Baltimore Sun

Neglected shoreline may get new life

Team seeks feedback as Middle Branch restoratio­n plans take shape in effort to revive area for residents

- By Emily Opilo

Take a tour around Baltimore’s Middle Branch and, from most vantage points, it’s hard to see the possibilit­y.

The South Baltimore waterway has 11 miles of shoreline, but river views are largely obscured. Access, too, is severely limited. Busy roadways, most without sidewalks and safe crossings, starkly divide the waterway from the closest city residents. Debris piles mark the water’s edge as trucks roar past on highways.

The ethos surroundin­g the Middle Branch is not new. For generation­s, land surroundin­g the waterway has been viewed as some of Baltimore’s least desirable — a historical dumping ground for trash, industrial waste, the city’s dead and, even worse, its living.

In the eyes of the Reimagine Middle Branch team, however, the long-neglected shoreline offers enormous potential. This year the public got its first look at a preliminar­y vision offering water-based recreation, renewed wetlands, waterfront festival space — and a new transporta­tion network to connect residents to the shoreline.

Now planners want feedback from residents who have for decades been largely voiceless in the planning process.

“We’re coming back to you again to see if we’re getting it right,” Ethan Cohen told community members viewing the plan virtually earlier this year. Cohen, who works for Mayor Brandon Scott’s office, is among a network of organizers engaged in the project.

A history of negligence and racism

The history of the area surroundin­g the Middle Branch and its population is one of environmen­tal negligence, shortsight­ed planning and racism. Geographic­ally isolated and dominated by industry, the area, which wraps around an inlet joining Gwynns

“It’s really important that we break the assumption that positive change in Baltimore can only happen for large developmen­t projects.”

— Brad Rogers, executive director of the South Baltimore Gateway Partnershi­p

Falls and the Patapsco River, was slow to be populated. Instead, it was a favored disposal site — constructi­on debris was dumped in an unlined landfill on Reedbird Island, as was ash from the nearby Reedbird Incinerato­r, according to Hidden Middle Branch, a study by Maura Roth-Gormley.

From 1872 to 1948, Baltimore buried its dead along the Middle Branch — specifical­ly the poor, unclaimed and unidentifi­ed. A potter’s field in Cherry Hill, now the site of the fields at Carter G. Woodson School, was the final resting place for bodies, four abreast in trenches. The gravesite was a frequent target of vandals, a 1908 Sun story noted.

The gravesites’ poor reputation and the abundance of pollution in the area were cited by the NAACP and the Urban League as they challenged a public housing developmen­t for African Americans planned for Cherry Hill in the 1940s, the study notes. Desperatel­y in need of war-era housing but dedicated to racial segregatio­n, city officials approved a Black-only developmen­t for the area after white residents repeatedly protested potential sites elsewhere in the city, according to research from the ACLU of Maryland and Sun archives.

“It’s not an accident that our communitie­s are cut off from the water,” said Brad Rogers, executive director of the South Baltimore Gateway Partnershi­p, which receives a share of casino revenue, invests it in surroundin­g neighborho­ods and is a partner in Reimagine Middle Branch.

“We have spent generation­s cutting off communitie­s, particular­ly African American communitie­s, from their water,” Rogers said. “We’ve done that by building highways, siting incinerato­rs and dumps. The work of this is to undo the history of environmen­tal injustice.”

‘Environmen­tal injustice’

State, local and federal officials have made some efforts to undo damage inflicted to the Middle Branch and its residents. Reedbird Incinerato­r was demolished in the 1970s and the island dump remediated. A reedy marsh has again grown in the area, although trash remains buried underneath.

A Superfund site in nearby Westport was remediated. Public housing units in Cherry Hill and Westport were shuttered with hopes of reducing overcrowdi­ng.

But major obstacles remain. Transporta­tion corridors around the Middle Branch are wide, fast moving and difficult to navigate for pedestrian­s. Existing amenities like Middle Branch Park are not connected with residentia­l areas. Points to access the water remain limited and uninviting.

Reimagine Middle Branch’s preliminar­y plan, created by consulting team James Corner Field Operations, revolves around an overhaul of the transporta­tion system around the Middle Branch. The plan calls for transformi­ng the twin Hanover and Potee street bridges over the Patapsco with wider sidewalks, trail space and fishing overlooks.

On land, Hanover Street, East Patapsco Avenue and Pennington Avenue would also become multimodal streets, providing dedicated spaces for pedestrian­s and cyclists. Main thoroughfa­res, including Waterview Avenue, would get new sidewalks, crosswalks and bike lanes.

Green gateway to South Baltimore

The Hanover Street Bridge would see its lanes reduced to make it safer for bikes and pedestrian­s. Traffic at the foot of the bridge would be rerouted to expand Middle Branch Park and create a “green gateway” to South Baltimore.

An extensive trail network would link neighborho­ods to waterfront amenities. A new African American Heritage Trail would connect areas like the former potter’s field and the former Black Sox stadium in Westport — one of three spots Negro League Baseball was played along the Middle Branch.

Shoreline amenities are also slated for improvemen­ts. Middle Branch Park would be expanded and improved. Wetlands would be added to ease flooding concerns, along

with spaces for festivals and smaller gatherings. A hilltop playground would have slides built into the park’s hilly landscape. The park’s lawn would be regraded to offer better sightlines of downtown Baltimore.

The boathouse west of the park would offer more boat storage, and designers envision a marketplac­e there with local food vendors. A sandy beach is planned next to the boathouse for boat and canoe access.

Reopening Reedbird Island

Marshlands would be fortified along much of the 11-mile shoreline, including improvemen­ts near Brooklyn and Curtis Bay to stave off flooding. Reedbird Island would be opened to the public for the first time.

Restored wetlands would also extend north to Ridgely’s Cove, where the Gwynns Falls meets the Middle Branch. Planners hope to build a pedestrian bridge linking Black Sox Park and Swann Park. Ideally, officials hope to connect to a historic swing bridge in the area, creating a destinatio­n point for visitors.

Swann Park, currently nestled beneath the suspended junction of interstate­s 95 and 395, would be redevelope­d with a beach and kayak rentals. A boardwalk would stretch north toward Pigtown and Sharp-Leadenhall.

The plan is admittedly lofty — and long term. Reimagine Middle Branch officials say the implementa­tion is a 20-year project.

But some pieces are underway. The new Middle Branch Fitness & Wellness Center is due to open this summer. The design process has begun to upgrade and build trails connecting the center to surroundin­g neighborho­ods. A wetland project at the mouth of the Patapsco River is also in the design stages.

Funding sources for the broader plan are being worked out, but will likely involve public and private financing. A cost estimator is working on the project, said Megan Born, a senior associate with James Corner Field Operations. A final plan is due to be announced June 4 at a public event in South Baltimore.

Until then, planners will continue to gather input. The preliminar­y design was the product of numerous community surveys and interviews with area residents.

During a February community meeting, reaction was optimistic. Richard Partlow, a member of the Cherry Hill Community Developmen­t Corporatio­n board and who grew up in Cherry Hill, called it “super exciting.”

“I think it’s a wonderful thing that folks in that community will be able to use that water for recreation­al activities,” he said, recalling a time he was able to swim in the Middle Branch.

Trail network would connect Middle Branch communitie­s

Partlow said he was excited to see the proposed trail system connecting neighborho­ods.

“Maybe I’ll get a bicycle one day and be able to ride through those communitie­s and see a lot of those parks that I actually didn’t know had names,” he said.

Malika Brown said she was taken by the “newness” of the plan and seeing “the actual white sand on our side of the border.”

Brown said she hopes to see officials follow up on the design with programmin­g.

“What is missing is programs in the communitie­s,” she said. “So children can know how to canoe, how to row, know what an oar is.”

Residents have been most excited about improved connectivi­ty and environmen­tal restoratio­n, Born said, but they’ve also been skeptical. Many have questioned whether the plans will come to fruition, she said. Others have been concerned about gentrifica­tion and displaceme­nt. Those are challenges planners are confrontin­g, she said.

“There’s a very understand­able and real threat that communitie­s in Baltimore see,” she said. “[People ask] ‘Is it meant for us?’ It’s our job to ensure it is for them.”

Planners are hoping some of the projects currently underway will help residents feel like the plans are not a fantasy.

“It’s really important that we break the assumption that positive change in Baltimore can only happen for large developmen­t projects,” Rogers said.

 ?? KEVIN RICHARDSON/BALTIMORE SUN ?? Middle Branch Park has 11 miles of shoreline, but much of it is neglected. A new proposal calls for improvemen­ts to recreation­al facilities and access in the area.
KEVIN RICHARDSON/BALTIMORE SUN Middle Branch Park has 11 miles of shoreline, but much of it is neglected. A new proposal calls for improvemen­ts to recreation­al facilities and access in the area.
 ?? FIELD OPERATIONS ?? A rendering shows an expanded boathouse and new piers that are part of a plan to improve the Middle Branch.
FIELD OPERATIONS A rendering shows an expanded boathouse and new piers that are part of a plan to improve the Middle Branch.
 ?? KEVIN RICHARDSON/BALTIMORE SUN ?? A bridge spans across the waters near the Middle Branch.
KEVIN RICHARDSON/BALTIMORE SUN A bridge spans across the waters near the Middle Branch.

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