This photo was taken last August, before the tenants were evicted. There was a larger wood-frame structure on the corner, a long brick structure on the Wessyngton lot, and in between a small wood-frame building (attached to the larger one) that looked too small for someone to live in (but I'm pretty sure someone did).
By November, the buildings were empty and boarded up.
By mid-May, when I took the pictures below, some of the erosion control fencing was in place and a large piece of equipment with a big shovel on the end was in place. It was clear that demolition would begin soon.
On May 19, the demolition began. That first day, the white frame structure was reduced to a large pile of rubble.
By the weekend, the corner lot was cleared off and leveled, and demolition of the brick building was well underway. It looked like it had been bombed, without the fire.
Two weeks later, there was only a little rubble left from the brick building. Mostly, there was a big hole.
By the following week, the rubble was pretty much gone, and all that was left of the brick building was the far wall, which was serving as a retaining wall for the property behind the lot.
The stairs remained at the corner lot, even though there no longer was anything at the top of them except for an empty lot.
A number of beautiful trees have been left. With all the excavation around them, I don't know if they will survive, but it is encouraging that they aren't marked with fluorescent orange "X"'s and that there is no sign notifying neighbors that trees are about to be removed.
I was out of town the next week, but when I came back I was surprised to see a brand new sidewalk, extending the existing sidewalk along Wessyngton to the edge of the property.
Between kids being home and travel for work, I have not had time to attend any of the neighborhood meetings where I might have learned what is planned for the site. We do know that the two lots have been or will be subdivided into three -- the Georgia Supreme Court has ruled that the City has to subdivide the property -- and that it will remain zoned for single-family homes. But we don't know what will be built.
Myself, I'm not so worried about what the houses look like. I'm more concerned about who will buy the houses and be our neighbors. I'm hoping for the kind of neighbors who will pick up your mail or or newspaper if you are out of town for a few days and maybe even feed your cat and definitely call 911 if guys in an unmarked truck show up and start loading up your stuff.
But of course that's still some ways away. In the meantime, I'll take it as a good sign that there's a new sidewalk and pretty effective erosion control measures in place. We'll see what happens.
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