Lower 9 Self-Guided Tour
Transcription
Lower 9 Self-Guided Tour
Courtesy of: NewOrleansOnline.com Design by: Grace L. Pettit Questions or Comments? Contact Darryl Malek-Wiley at: [email protected] NENA 504.373.6483 www.9thwardnena.org Our School at Blair Grocery 718.415.0890 www.schoolatblairgrocery.blogspot.com Tour Self-Guided Make It Right 1.888.MIR.NOLA www.makeitrightnola.org Hurricane Rita. lowernine.org 504. 278.1240 www.lowernine.org Lower 9th Ward from flood waters from Hurricane Katrina and Lower 9th Ward Village www.lower9thwardvillage.org neighborhoods. The damage you will see was caused by the largest engineering failure in the history of the United States, with the collapse of the levees built to protect the Guerrilla Garden www.facebook.com/backyardgardeners CSED 504.324.9955 www.helpholycross.org We welcome you to the Lower Ninth Ward. On this self-guided tour you will see the efforts of residents Common Ground Relief 504.312.1729 www.commongroundrelief.org Contact our Supporters Welcome! Ninth Lower Past rebuilding and restoring their Ward the House of Dance & Feathers 504.957.2678 www.houseofdanceandfeathers.com into Global Green- Holy Cross Project 504.525.2121 www.globalgreen.org Stepping Rebuilding Visions of the Future Today New Orleans in people’s minds will, for The residents of the Lower Ninth Ward started meeting quite some time, be divided in to the two weekly in November 2005, after neighborhoods were worlds of Pre-Katrina and Post-Katrina. urged by the mayor to develop their own recovery plans. They had a vision of rebuilding: stronger, smarter and safer. Their plan called for the sustainable renewal of the Lower Ninth Ward. From this vision, over 80 new homes were built with a high level of green building designs, technology, and energy- saving appliances. There have been over 112 homes retrofitted with radiant barrier and weatherization The Lower 9th Ward residents are not products. The community is actively working to restore the waiting for the ‘Government’ to help them cypress swamp north of Florida near Bayou Bienvenue, thus rebuild their neighborhood:they are restoring part of Louisiana’s coastal wetland system. renewing their community stronger, smarter and safer -- one house at a time. Historically, the Lower Ninth Ward was among the very last of the New Orleans neighborhoods to be developed.It wasnamed the Lower Ninth Ward not because it was “lower in elevation,” but because it was lower down the Mississippi River towards the Gulf of Mexico. Pre-Katrina, the Lower Ninth Ward was an integral part of New Orleans: people who worked and were the heartbeat of the city, producing the culture that people loved. These families owned their homes and had owned them for generations. On August 29th, 2005, the irresponsibly constructed federal levee system in New Orleans suffered a catastrophic failure, causing the Lower Ninth Ward (and 80% of New Orleans) to flood. Information Courtesy of Greater New Orleans Community Data Center and Sierra Club Self-Guided Tour ofthe L owe rN i n t hW a r d 9 Chartres Street and Charbonnet Street A vibrant greenspace in place of blighted land where families can congregate, socialize, grow vegetables and pick from fruit trees. The project is organized by the Backyard Gardener’s Network. 4 FRENCH The Village serves as a hub where all community members can access or create essential resources to empower themselves, be self-sufficient, sustain an equitable quality of life, and become whole after Katrina and beyond. House of Dance & Feathers 1317 Tupelo Street 1123 Lamanche Street NENA was founded by residents of the Lower 9th Ward after Hurricane Katrina to assist neighbors in the rebuilding process. Our mission is to play a vital role in our neighborhood’s redevelopment. Since its inception, NENA has provided direct services to over 2,000 families. 5 6 ST CLAUDE AVE 17 1 12 2 13 4 Walking tour MIS SIS SIP PI Bayou Bienvenue 3 Extra Sites: Steamboat Houses RIV ER Florida Avenue and Caffin Avenue The Bayou Beinvenue restoration project is driven by the desire of residents of the Lower Ninth Ward to restore the natural coastal cypress forest, helping to reduce storm surge into the Lower Ninth Ward. Make It Right 10 Tennessee Street More than 4,000 homes in New Orleans’s Lower 9th Ward were destroyed by Hurricane Katrina. Two years later, when actor Brad Pitt toured the city, the neighborhood was still deserted and devastated. He founded Make It Right to build 150 affordable, green, storm- resistant homes for families living in the Lower Ninth Ward. Common Ground Relief 11 12 Legend 2124 Lamanche Street 9 AVE 16 Lower Ninth Ward Neighbors Empowering Network (NENA) 7 14 QUARTER Celebrating the cultural history of the Lower Ninth Ward, the House of Dance and Feathers features a personal collection of New Orleans social aid and pleasure clubs and Mardi Gras Indian memorabilia and artifacts. 6 AVE Lower 9th Ward Village 1001 Charbonnet Street 5 CLAIBORNE lowernine.org Rebuilding homes for the Lower Ninth Ward residents who lost their properties in Hurricanes Katrina and Rita and the ensuing levee breaches. We also operate a lamanche urban farm, where we grow organic produce to feed volunteers, donate and sell. 15 N I-10 1740 Benton Street 8 BA RR AC KS The Guerrilla Garden LEVE E 3 10 11 Our School at Blair Grocery 7 Our School at Blair Grocery (OSBG) is an independent alternative school and sustainability education center based in the Lower Ninth Ward of New Orleans. Composting more food waste than anyone in the Orleans Parish, it is a green oasis right in the heart of the Lower Ninth Ward. JA CK SO N A national environmental nonprofit, Global Green USA constructed the Holy Cross Project as a sustainable model for the development and rebuilding of New Orleans. The project’s LEED Platinum Visitors Center is open for tours Mondays and Friday, 11 am - 4pm and Saturdays, 10am 8 CAFF IN 401 Andry Street TENN ESSE E INDU STRI AL LEVE E Global Green USA Holy Cross Project AVE TUP ELO ST 5130 Chartres Street Lower 9th Ward Center for Sustainable Engagement and Development’s focus is to make sustainable, resilient decisions informed by community engagement that will help uplift our neighborhood. 2 FLOR IDA ST CSED CAN AL 1 13 Armstrong School 1800 Deslonde Street Founded on September 5, 2005, Common Ground Relief volunteers gutted nearly 3,000 houses, businesses and churches throughout the Ninth Ward in the first two years following Hurricane Katrina. 16 14 Fats Domino House 15 MLK Elementary Industrial Canal Lock 17 Mississippi River Overlook