The neighborhood was, as Michelle Jordan says frankly, “on the brink.” Crime was up. Housing prices were down. Neighborhood vitality was down even further.
But through strategy and investment, a transformation is taking place.
“We see Terry Heights as a neighborhood on the comeback,” says Jordan, Planning Director for the City of Huntsville.
The neighborhood, bordered by Holmes Ave., University Ave. and Pulaski Pike, just west of North Memorial Parkway, has had “challenges,” to use Jordan’s word. The average family income was $22,000, some $30,000 below the City’s average. Only 45 percent of the homes were owner-occupied. The neighborhood was aging.
That’s beginning to change.
“Investing in Terry Heights has resulted in homeownership, increased home values, overall neighborhood stabilization, a decrease in crime and a return of a safe neighborhood,” Jordan says.
Here’s how it’s happened:
Sonnie Hereford School
The courage of Dr. Sonnie Hereford III is part of Huntsville’s lore. In 1963, he enrolled his son Sonnie IV into Fifth Street Elementary and he became one of the first four black children entering a previously all-white public school
The family’s legacy is celebrated by the Sonnie Hereford Elementary School , which opened in 2016.
Investing in Terry Heights has resulted in overall neighborhood stabilization.” — Michelle Jordan
“It’s a beautiful school,” Jordan says. “It’s the centerpiece of the neighborhood.”
The school’s construction was part of a massive capital project by Huntsville City Schools that has revitalized a number of neighborhoods throughout the city. More specific to Terry Heights, it was part of a $25 million investment of public funds that has gone toward the neighborhood.
New Housing Built
Some 40 new single-family homes have been built in Terry Heights over the past five years through federal community development block grants, distributed through the City via organizations like Family Services Center .
The average sale price is $72,900 – higher than the neighborhood average – and all the homes were sold prior to construction, according to Jordan.
“There had been no new construction since the late ’70s or early ’80s,” she says “We’ve revived that. Our hope is private developers will come in and flood the market.”