New life comes to Davenport gateway corridor
By Alma Gaul | Monday, June 23, 2008 |
In 1964, Maurice Woods and his wife,
Lois, drove through Davenport from California on their way to the
World’s Fair in New York City.
They were enthralled with the Mississippi River and the town’s old
homes, and the couple told themselves that when they had the time
and resources, they would come back.
In August 2006, they made good on their intentions. The Woodses
purchased two homes in the city’s historic Gold Coast neighborhood
and are to close soon on a third, becoming — serendipitously — part
of a transformation on that portion of heavily traveled Gaines
Street.
The street that spills off the Centennial Bridge and into the heart
of Davenport has its share of dilapidated homes, especially in the
Gold Coast area between 5th and 9th streets. But an abandoned house
at 8th Street has been rebuilt by the nonprofit Gateway
Redevelopment Group, and five other troubled properties are being
fixed or will be soon.
Among them is 604 Gaines — a large blue, Queen Anne-style home that
has been sitting empty, forlorn and highly visible for several years
— which is being purchased by the Woodses.
“It’ll come back fast,” says Maurice Woods, who has spent a lifetime
in construction.
In the 42 years since the couple first visited Davenport, they moved
to Cripple Creek, Colo., where they made their living at general
contracting and running several small businesses, including a
general store, an antique emporium and an outfitters.
Buying and rehabbing homes is a way of life for them, he says. “I
did it all my life and my father did it all his life. By the time I
was 16, we had rebuilt and moved into 12 different houses in the Los
Angeles area.”
The Woodses are selling their properties in Colorado, making
Davenport their home. Woods, 76, says he can’t wait to get started
on the Gaines Street house, hopefully next month.
“We’re going to put up scaffolding and use about 100 tubes of
caulking,” he says. “I have a bad leg, but that doesn’t stop me.
I’ve done hard labor all my life. I’m not about to quit now.”
And he can’t say enough good things about Davenport. He ticks off a
list of features that amaze him: the “awesome” swing span of the
Government Bridge, the locks and dam, the steamboats that tie up
here and the Deere and Alcoa industrial complexes.
But most of all, he loves the people he has met. “Jack (Haberman)
has introduced us to the nicest group of people I have ever met in
my life,” Woods says. “the nicest people on earth.”
Haberman is a founder of the Gateway Redevelopment Group, which has
a goal of saving abandoned buildings in the neighborhood. He and
others are glad to have the Woodses, too — glad for new enthusiasm
and investment.
“We’re cleaning up the corridor,” Haberman says. “Gaines Street is
starting to look up.”
Roy DeWitt, a neighborhood services specialist for the city, lauds
the efforts.
“The work they (Gateway Redevelopment Group volunteers) are doing is
creating a domino effect of interest in redevelopment in that
neighborhood. The interest is spreading, and that is the important
thing,” he adds.
“The neighborhood is more stable than it was even a year ago. Crime
is under control. There is positive change.”
Alma Gaul can be contacted at (563) 383-2324 or
agaul@qctimes.com.
Other properties slated for fix-up
Other properties that are part of the Gaines Street improvement
story, include:
- 514 Gaines — This is a circa-1890-1910 house that was built as an
upstairs/downstairs duplex. When it came up for sale last year,
neighborhood resident Duane Timm purchased it because he was “tired
of the problems going on there.” The home is undergoing restoration.
- 705-711 Gaines — This property was built in 1905 as four
townhouses designed by the regionally known architectural firm of
Clausen & Clausen.
In time, the building was converted to eight apartments, and it is
now vacant and boarded-up after problems with garbage and criminal
activity that came to a head last fall.
Jack Haberman and his wife, Marion Meginnis, expect to buy the
property this summer and return it to four units.
Bill Boom, a neighborhood resident and the city’s 3rd Ward alderman,
says the building “has, for quite a while, been a source of
consternation for people in the neighborhood,” so he is happy to
hear of its impending purchase.
- 730-732 Gaines — This is the Civil War-era Christian Jipp grocery
store and attached house that the Gateway group is converting into
an architectural salvage shop/museum/meeting area and apartment.
Work has been slow but steady since those efforts began in 1997. The
building is stabilized and work should begin soon on the apartment.
- 822 Gaines — This slated-for-demolition home has been completely
rebuilt; see the story about it in today’s Salute section.
- 902 Gaines — This circa-1909 building was constructed as a saloon
with upstairs apartments, and it has been a bar/private club for
most of its history.
The nonprofit Rebuilding Together Quad-Cities organization is
helping transform the building into a home for Darius Moore Sr., a
disabled Navy veteran, and his family, with the help of a $20,000
Heroes at Home grant from Sears Holding Corp.
Work should be finished in two weeks, says Rod Jennings, the
executive director of Rebuilding Together.
Historic lighting
In addition to fixing up properties, there is a move afoot to
replace the existing streetlights along Gaines Street with
energy-efficient period lighting.
The project is being studied by the Edmund Gaines Group, which was
begun years ago as a neighborhood effort to plant flowers along the
street’s boulevards but is operating now under the 3rd Ward Action
Team headed by Alderman Bill Boom.
Other groups are involved in the effort as well, including
DavenportOne and St. Ambrose University, which are looking at
supporting the lighting effort from the Centennial Bridge all the
way to Locust Street, said PJ Slobojan of the Gaines Group.