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Part Three: A Last-Minute Rescue
Huffman specializes in bringing homes back
from the brink. When the City Commission decided to protect this National
Historic Register neighborhood in 1981, nearly one-quarter of the homes
in the neighborhood were boarded up.
Time, neglect -- and human abuse -- had taken their toll in some startling
ways.

Linden Italianate, before and after restoration.
One of the most dramatic stories in the Huffman Historic Area is that
of two homes on Huffman Avenue.
Some time in the 1930s or 1940s, the two homes, which sit on lots next
to each other, were joined and then made into a number of rental units
to create an extremely high-density apartment building. The high density
took its toll. By the late 1970s, the buildings stood vacant, gradually
heading toward collapse. In the 1980s, City inspectors had only two choices
-- demolition, or restoration.
Teamwork Saves the Homes
That's when the Huffman neighbors joined forces with the City to save
the homes. With a combination of public funds and a civic-minded loan
program with First National Bank, neighbors separated the two buildings
and have restored both of them.
They are both now occupied and being enjoyed by their new families.
This is how, on a much less dramatic scale, residents of the Huffman
Historic Area have bit by bit lifted the boards off those abandoned structures
and turned them back into homes.
 
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