Houston Chronicle

Emancipati­on Avenue a home for free enterprise

Street’s new name a sign of business resurgence planned for southeast area of city

- By Andrea Rumbaugh

ELLA Russell’s early taste testers were at the Eldorado Ballroom. Her church used to hold services in the historic Third Ward building, and Russell gave out free sweets she’d baked to the congregati­on.

That passion has since blossomed into a business. Now, Russell is keeping her Third Ward roots by selling cookies, brownies and “stuffedcup­s” — a cupcake with a cookie baked inside — at Crumbville, TX, on the corner of Elgin and Emancipati­on Avenue.

“Cupcakes and cookies, they’ll sell anywhere,” she said. “But I feel like in this area, there aren’t enough businesses owned by people who look like me.”

Russell said the area used to be filled with innovative black business owners. But many of those businesses closed. She’d like to see a resurgence of companies that can keep money in the community.

Economic developmen­t is a focus of local officials, too, with new street signs designatin­g the area as an economic corridor. Officials gathered under these signs on Monday to celebrate changing the street’s name to Emancipati­on Avenue. The street was previously named for Confederat­e officer Richard “Dick” Dowling. It runs by Emancipati­on Park, which just completed its $33.6 million makeover.

“I’m excited for what’s happening in our city,” Mayor Sylvester Turner said Monday. “This is the dawn of new days.”

Spurring economic devel-

opment is among Third Ward officials’ focus moving forward. They want to create entreprene­urs and small-business owners from the community to ensure residents aren’t displaced by gentrifica­tion.

“We don’t want to just attract the creative class,” said Minister Robert Muhammad, vice chairman of the board for Houston Southeast. “We want to create the creative class from within.”

Houston Southeast, the management district for a region encompassi­ng the Third Ward, the Museum District and the Texas Medical Center, is placing “economic corridor” on the street signs of areas where it wants to promote economic activity, said Hina Musa, executive director for Houston Southeast.

More details will be released July 14, but Musa said the region’s corridors will be Emancipati­on, Almeda, Blodgett, Scott, Old Spanish Trail and Griggs.

Houston Southeast has been hosting workshops called Invest in My Own Community, or IMOC. Some assist novices in investing or developing, while masters workshops are available by invitation only to experience­d people who will receive assistance with plotting out properties that are good for developmen­t and investment.

Musa said Houston Southeast is also trying to start a microloan or grant program to improve the façades of businesses.

Muhammad said the group also would like to train youth in trades such as plumbing, carpentry and landscapin­g. Further out, he envisions a “Silicon Bayou” that brings robotics, artificial intelligen­ce, coding and other technology jobs to the area.

Similarly, the Emancipati­on Economic Developmen­t Council and Project Row Houses announced in January that they received $460,000 from the Kinder Foundation. The money was earmarked for seven projects, including a wealth-building symposium, affordable-housing initiative­s and a neighborho­od cleanup team ahead of Emancipati­on Park’s grand reopening.

Project Row Houses is a community-based arts and culture nonprofit group. Its Artist Rounds program opens houses for artists to display their work, and a recent round included small business owners. Russell, with Crumbville, teamed up with artist Anthony Suber to create an art installati­on that was a bakery popup shop. It was open for four months.

That was the first time Russell’s business had a physical location. After the event, Project Row Houses asked Russell to join its business incubation program. She opened Crumbville, selling her E-dub-alicious Treats, on Oct. 8.

Monday was special for Russell, 43. Being born in Galveston on Juneteenth, a day that commemorat­es the 1865 announceme­nt of the abolition of slavery in Texas, she was pleased to have a business across from Emancipati­on Park and the newly minted Emancipati­on Avenue.

“It means that I’m free to be a business owner,” Russell said. “I’m free to be whatever I want to be. And I’m being it.”

 ?? Steve Gonzales photos / Houston Chronicle ?? Members of Houston Southeast and guests including Mayor Sylvester Turner cut the ribbon for Emancipati­on Avenue.
Steve Gonzales photos / Houston Chronicle Members of Houston Southeast and guests including Mayor Sylvester Turner cut the ribbon for Emancipati­on Avenue.
 ??  ?? Cookie entreprene­ur Ella Russell says of Emancipati­on Avenue: “It means that I’m free to be a business owner.”
Cookie entreprene­ur Ella Russell says of Emancipati­on Avenue: “It means that I’m free to be a business owner.”

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