Dayton Daily News

Vacant lot to become performanc­e space

Blighted Toledo parcel to benefit from $30,000 grant.

- By Sarah Elms

Toledo’s Junction neighborho­od soon will see a dilapidate­d vacant lot turned into a public space for residents to enjoy.

The city-owned plot at the intersecti­on of Nebraska and Junction Avenues is home to a few trees, some old garden boxes, and concrete from a structure torn down two decades ago, but a $30,000 grant will help change that. City officials were recently approved for the National Recreation and Park Associatio­n funding that will allow them to clear the site of debris and construct an outdoor entertainm­ent space.

“We will build a stage, and with earthen works and soils we will create an amphitheat­er seating area for the neighborho­od to sit and enjoy whatever production is put on the stage,” said Paul Rasmusson, the city’s director of public service.

Ryan Bunch, communicat­ions and outreach coordinato­r for the Arts Commission of Greater Toledo, has been working with leaders from the Junction Coalition, Frederick Douglass Center, and Soul City Boxing to improve the largely African-American neighborho­od.

“My understand­ing is there hasn’t been significan­t investment in that neighborho­od since the late 1980s,” he said. “It’s a rich, vibrant community. It’s a great neighborho­od, and I’m just excited to see that this community-led action they’ve been participat­ing in is going to help transform a space.”

Bunch said the vacant lot, referred to as Junction Park, has come up time and again in community conversati­ons.

“It’s essentiall­y a blighted piece of property that the residents would like to be a cultural park space,” he said. “We met with a variety of youth and elders in the community, and they identified a few things they wanted to see: a reading area, walking path, some benches, and a performing space.”

Councilman Yvonne Harper, who represents District 4 where the park is located, said she is happy to see an entertainm­ent space built in the neighborho­od, but she questioned whether there will be electricit­y available.

“There are no current plans for electricit­y there,” Rasmusson said.

The park is located diagonally across the street from St. Anthony Church, which the Lucas County Land Bank is soon to acquire from the Diocese of Toledo after a community effort to stop the diocese’s plans to demolish the long-vacant building.

Community leaders and elected officials alike praised the preservati­on effort, and Land Bank board members soon will begin meeting with area residents to develop a strategy for how to renovate the church.

Officials hope work on Junction Park can be completed before winter, ensuring an attractive usable space will be ready to compliment whatever St. Anthony ultimately becomes for the neighborho­od.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States