
Edmondson Village's demographics have always been driven by outside  forces. First it was the advent of James Keelty's "Daylight Row Houses"  which features a window in every room. This brought Baltimore's White  Middle Class Christians and Catholics to Edmondson Village. Then came  blockbusting, Real Estate agents scared off Whites by the thousands by  planting Black Families on stable blocks and in no time at all, Edmodson  Village went from completely White to completely Black. Then came the  Drug Trade and Public Housing High Rises.   
 
 
The Public Housing High Rises were supposed to solve and  consolidate the urban ills and decay, instead, it expanded them and made  them worse. Although Edmodson Village didn't ever have Public Housing  High Rises but some of the woes caused by them and the drug trade  crossed into Edmondson Village. More recently, long time Homeowners have  aged and as a result are putting their houses up for sale and looming  threat of slum lords buying them and renting them out to families who  don't care for their houses the way Homeowners do.   
  
Today, outside forces over the next 10-20 years will reshape the  demographics of Edmondson Village. On either side of the Neighborhood,  major redevelopment initiatives or beginning to take place or are on the  books to take place. In Uplands, a large shuttered Public Housing  Development has been torn down. In its place will be roughly 1646 units  of mixed style and mixed income housing. This will be a transformation  area between the lower density Neighborhoods of Ten Hills and Hunting  Ridge and the higher density Neighborhoods of Edmondson Village and  Allendale. 
    
 
East of Edmondson Village, redevelopment is also in the air. It's  not quite as apparent as Uplands seeing as nothing has been torn down  recently. But make no mistakes, the West Baltimore MARC Station  Redevelopment is raring to go full speed ahead. In addition to Edmondson  Village the redevelopment of the West Baltimore MARC may finally lead  to addressing the Road to Nowhere. The West Baltimore MARC Station, now  nothing more than surface lots will be developed into high density TOD  with Offices, Retail, and Residential. Since the existing surrounding  Neighborhoods (Not Edmondson Village) are in such bad shape,  redevelopment will extend beyond the boundaries of the West Baltimore  MARC Parking Lots.
    
 
Finally, running right through Edmondson Village will be the Red  Line. It will span from Medicare/Medicaid Office Complex to Bayview  crossing the existing West Baltimore MARC Station and a new  East Baltimore MARC Station to be created in Orangeville. Although it is  poised to relieve traffic congestion along Edmondson Avenue with fewer  cars driving on it, it is also poised, to be rammed down Edmondson  Avenue just like the Light Rail is along Howard St. Not only will this  destroy Edmondson Avenue's beautiful new landscaped median but it will  make traffic worse! This is an SOS call to the MTA; Tunnel the Red  Line down Edmondson Avenue!
    
 
So where does this leave Edmondson Village? After it's in the  middle of all this redevelopment. How will it change? Will it change at  all? Should there be intervention to initiate change? I'm going with the  third option, after all, if I wasn't interested in change for Edmondson  Village, Would I be writing this post? The vast majority of Edmondson  Village's housing stock is in great shape and needs no intervention.  What does need to happen is when a house goes up on the Market there  should be a monitoring agency presumably an HOA to make sure the  Homeownership Rate stays high and flippers and slumlords are kept out. 
    
 
Now there is a little room for redevelopment in Edmondson Village.  First, at the northern end of the Neighborhood lies the Wildwood Gardens  Apartment Complex. Wildwood Gardens is a suburban style garden  Apartment Complex that is suffering from poor maintenance and is showing  its age. New Town Homes would make a perfect replacement as that's what  leads up to them on Woodington Road and Wildwood Parkway. The new homes  will take advantage of its views of Leakin Park and will be named  "Leakin Overlook at Edmondson Village." In what I'm calling a "density  exchange" the row homes along Edmondson Avenue will be demolished and  Mixed Income Apartment/Condo Buildings will go in their place. These  buildings will connect Uplands to the West Baltimore MARC Station as  they will cover that whole distance. Behind the shopping Center is a  vacant spot that can make for additional Town Homes as well. 
    
 
Speaking of Edmondson Avenue, it's time that it underwent a  makeover. From the County Line to the West Baltimore MARC Station  it should undergo sidewalk construction, new traffic signals  and pedestrian "countdown signals", repavement, and crosswalk  restriping. New benches and plantings will also flank Edmondson Avenue.  It may work in Edmondson Avenue's favor to narrow it to four lanes  instead of six. The fifth and sixth lanes could work as metered diagonal  parking spaces like those found on the Avenue in Hampden. 
    

Well it's plain to see that outside forces have driven  Edmondson Village in the past and have continued to do so in the present  and are poised to do so in the future.