk of flooding today, according to new research from @Redfin, the Seattle-based real-estate brokerage.
Read 12 tweets

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