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'''Joseph H. Loveman Village''' is a public housing project operated by the [[Housing Authority of the Birmingham District]] located at 248 [[1st Avenue Southwest]] in the [[North Titusville]] neighborhood of the [[Titusville]] community east of [[Elmwood Cemetery]].
:''This article is about the former public housing community in Titusville. For the former Hoover shopping center, see [[Loehmann's Village]].''
'''Joseph H. Loveman Village''' was a public housing project operated by the [[Housing Authority of the Birmingham District]] from [[1952]] to [[2017]]. It was located at the site of the current [[Villas at Titusville]], at 248 [[1st Avenue Southwest]] in the [[North Titusville]] neighborhood of the [[Titusville]] community east of [[Elmwood Cemetery]].


The project was constructed in [[1951]]-[[1952]] and contains 500 apartments. It was named for [[Joseph Loveman]], president of [[Loveman's|Loveman, Joseph & Loeb]] department store, who served on the city housing board from [[1940]] to [[1949]]. The project was designed by [[Charles H. McCauley & Associates]] and constructed by the [[Batson-Cook Company]].
The project was constructed in [[1951]]-[[1952]] and contains 498 apartments. It was named for [[Joseph Loveman]], president of [[Loveman's|Loveman, Joseph & Loeb]] department store, who served on the city housing board from [[1940]] to [[1949]]. The project was designed by [[Charles H. McCauley & Associates]] and constructed by the [[Batson-Cook Company]].


It is managed by [[Danny Kidd]]. All units at the project were renovated and lead paint was abated in the 2000s.
All units at the project were renovated and lead paint was abated in the 2000s. In [[2009]], then-[[Mayor of Birmingham|Mayor]] [[Larry Langford]] (who grew up at Loveman Village) proposed replacing the project with condominiums which could be sold to existing tenants with subsidized loans. In [[2010]] the HABD contracted with Columbia Residential of Atlanta, Georgia to redevelop the site as a 280-unit mixed income community to be called "Westwood Green". The Boulevard Group, which managed [[Tuxedo Terrace]], was asked to apply for a U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development [[Hope VI]] grant to help fund the redevelopment.


In [[2009]], then-[[Mayor of Birmingham|Mayor]] [[Larry Langford]] (who grew up at Loveman Village) proposed replacing the project with condominiums which could be sold to existing tenants with subsidized loans. In [[2010]] the HABD contracted with Columbia Residential of Atlanta, Georgia to redevelop the site as a 280-unit mixed income community to be called "[[Westwood Green]]". The Boulevard Group, which manages [[Tuxedo Terrace]], was asked to apply for a U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development [[Hope VI]] grant to help fund the redevelopment.
In [[2012]] HABD told residents it was pursuing a $30 million "Choice Neighborhoods Initiative" grant along with $10 million of infrastructure work from the City of Birmingham to redevelop the area, with the idea that replacing the existing project with attractive, new mixed-income housing would spur private development in North Titusville, then suffering from depressed property values and high vacancy rates.


The Housing Authority announced plans in [[2015]] to demolish the existing buildings and redevelop the site for new public housing in three phases under HUD's "Rental Assistance Demonstration" (RAD) program. The redevelopment would replace 475 two-level apartments with more accessible, modern units. [[Hollyhand Construction]] of [[Northport]] was selected as the contractor, with ground broken in August 2015.
The Housing Authority announced plans in [[2015]] to demolish the existing buildings and redevelop the site for new public housing in three phases under HUD's "Rental Assistance Demonstration" (RAD) program. The $19 million redevelopment was to provide 250-300 accessible, modern units, along with a low-rise senior living building. [[Hollyhand Development]] of [[Northport]] was selected as the developer, and a groundbreaking was scheduled for August 2015. The state tax credits needed for the project, though, were held up as the [[Birmingham Department of Community Development]] made the 96-unit [[Cotton Avenue Apartments]] in [[West End]] a priority.
 
In March [[2016]] HABD announced that they had applied for $15-20 million in low-income tax credits to help fund the first phase of a four-part $79.6 million redevelopment. In the first phase, 100 of 220 new units would be rebuilt on the same site, designed to blend in better with the character of the surrounding neighborhood and to provide additional green space. Another 120 apartments would be built on land owned by the HABD on [[Sydney Drive]] in [[Oxmoor neighborhood|Oxmoor Valley]]. Additional new units would be constructed at various other sites to maintain the same total number available to tenants.
 
Demolition of Loveman Village in preparation for construction of the [[Villas at Titusville]] began in October [[2017]].


==References==
==References==
* Gray, Jeremy (November 9, 2010) "Birmingham seeks grant to raze Loveman Village, build mixed-income apartments." {{BN}}
* Gray, Jeremy (November 9, 2010) "Birmingham seeks grant to raze Loveman Village, build mixed-income apartments." {{BN}}
* Bryant, Joseph D. (January 29, 2015) "Major overhaul coming to Birmingham with $70 million planned housing redevelopment." {{BN}}
* Bryant, Joseph D. (January 29, 2015) "Major overhaul coming to Birmingham with $70 million planned housing redevelopment." {{BN}}
* Bryant, Joseph D. (February 3, 2015) "Dueling for dollars: Here's how a Birmingham City Council vote today could jeopardize a $90 million project to overhaul Loveman Village." {{BN}}
* Godwin, Brent (February 23, 2016) "How a $19M project will transform Loveman Village." {{BBJ}}
* Hu, Lydia (March 25, 2016) "Multi-million dollar Loveman Village transformation could start by summer." WBRC.com
* Poe, Kelly (June 3, 2016) "Loveman Village redevelopment gets $17 million tax credit approval." {{BN}}
* Hodgin, Mary Scott (September 6, 2016) "[https://wbhm.org/2016/re-shaping-birminghams-largest-public-housing-complex/ A New Direction for Birmingham’s Largest Public Housing Complex]." WBHM.org


==External links==
==External links==
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[[Category:HABD communities]]
[[Category:HABD communities]]
[[Category:1952 buildings]]
[[Category:1952 buildings]]
[[Category:2017 demolitions]]
[[Category:Charles McCauley buildings]]
[[Category:Charles McCauley buildings]]
[[Category:North Titusville neighborhood]]
[[Category:North Titusville]]
[[Category:1st Avenue Southwest]]
[[Category:1st Avenue Southwest]]

Latest revision as of 18:17, 2 January 2024

This article is about the former public housing community in Titusville. For the former Hoover shopping center, see Loehmann's Village.

Joseph H. Loveman Village was a public housing project operated by the Housing Authority of the Birmingham District from 1952 to 2017. It was located at the site of the current Villas at Titusville, at 248 1st Avenue Southwest in the North Titusville neighborhood of the Titusville community east of Elmwood Cemetery.

The project was constructed in 1951-1952 and contains 498 apartments. It was named for Joseph Loveman, president of Loveman, Joseph & Loeb department store, who served on the city housing board from 1940 to 1949. The project was designed by Charles H. McCauley & Associates and constructed by the Batson-Cook Company.

All units at the project were renovated and lead paint was abated in the 2000s. In 2009, then-Mayor Larry Langford (who grew up at Loveman Village) proposed replacing the project with condominiums which could be sold to existing tenants with subsidized loans. In 2010 the HABD contracted with Columbia Residential of Atlanta, Georgia to redevelop the site as a 280-unit mixed income community to be called "Westwood Green". The Boulevard Group, which managed Tuxedo Terrace, was asked to apply for a U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development Hope VI grant to help fund the redevelopment.

In 2012 HABD told residents it was pursuing a $30 million "Choice Neighborhoods Initiative" grant along with $10 million of infrastructure work from the City of Birmingham to redevelop the area, with the idea that replacing the existing project with attractive, new mixed-income housing would spur private development in North Titusville, then suffering from depressed property values and high vacancy rates.

The Housing Authority announced plans in 2015 to demolish the existing buildings and redevelop the site for new public housing in three phases under HUD's "Rental Assistance Demonstration" (RAD) program. The $19 million redevelopment was to provide 250-300 accessible, modern units, along with a low-rise senior living building. Hollyhand Development of Northport was selected as the developer, and a groundbreaking was scheduled for August 2015. The state tax credits needed for the project, though, were held up as the Birmingham Department of Community Development made the 96-unit Cotton Avenue Apartments in West End a priority.

In March 2016 HABD announced that they had applied for $15-20 million in low-income tax credits to help fund the first phase of a four-part $79.6 million redevelopment. In the first phase, 100 of 220 new units would be rebuilt on the same site, designed to blend in better with the character of the surrounding neighborhood and to provide additional green space. Another 120 apartments would be built on land owned by the HABD on Sydney Drive in Oxmoor Valley. Additional new units would be constructed at various other sites to maintain the same total number available to tenants.

Demolition of Loveman Village in preparation for construction of the Villas at Titusville began in October 2017.

References

  • Gray, Jeremy (November 9, 2010) "Birmingham seeks grant to raze Loveman Village, build mixed-income apartments." The Birmingham News
  • Bryant, Joseph D. (January 29, 2015) "Major overhaul coming to Birmingham with $70 million planned housing redevelopment." The Birmingham News
  • Bryant, Joseph D. (February 3, 2015) "Dueling for dollars: Here's how a Birmingham City Council vote today could jeopardize a $90 million project to overhaul Loveman Village." The Birmingham News
  • Godwin, Brent (February 23, 2016) "How a $19M project will transform Loveman Village." Birmingham Business Journal
  • Hu, Lydia (March 25, 2016) "Multi-million dollar Loveman Village transformation could start by summer." WBRC.com
  • Poe, Kelly (June 3, 2016) "Loveman Village redevelopment gets $17 million tax credit approval." The Birmingham News
  • Hodgin, Mary Scott (September 6, 2016) "A New Direction for Birmingham’s Largest Public Housing Complex." WBHM.org

External links