90.7 Charlotte 93.7 Southern Pines 90.3 Hickory 106.1 Laurinburg
Almost 15 years ago, Charlotte’s civic leaders and neighborhood activists created the Renaissance West Community Initiative with the vision of revitalizing a west Charlotte neighborhood through an education village approach. This initiative is part of a national movement — and represents one of Charlotte's most ambitious efforts to break the cycle of poverty.

Here’s how Charlotte’s Renaissance West project has evolved

Boulevard Homes public housing in 2000.

A timeline of the Renaissance West project:

1970

  • Boulevard Homes public housing opens on West Boulevard, just east of Charlotte’s airport.

2007

  • Charlotte Housing Authority (now Inlivian) identifies Boulevard Homes as its most dilapidated and troubled property.

2009

  • Citing conditions that are beyond repair and dragging down the neighborhood, the Housing Authority applies for a grant from the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development to tear down Boulevard Homes and replace it with mixed income housing and a cradle-to-career support system.
  • HUD approves demolition of Boulevard Homes. Residents are given the option to move to other public housing or to receive Section 8 vouchers for subsidized rentals elsewhere.
  • The Charlotte-Mecklenburg school board votes to build a new K-8 school on West Boulevard to be part of the Boulevard Homes replacement project.

2010

  • HUD awards the Housing Authority a $20.9 million Hope VI grant for a project that includes mixed-income housing and an education village.

2012

  • Construction begins on Renaissance West housing for senior citizens.
  • The Housing Authority creates an advisory board to discuss the education aspects of the plan.

2013

Renaissance West Community Initiative office.
Ann Doss Helms

  • Renaissance West Community Initiative is incorporated and hires Laura Yates Clark as CEO.
  • Renaissance West Community Initiative becomes part of the Atlanta-based Purpose Built Communities network.
  • Residents begin moving into senior housing.
  • Construction begins on mixed-income housing for families.
  • Voters approve a Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools bond package that includes $30 million for a school at Renaissance West.

2014

  • Residents begin moving into mixed-income housing.

2016

  • Mixed-income housing is completed.
  • William “Mack” McDonald is hired as Renaissance West Community Initiative’s second CEO.

2017

Renaissance West STEAM Academy
Ann Doss Helms

  •  Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools opens Renaissance West STEAM Academy, a preK-8 school.
  • United Way of Greater Charlotte, now headed by Laura Yates Clark, launches a United Neighborhoods program that will provide long-term funding and support to Renaissance West and other neighborhood-based revitalization projects.

2018

  • Howard Levine Child Development Center opens at Renaissance West.
  • Renaissance West STEAM Academy gets its first school performance grade. Based on student test scores it’s rated F and put on the state’s low-performing list.

2019

  • Renaissance West STEAM Academy is again rated F and low performing.

2020

  • COVID-19 pandemic forces schools into remote learning; North Carolina suspends testing and school performance grades.
  • Howard Levine Child Development Center closes temporarily.

2021

  • Child Development Center reopens under new management.
  • In-person classes and state testing resume but the state issues no performance grades.

2022

  • North Carolina resumes performance grades. Renaissance West gets an F based on low proficiency but is removed from the low-performing list because of significant growth.

2023

  • CMS unveils plans to turn Renaissance West STEAM Academy into a middle school and relocate the preK-5 students at an unspecified date.
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Email
Ann Doss Helms has covered education in the Charlotte area for over 20 years, first at The Charlotte Observer and then at WFAE. Reach her at ahelms@wfae.org or 704-926-3859.