UPDATE (2 p.m. July 25)— Baltimore County spokeswoman Ellen Kobler confirmed this morning that a permit to raze the cabin was issued by the county on June 29.
A backhoe and a roll-off trash bin sit outside a boarded up cabin near the entrance to Lillian Holt Park and Center for the Arts in the Elmwood neighborhood.
The building, used for storage and meeting space for performers and volunteers, was set to be torn down by Baltimore County, but now the future of the 80-year-old cabin is uncertain.
Baltimore County spokeswoman Ellen Kobler told Patch Tuesday morning that a final decision about razing the cabin had yet to be made.
"The county executive is aware of the community interest in the building," Kobler said. "The current status is that we're boarding it up and stabilizing the building. The bottom line is no decision has been made yet."
Carol Eldringhoff, a community member who serves as an officer for the Overlea-Fullerton Recreation Council and as the chairperson for programs at the Holt Center for the Arts, has been leading the charge to ensure that the cabin is not demolished.
Early last week, Eldringhoff said that she arrived at the park to find a 30 cubic yard roll-off dumpster in the parking lot, a backhoe parked outside of the building atop a garden planted by children in a park program, and the electric meter removed from cabin.
"I work in construction, so this is not my first rodeo," Eldringhoff said. "Those things all add up to 'the building's going to be demolished'.
The chain of events that led up to the current situation began a year ago, Eldringhoff said.
"We learned last year that the cabin had sustained some damage from carpenter bees," Eldringhoff said. "We reported it to the county's property management and to the community supervisor for parks and rec."
"The county refused to mitigate the carpenter bee damage… it’s gone on for over a year and only gotten worse. If they had, we wouldn't be having this conversation," she said. "If you ignore a problem it's just going to get bigger and bigger."
Kobler explained that the estimated cost to rehabilitate the cabin is around $150,000 and includes the removal of asbestos and lead paint on the property.
"We are evaluating the structure and our options," she said. "It's a purely pragmatic decision based on—among other things—the expenditure of taxpayer money. The final decision will be made by the county administrative officer [Fred Homan]."
"We've been granted a stay of execution for now," Eldringhoff said.
She explained that a county official had told her the property was scheduled for demolition last Wednesday and that a permit to raze the structure had been approved by the county. She was able to provide a what she said was a Baltimore County permit number.
"I spoke to George Klunk, the head of the county's property management, and he told me it's slated for demolition," she said.
Kobler, for her part, was unable to confirm or deny whether or not a permit to raze the structure had been granted even after being provided Tuesday afternoon.
There are a total of 5 cabins on the Lilian Holt park property—two are rented out by the county to individuals; the cabin near the park's entrance was used to store materials for the art programs, which have since been moved by the county to another building.
"The history of the cabins on the property is that during the depression, Mrs. Holt—she was Mrs. McCormick then—was in her 40's and not married. Her father was concerned with how she would support herself when he died so the cabins were built on the property as an income source for her in her old age and spinsterhood," Eldringhoff said. "So it's important for the historic value."
Eldringhoff said that the building, which is on the register of historic places, is not on the Baltimore County landmarks list and is not currently subject to protection as a result.
"I really believe that if I hadn’t noticed the machinery on Tuesday the 17, the building would have been gone by now. They have the razing permit they don’t need anything else," she said.
At the very least, the county should have the courtesy and PR to travel the proper channels. The parks and rec in overlea has never seemed to function in a well-oiled manner and now the community is paying the price for decades of maintenance neglect.
I don't live in your community, but I can't see my tax dollars being wasted to preserve something that has no real historical significance.
http://i.imgur.com/oeM0u.jpg And again, what it looks like today: http://imgur.com/GKcph Oh what a difference 11 years and $180,000 in renovations can make huh?! This cabin was thoroughly renovated in 2005. These renovations included exterior stabilization, and significant interior upgrades which included but were not limited to basement waterproofing, and the addition of central air. If we are going to wasting talk tax dollars here... I feel the county's property management is has some questions to answer and may be the true "waste". Why was the damage to the cabin not address when it was first reported? Why was our county asset management staff so ineffective, and failed to protect an asset over the course of a which a significant amount of money was invested to maintain. County parks are important to all of our communities and we are lucky to have them. Mrs. Holt realized this, and donated this property to be maintained and enjoyed by our community. I understand that times are tough, and that most local governments are strapped for funds, I only wish the county had gotten our community involved before it got this far. Sometimes it takes a village! And M. Sullivan, you make plenty of great points, but cabin razing or not, please take the time to checkout this park sometime. It's a little slice of heaven in our neighborhood. You won't be disappointed!
Through a serie of poor choices-the park program has become a joke. The neighborhood has had to watch-painfully-while people who do not have the best in mind for the park make devastating choices. The community HAS spoken out and HAVE NOT been listened to. Instead, those responsible for ruining Holt Park have gotten promotions and grants--ironically--to fix up and preserve the cabins. The park does have its historial purpose of the founders of Baltimore County. The Holts did do amazing things for Baltimore, and their devotion to the arts was the entire reason the park was created. Lillian Holt left the property in the TRUSTED hands of the county--and left it for the community to enjoy. INSTEAD--people who come to the park to enjoy it for artful purposes are thrown out. Programs are designed to satisfy a requirement-instead of actually building the community. It is a shame what has happened there. It went from being a place that tied the community together to a place that breaks the heart of that community. This cabin in not the first thing that has happened without the community's say. It has been made incredibly clear that what the surrounding community wants does not matter.
I totally respect your desire for tax money to be spent properly. But you might want to look into the fact that your tax money is being spent on a crew of men sitting in their trucks in the parking lot of Holt Park. They also spend a few days pushing mulch around or mowing the grass three times a week. Sometimes they just bang their car doors loudly and swear a lot. Really, no one really knows what they do, but they are always there. Tax dollars at work!