A day after voters approved a crucial ballot question for the overhaul of Baltimore’s Inner Harbor, opponents reiterated their plans to keep fighting.
Protect Our Parks, the coalition that encouraged residents to vote “F-No” on Question F, said in a statement that it plans to block residential towers from being built on along the Inner Harbor promenade through its own appeal to voters — two years from now.
MCB Real Estate, which owns and operates Harborplace, wants to raze the retail pavilions, build five new buildings and radically change the surrounding streetscape. The plan, which relies on a hypothetical mix of taxpayer money and private financing, is estimated to cost roughly $900 million.
Click here to read the rest of the article written by Giacomo Bologna over at The Baltimore Banner