Baltimore Sun Sunday

City neighborho­ods are moving up

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Woodbourne and McCabe avenues in Greater Govans. It’s a transition­al neighborho­od with both single-family houses and rowhomes where the median sales price increased four-fold to $52,500 last year from $13,000 in 2015. The number of homes sold jumped to nine in 2016 from just one a year earlier.

The North Baltimore neighborho­od is near Loyola University Maryland and Notre Dame of Maryland campuses and within walking distance to entertainm­ent, shopping and dining areas such as Belvedere Square and the Senator Theatre.

Gondol attributed the area’s uptick to the city’s Vacants to Values program, in which properties are demolished, rehabilita­ted or redevelope­d. Habitat for Humanity of the Chesapeake has been doing homes in the neighborho­od as part of the program.

In East Baltimore, Milton-Montford saw similar gains. Several blocks east of the Johns Hopkins Hospital campus, MiltonMont­ford is also a neighborho­od in transition. The number homes sold there nearly doubled to 21 in 2016, from 11 the year before. The median sales price soared more than three times to $44,000.

The neighborho­od likely saw a boost due to the Station East redevelopm­ent, which is revitalizi­ng the community with renovated homes and green spaces, Gondol said.

While the cause for increases were apparent for the Woodbourne-McCabe and Milton-Montford neighborho­ods, there was no clear reason for sales growth in the other four areas except for market trends, Gondol said.

Wrenlane, another tiny North Baltimore pocket neighborho­od, saw sales of its rowhomes double from two to four in 2016. The median sales price nearly tripled to $93,750. This sliver of a neighborho­od off Cold Spring Lane, just east of York Road, is also close to Loyola University Maryland and Notre Dame of Maryland campuses.

Belair-Parkside, a neighborho­od of mostly single-family homes in Northeast Baltimore, runs along the north side of Herring Run Park. While it had just one standard sale for $49,500 in 2015, last year it saw six sales with a median price of $135,658.

Close to the commercial and commuting corridors along Belair and Harford roads, the area’s park-front properties offer “incredible value,” Gondol said. With the park on one side and Most Holy Redeemer Cemetery on the other, the neighborho­od’s other added benefit, he joked, is “quiet neighbors.”

Closer to downtown, Seton Hill saw seven standard sales with a median price of $210,000 in 2016, up from just two a year earlier with a median price of $83,500.

The small neighborho­od just west of Mount Vernon borders Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard, allowing for easy access to the busy connecting road. Close to Mount Vernon Marketplac­e eateries, the light rail and the Howard Street Dog Park, Seton Hill is “a little neighborho­od that packs a lot of amenities,” Gondal said. The area also has a host of nearby arts and cultural attraction­s such as the Walters Art Museum and Maryland Historical Society and is within walking distance of such academic institutio­ns as the University of Maryland, Baltimore, the Maryland Institute College of Art and the University of Baltimore.

Kate Barnhart, a real estate agent with Keller Williams Gateway, who has handled sales in Seton Hill, said that even though rowhouses along the tree-lined streets tend to be on the smaller side, it’s an inexpensiv­e neighborho­od compared to Mount Vernon.

“It’s smaller, but the location can’t be beat. … You’re just a few blocks out of the hustle and bustle of downtown,” Barnhart said.

In West Baltimore, Bridgeview/Greenlawn is a mixed neighborho­od of rowhomes and light industrial properties that includes St. Peter’s Cemetery. With moderate-sized rowhomes near, but away from such east-west corridors as Route 40 and North Avenue, the area saw saw seven standard sales in 2016, up from two the year before. The median price more than doubled to $45,000 from $21,000 in 2015.

While other areas like Locust Point and Remington maintained a healthy sales pace in 2016, Gondol said the improvemen­t in additional neighborho­ods is a good sign for Baltimore’s housing market.

“It’s one thing to say our eight to 10 well-known neighborho­ods continue to do well. But if that’s the only trend you have over 5, 10 years, you’re not really growing,” he said.

“You want to see that progress and growth is reaching beyond a core area. I think it’s really encouragin­g that we are continuing to climb with our sales, that we’re seeing this impact reach more neighborho­ods, which is good for everyone in the city to see that prosperity and stability is coming to more neighborho­ods.”

 ?? ALGERINA PERNA/BALTIMORE SUN ?? Belair-Parkside, a neighborho­od of mostly single-family homes in Northeast Baltimore, runs along the north side of Herring Run Park.
ALGERINA PERNA/BALTIMORE SUN Belair-Parkside, a neighborho­od of mostly single-family homes in Northeast Baltimore, runs along the north side of Herring Run Park.
 ?? BARBARA HADDOCK TAYLOR/BALTIMORE SUN ?? Milton-Montford, east of the Johns Hopkins Hospital campus, likely saw a boost due to the Station East redevelopm­ent.
BARBARA HADDOCK TAYLOR/BALTIMORE SUN Milton-Montford, east of the Johns Hopkins Hospital campus, likely saw a boost due to the Station East redevelopm­ent.

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