Sidney's Salon w/ Marjy Stagmeier author of _Blighted_

Sidney's Salon w/ Marjy Stagmeier author of _Blighted_

Join us for a presentation with the author of _Blighted: A Story of People, Politics, and an American Housing Miracle_

By Historic Macon Foundation

Date and time

Thursday, May 15 · 5:30 - 7:30pm EDT

Location

Booker T. Washington Community Center

401 Monroe Street Macon, GA 31201

Agenda

5:30 AM

Reception

6:00 PM

Presentation

About this event

  • Event lasts 2 hours

Join Historic Macon and for a presentation given by affordable housing solutionist Marjy Stagmeier, author of Blighted: A Story of People, Politics, and an American Housing Miracle. We will serve light refreshments at 5:30 and the presentation will begin at 6.

Blighted is a powerful narrative about the decades-long decay and remarkable two-year reinvention of Summerdale, an aging apartment community located in one of Atlanta’s grittiest corridors. From burnt-out, mold-infested buildings to traumatized classrooms, Blighted unfolds in the voices of ruthless drug dealers, phantom tenants, fearless landlords, the working poor, educators, and visionary local leaders.

After purchasing the property from an absentee overseas owner, Marjy Stagmeier and her partners methodically tackled the crisis festering inside the gated 244-unit apartment property. Two years of relentless work later, Stagmeier reveals how the team that she led built community from chaos. Through on-the-ground, in-the-moment interviews with a wide range of stakeholders, Stagmeier demonstrates how marginalized housing perpetuates intergenerational poverty and the collapse of nearby public schools while showing the multifaceted challenges of improving dire living conditions.

Blighted offers a unique insider perspective of the political, human, and economic challenges of delivering equitable housing in a market fueled by inflationary prices, insatiable demand, and competing and often dubious agendas. Summerdale’s success is a bright model of how affordable housing, education, healthcare, and social capital can interconnect to build vibrant, sustainable communities—affordable housing communities, nearby schools, and the community at large. From there, kids, families, working people, and neighborhoods can thrive.

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