Partnership to investigate the status of Marlton Square

Intersections:  The South Los Angeles Report is teaming up with LeimertParkBeat.com to embark upon an investigative report on the status of the Marlton Square/Santa Barbara Plaza, the 20-acre shopping center that lies vacant and in shambles. Fifty million dollars has been attached to this debacle and millions spent, but nothing has improved.  We hope to find out why with your help.

Click here to see a video of the Marlton Square area.

Eddie North-Hager, creator of LeimertParkBeat.com, is spearheading this reporting investigation in collaboration with The South LA Report and Spot.Us, a crowd funded investigative news site. 

 

 

 

How to Help


The Marlton Square project is a joint effort between student reporters at USC’s Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism and local residents.  How to help:

* Contribute time and help with reporting the story.  Contact The South L.A. Report

* Contribute money to help cover costs and pay community members.  Log onto Spot.Us to donate.

ANY amount is appreciated.

 

The Saga of Marlton Square
By Eddie North-Hager

Leimert Park is the Soul of Los Angeles, an African American cultural center within the city filled with cafes, shops and music. Near it, Baldwin Hills is the high-class star of the BET Network’s successful foray into reality TV.

In between these two L.A. neighborhoods is an embarrassment no one wants to talk about - Marlton Square, aka Santa Barbara Plaza.

Marlton Square
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The 20-acre shopping center, apparently already in disrepair in the early 90s, was slowly killed as the city attempted to buy it, then sell it to a private firm to redevelop. First there was talk of working with legend Magic Johnson. Then football star Keyshawn Johnson dropped out. Then a check-bouncing, politically-connected developer became the city’s partner.

Today all the buildings, dozens of storefronts with a mammoth parking lot in the middle, are still there—crumbling. All but a few shops are boarded up and waiting for the bulldozer that never comes. Oh, there is one new building—a multi-story nursing home—but it’s never been occupied. The deserted center has hurt business strips nearby, including the adjacent Crenshaw Mall, attracting criminal elements and being blamed for lowering property values. image

And $50 million later, L.A. officials are back to square one with their bombed-out plan, holding back a community’s promise.

The numbers are murky, but it’s been reported there was $43 million in government subsidies tied to the project and that at least $15 million of that has been lost, plus an additional $30 million in private funds were spent.

Most of the political players are still around as the next developer in line, current owners of the adjacent Crenshaw Mall, courts city officials. What will happen?
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The story of Marlton Square’s demise and future will be completed in August

 

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