ANNAPOLIS, MD—Governor Wes Moore today announced $50.8 million in awards through the Baltimore Vacants Reinvestment Initiative to revitalize Baltimore City’s neighborhoods by reducing the number of vacant buildings across the city. The 43 awards tap $50 million committed to the program in the State’s Fiscal Year 2025 budget—a historic acceleration of funding to the department to rehabilitate vacant properties—clearing the way for affordable housing, new green space and mixed-use developments.
“In order for it to be Maryland’s decade, it has to be Baltimore’s time,” said Gov. Moore. “This historic investment through the Baltimore Vacants Reinvestment Initiative will transform the City of Baltimore by addressing vacancy brick by brick and block by block.”
The Baltimore Vacants Reinvestment Initiative is one of the Maryland Department of Housing and Community Development’s seven State Revitalization Programs that provides funding to public, private and nonprofit partners in Baltimore City. Established in October by executive order, the initiative taps key community, corporate, philanthropic and government leaders to leverage targeted investments to move at least 5,000 vacant properties into homeownership or other positive outcomes, such as demolition and stabilization, between Fiscal Year 2025 to Fiscal Year 2029.
“The $50.8 million in funding through the Baltimore Vacants Reinvestment Initiative is a key component of the Moore-Miller Administration’s plan to build a stronger Baltimore by converting the city’s vacant buildings into new homes and lovable spaces,” said Maryland Department of Housing and Community Development Secretary Jake Day. “This funding will allow our local government and non-profit partners the ability to create stronger neighborhoods by increasing home ownership, adding more commercial space and creating new public spaces to make Baltimore better.”
Funding will go directly to awardees to support identified projects, including:
- Baltimore City Department of Housing and Community Development, awarded $20 million to accelerate the acquisition of properties for demolition, stabilization and rehabilitation and reuse.
- Maryland Stadium Authority, awarded $9 million to support demolition, stabilization and related activities for vacant and abandoned properties in priority neighborhood target areas through the expanded partnership between the Maryland Department of Housing and Community Development and the City of Baltimore.
- Druid Hill Partnership Inc., awarded a combined $2.15 million for the stabilization and rehabilitation of several residential properties near Druid Hill Park, Reservoir Hill, West North Avenue and Penn North neighborhoods.
- Neighborhood Impact Investment Fund, Inc., awarded $1.5 million to support acquisition, demolition, infrastructure and/or design for the next phase of Reservoir Square on West North Avenue, which will include a nearby grocery store, neighborhood retail, and mixed-income apartments and parking.
- Southeast Community Development Corporation, awarded $1.5 million for acquisition and stabilization of the Crown Cork & Seal site on Eastern Avenue in advance of a large-scale rehabilitation effort for mixed-use live and work artist use.
A complete list of awardees is available on the DHCD website.
“The State’s BVRI program is integral to achieving Mayor Scott’s goal of restoring vibrant and sustainable neighborhoods throughout the city,” said Baltimore City Housing Commissioner Alice Kennedy. “The BVRI funds directly support the City’s $3 billion plan to reduce vacant properties, and with this support, we can continue and expand our work to accomplish whole block outcomes and build stronger, more inclusive communities.”
More information about the Baltimore Vacants Reinvestment Initiative and Baltimore Vacants Reinvestment Council can be found on the department’s website.
Lipstick on a pig. Just like Day tried to revitalize downtown Salisbury. No one is going to go if you don’t clean up the drugs and the crime. Spend the money on that 1st, and businesses will come back. For a state that has a budget problem, I’d think this money would be better spent elsewhere.
Baltimore is no longer Charm City! It is now Charmless City. No one will live there so what’s the use in rehabbing those vacant houses in the slums? Baltimore is a dump and will only get worse.
I’ve seen this happen before. Build new subsided housing, fill them with tenants, and watch them get torn to Hell. A real waste of tax payers money
In continuance of systemic racism!
This will be good housing for the Latino gangs
So the definition of insanity is to do the same thing and expect a different outcome. Really, look around, study your history. This has been done ad nauseum and never works. More wasteful spending from a wasteful demon crat government
state’s broke and this loser keeps spending. throwing good money after bad! what’s wrong with the people in this state that they elect such a worthless pos?