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April 18, 2022

Overtown residents want to reclaim a destructive I-95

The Florida Department of Transportation is collaborating with the city of Miami to create The Underdeck, a linear park under the soon-to-be reconstructed I-395. Although the challenge of planning a major area of recreation in the heart of the city is itself no walk in the park, the biggest controversy surrounds what may come off as an unexpected dilemma: the project’s name.

  • Source

    Miami Times

Residents of Overtown, where The Underdeck will begin near Gibson Park, want to reclaim the space where their neighborhood was once divided and destroyed by the original construction of the I-95 highway in the 1960s. But others are hesitant to attribute The Underdeck solely to Overtown when it will ultimately extend across the Florida East Coast Railway tracks toward Biscayne Bay, reaching key cultural institutions like the Adrienne Arsht Center for the Performing Arts.

The Underdeck committee, tasked with engaging and advocating on behalf of residents and stakeholders while creating its own plan for the park, has been hosting community meetings to discuss the branding process. During the first half of March, it held four virtual discussions to introduce the names it has come up with.

The names are divided into three groups. Group one focuses on “paying homage to Overtown and looking toward a connected future for Miami,” including names like “Towners Mile” and “Heritage Trail.” Group two vows to “[celebrate] the melding of people, neighborhoods and cultures that make up the rich fabric of Miami,” including names such as “Soul Mile” and “Legends Place.” Group three “[calls] for reconnection and coming together in the face of what the overpass has separated,” displaying names which emphasize the word “unity.”

Still, of the 15 suggestions that have been presented, only one references Overtown by name. For Overtown resident and business owner Emmanuel Washington, that’s a mistake.

“For the most part, I-395 and I-95 – the biggest community that it affected, physically, economically, spiritually and mentally, was the Overtown area, so to not even mention the name Overtown in the name, I think, would be a disservice to our community,” he said.

Washington has attended meetings both in person and virtually to express his opinions on the entire planning process. There, he’s introduced his personal name of choice: the “Overtown Renaissance Heritage Trail.”

Besides hosting monthly community meetings to gather feedback, The Underdeck committee also conducted a survey – available up until March 30 – to allow residents to choose from one of the 15 names or suggest their own. The committee now must gather those results and deliberate before updating the public on its next moves.

The next community meetings will be held April 19 and April 20 in Overtown and the Biscayne corridor, although exact locations have yet to be decided. The focus of the meetings will be to discuss finances, particularly where additional funding for the project can be extracted.

Read More Via Miamitimesonline.com

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