In 2001, Arth was a homebuilder in Santa
Barbara, California. But unlike a typical homebuilder, he has a fine arts
background. He is an author. He is a longtime student of city planning. He
is a proponent of the New Urbanism and New Pedestrianism movements that
are correcting many of the design flaws inherent in many American cities
and towns.
Arth was in the throes of writing a book
titled "The Labors of Hercules: Modern Solutions to 12 Herculean
Problems," so he is intimately familiar with the revered god's
batting average against all odds. He is equally familiar with the complex
problems of contemporary society. Among the chapters in his book are
narratives on urbanism, transportation and drugs, each posing great
challenges to city governments and the residents they serve.
His passion for the elusive sense of
community lacking in most communities took Arth on a "field
trip" to see places that have invested in planning and design to
avoid or mitigate these and other problems. These communities were created
or restored under the influence of the New Urbanism and Smart Growth
movements. What he saw in Celebration, Charleston, Beaufort, Savannah and
Seaside moved him profoundly. He began thinking about creating a
neighborhood that would emulate the communities he studied and visited.
In the course of his studies, Arth came
across an online real estate listing by Maggi Hall, a DeLand real estate
agent and preservationist. She invited Arth to purchase some core
buildings in an area whose character and sense of community had given way
to decay and crime. The houses in the area date to the period between 1906
and World War II. She had hoped he would take an interest in the area and
generate discussions about what to do with the neighborhood which, by all
accounts, had hit rock bottom.
Arth visited DeLand and saw a neighborhood
that had multiple nicknames including Cracktown, Crack Alley, The Bottom,
Hell, The End and others. The two-block area had a number of crack houses.
Even the neighborhood convenience store was a crack house where dealers
and users met, bought and sold drugs and paraphernalia.
"It was horrifying to see and chilling
to realize that this slice of hell flourished just a couple blocks away
from government and shopping areas and city neighborhoods populated by
families," said Arth. "It seemed obvious the cancer not only was
malignant, but also surely would spread, consuming more and more of this
charming old Florida rural city."
Arth saw something beyond the danger and
horror that defined the neighborhood. He could see interesting
architecture beneath the neglect and decay. He could see a city
neighborhood whose basic layout could be restored and modified as a
catalyst to comfort, safety and security, eliminating the fear, danger and
paranoia that prevailed. But it couldn't be done simply by restoring a
couple of houses. It would require seizing the entire neighborhood and
giving new life to dozens of buildings, moving junkies, drug traffickers
and criminals out, and convincing families and professionals to move in.
It was a huge challenge - a Herculean challenge.
How did he begin? He identified two
buildings on E. Voorhis Avenue that were condemned flop houses. The city
advised him that back taxes of $16,000 were owed on the buildings as was
$302,000 in building code violation fines.
The houses were scheduled for demolition, but City Manager Mike Abels told
Arth that for $950 the city would board up the houses, delay demolition
and give him six months to purchase the buildings. Arth took the deal.
Arth and his wife, Maya, sold their
California home (at a loss), and drove across the nation, a nine-day
journey punctuated by six breakdowns. The day after they arrived, he sent
Maya, who was pregnant with their first child, to live in her native
Bulgaria for two months while he got
situated. On the last day of the city's
six-month extension on the two houses Arth wanted to buy, he cobbled
together $16,000 and bought them for back taxes. The city forgave the
building code violations. He then began work on the houses, while sizing
up the entire neighborhood, walking the streets and inviting drug addicts
and dealers to leave. They did.
The neighborhood convenience store
re-emerged as a bona fide convenience store with security cameras, a no
loitering policy and a police edict assuring the store would be run
henceforth as a legitimate business.
The exhaustive work began on the two homes
Arth purchased. During this time, Arth lived in another decaying house.
The owner simply flipped him the keys. No heat. No air. No class. But no
rent either. Arth later bought the house and restored it.
Today the structure is home to the Arth
family, including Sophie, 18 months. Just a few steps across the street is
Arth's office.
Over the past two years, Arth has purchased
19 structures representing some 28 homes including houses, duplexes and
one four-unit apartment building. He has relied on private lenders for
mortgages. Banks weren't interested.
By now, others have purchased buildings,
including Maggi Hall, who bought several houses that
anchor the southwest corner of The Garden
District. Attorney Lisa Starke has purchased land and plans to build an
office that will fit in nicely with the neighborhood restoration. A couple
is considering opening a gourmet store and restaurant in the neighborhood.
There soon will be a neighborhood newspaper, the Garden District Gazette,
that will be edited by Ramona Whaley, who also manages The Art in the
Garden Gallery, which exhibits Arth's artwork and photography.
The drug addicts and dealers have vacated
and respectable tenants have moved in. Among them are some semi-retired
people, young families, single professional women, a journalist and a
photographer.
The initial work is centered in the core
area of the Garden District, near S. Amelia and E. Voorhis avenues. As
more people respond to the concept of a "garden district,"
restorations will reach from S. Amelia and S. Alabama avenues and from E.
Howry and E. Euclid avenues.
In addition to the physical changes in the
neighborhood, there is a genuine neighborly aura. As Arth walks through
the neighborhood, narrating its evolution along the way and pausing here
and there to pick up litter, he is greeted warmly by residents, each of
whom knows him by name - a testimony to his accomplishment and the notion
that one man can make a difference.