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Stop Six Community Commemorates Babers Manor Groundbreaking

FORT WORTH, Texas – The Stop Six community, Fort Worth city and civic leaders, developers and supporters joined Fort Worth Housing Solutions to celebrate the groundbreaking of Babers Manor on Aug. 28 at the Eastside Boys & Girls Club of Greater Tarrant County.

Also in attendance were family members of Clarence Donald Babers, the namesake of the planned 80-unit community who was instrumental in bringing HUD funding to Stop Six.

“In the years I go to know Mr. Babers working alongside our Mayor Pro Tem Gyna Bivens, I was struck by his tenacity for change, the recognition that public housing would be different and that you could completely transform communities with the right level of public-private partnership,” Fort Worth Mayor Mattie Parker said. “And that’s what this groundbreaking really represents.”

Babers Manor, which will include townhome and garden apartments on Ramey Avenue between S. Hughes Ave and S. Edgewood Terrace​, joins current Stop Six Choice Neighborhood Initiative developments Cowan Place Senior Living and Hughes House, which is under construction.

Bivens, who grew up in Stop Six and whose district includes Stop Six, has represented the area on the Fort Worth City Council since 2013 and has long advocated for investment in the area. She worked closely with Mr. Babers for years.

“When you visit people who get lucky enough to move to Babers Manor, I want them to know who my friend was because it his knowledge, his connections and overall his passion for his community is why we have Cowan Place … (and) Hughes House,” Bivens said.

Babers Manor is part of the landmark Stop Six Choice Neighborhood effort that launched in 2020 when the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development awarded FWHS and the City of Fort Worth a $35 million Choice Neighborhood Implementation Grant. Former Cavile Place residents who relocated as part of the redevelopment process have the right to return to the community as new Stop Six CNI properties come online.

“I want to emphasize what brought about the funding here,” said Candace Valenzuela, HUD Regional Administrator for the Southwest. “Because of the incredible partners, because of the members of the community, we have this Choice Neighborhood Grant.”

The HUD grant will be spread across six phases of development and is expected to leverage $345 million in investment for the neighborhood. In all, FWHS and partners will develop approximately 925 new units across the community. The City of Fort Worth plans additional infrastructure improvements, including a new community hub and aquatics center.

“The Choice Neighborhood process is all about getting to a yes,” said Mary-Margaret Lemons, President, Fort Worth Housing Solutions. “In 2019 this community stood up and said it’s time.”

The groundbreaking also included numerous partners, including Hunt Capital Partners; Aetna; CVS Health; the City of Fort Worth; Urban Strategies, Inc.; McCormack Baron Salazar Development, Inc.; GMA Construction; RPGA Design Group, Inc. and Mason Joseph Company.

As part of the celebration, donations were made to the Boys & Girls Club of Greater Tarrant County and the C. Donald Babers Memorial Scholarship.