3-decker's
rehab rates applause
By Bronislaus
A. Kush
Telegram & Gazette Staff
WORCESTER
- The three-decker at 454 Pleasant St. sat neglected for
years with cracked windows, peeling paint and dangerously
deteriorating porches.
The only
residents of the house were pigeons in the attic and mice
in the basement.
Soon,
however, the historic building - a stone's throw from the
busy intersection at Pleasant Street and Park Avenue - will
be filled with families seeking affordable housing.
Yesterday,
officials at the nonprofit Worcester Community Housing Resources
Inc. threw open the three-decker's doors so neighborhood
residents and community leaders could take a peek at the
$308,000 worth of work pumped into the building.
"We've
already had some business people say they might be investing
in this neighborhood, just because of this project," said
Peter Fellenz, executive director of Worcester Community
Housing Resources.
The restoration
is the fifth completed by Worcester Community Housing Resources
with subsidies provided by the city and the Massachusetts
Development through a federal home program.
Worcester
Community Housing Resources has also rehabilitated properties
at 110 Austin St., 30 Irving St., 8 Townsend St. and 57 Russell
St. It is set to begin work on six-unit properties at 114
and 142 Elm St. and is looking to restore other residences
in the area.
The properties
fixed up by Worcester Community Housing Resources are sold
to qualified first-time buyers. The house at 545 Pleasant
St. is being offered at $155,000.
Paul V
LaCava, the assistant city manager who oversees Worcester's
neighborhoods said the recent Worcester Community Housing
Resources restoration will help stabilize the area and place
another property on the tax rolls.
He said
about 100 units of affordable housing have been put back
on the market over the past year, much of it the doing of
local community development corporations and housing nonprofits.
Affordable
housing is a major issue in older urban centers in the northeast.
But City
Councilor Dennis L. Irish, who sits on the council's Housing
and Neighborhood Revitalization Committee, said the problem
in Worcester isn't as acute because of these recent efforts
to rehab old properties.
Mr. Irish,
who served until recently as chairman of the Worcester Community
Housing Resources board, said the city administration has
placed great emphasis on Worcester's neighborhoods.
According
to Sen. Harriette L. Chandler, D-Worcester, the Massachusetts
Legislature is considering a $500 million bond issue to fund
affordable housing projects.
"I'd
like to see Worcester's name all over it (the bill)," said
Ms. Chandler.
The property
at 454 Pleasant St. is the only three-decker on the route
from Main Street to Park Avenue. The Queen Anne-style home
was built in 1892.
Patricia
Cushman Thon of the Downtown Neighborhood Partners said the
immediate area was home to a large farm from 1850 to 1870.
In
1871, the property was opened up to development and the area
became
known as "Pleasantville".
Most of
the area homes were constructed by Benjamin Jakes but preservationists
are not sure if the carpenter built 454 Pleasant St., which
was first owned by a local grocer.