Homeless Take Over Former Bank Facade on Weybosset St. in Providence’s Financial Dist

GoLocalProv News Team and Kate Nagle

Homeless Take Over Former Bank Facade on Weybosset St. in Providence’s Financial Dist

Facade on Weybosset St. in the Financial District
It was once the location of a historic bank building that was torn-down in the early 2000’s to make way for a gleaming condo-hotel tower. 

Now, a little more than a decade later what was to be a $90 million development is now home to a group homeless squatters, right in the center of Providence’s Financial District.

 

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The Decline of Downtown

Homeless people have taken up camp in the former bank facade, complete with blankets, beer bottles, sleeping bags, and books. 

Bob Burke, the owner of Providence’s Pot Au Feu restaurant, lamened the condition and decline of downtown Providence. 

"No city can ever prosper when the people upon whom we are depending for the prosperity are chased away and go elsewhere. It's very simple," said Burke. “People feel empathy for the people that are having a difficult time, but that will never justify this from an economic perspective. The only way we can reach those people is by having a robust economy. This is not the path."

Today, homeless are living in the facade
Just a parking lot away, the iconic former Bank of America Building — the Superman Building — is now in its third year of vacancy.  The Superman Building is Providence’s tallest building.

“This city is in a crisis situation -- and the Elorza Administration is failing to recognize it. The city administration is failing at giving these people help,” said former Providence Mayor and developer Joseph Paolino.

Paolino is now the owner of the lot and the facade. He purchased the property from O'Connor Capital Partners who owned the stalled residential tower project site, having acquired the bank building façade and adjacent property in 2005.

"The city has told me that because they won't enforce the anti-panhandling ordinance, that we have to find other avenues. It's embarrassing to file charges against a person that has to find a sidewalk to sleep on. It pains me to do that against a person who doesn't have a place to live.  The city is not being proactive. I don't know what it's going to take," said Paolino.

 

 

One Ten Providence - slated to be completed by 2010
One Ten Prov - What Could Have Been

The Providence National Bank Building, which was built in 1929, was demolished in 2004 to make way for what was to be Providence’s tallest building — even taller than the Superman building, but delays in permitting and failed financing led the developers to abandon the project and eventually Providence.

One Ten Providence had a number of iterations, but it was supposed to be Providence's biggest boldest development project in the city's core. Condos with price tags ranging from $500,000 to $1.5 million and a W Hotel. Today, it is a parking lot between the backside of the Turks Head Building and the Arcade.

 

 

Providence National Bank Building
The Facade Saved

In November of 2011, then-Mayor Angel Taveras and city preservationists celebrated a plan to save the facade. The site had been derelict for years blocked off by jersey barriers that blocked off the sidewalk and access to many businesses.

"My administration was pleased to work with our city's preservation community and O'Connor Capital Partners to save the historic Providence National Bank Building façade. Providence has long been a national leader in historic preservation, and our city looks and feels special for a reason - we value our history and care about our urban environment," said Mayor Taveras in 2011.

The press release from Taveras at the time of the press conference quoted David O'Brien, owner of Picture This Gallery and co-chair of a group of concerned Downcity business people, who has since closed his gallery on Weybosset due to the lack of business. And after the event, “residents and merchants gathered at the celebratory announcement and reception that followed at DownCity Restaurant.” That restaurant closed and has reopened under a new name.


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