I'd like to give you a brief description of some of Orangeville's surroundings. It may not look like much now but wait 5 or 10 years. To the south and west are the distressed neighborhoods of Ellwood Park/Monument, McEldery Park, Biddle Street all of which are poised to make a turnaround after the Johns Hopkins Biotech Park in neighboring Middle East. To the north is the former Claremont/Freedom Public Housing communities and the future Orchard Ridge. Also is the former public housing project and present co op Armistead Gardens and Belair Edison.
The biggest indicator of Orangeville's promising future is the multi-modal transportation center. Transit Oriented development is where it's at these days. The old industrial Orangeville as we know it will soon be bought up and replaced with new high density mixed income mixed use development. Baltimore's regional transit plan calls for the "Red Line" Security Square Mall to Dunalk and all points in between and the Purple Line (existing MARC) the number of people passing through Orangeville on any given weekday is staggering. Since this area has always been industrial making it residential can bring population growth to a city that has lost 300,000 people over the past 50 years and new schools with it.