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Photo by Allston-Brighton TAB photographer Winslow Martin, 11/96.


NEIGHBORS: OakSquare.com interviews
Charlie Vasiliades
Part 2 in a series of 4

[return to Part 1]

Both Charlie Vasiliades and his sister, Tina, had attended the bright yellow Oak Square School when they were little. Located between Nonantum and Tremont Streets, it was the last functional wooden schoolhouse in Boston. Since 1895, the school had provided Oak Square children with classes from kindergarden through 3rd grade. For a brief period in the 1970's, the grades shifted to 1st through 5th grades. The school was shut down in 1981 when State Proposition 2 1/2 slashed funding for education. The School Committee wanted to do away with "archaic" schools which had no adequate gym or cafeteria facilities. Some people thought the empty wooden structure was in danger of burning, and therefore it was destined for demolition until a group of committed neighborhood activists petitioned the City and turned the old building into 10 middle-income condomiums. This way, there could be 24 hour care for the premises and as you can imagine, all the units were sold by the day of the first open house.


The Oak Square School during construction in 1894,
Nonantum Street entrance.

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Back in 1976, when you and other members of the community hoped to save the Oak Square School, you were just 19 years old. What made you think you could actually succeed?

Charlie:  Well, of course we weren't 100% sure. I was in my 3rd year at college. I knew I was going into city planning and I knew I wanted to get involved with community issues. The Oak Square school was near and dear to my heart. The principal, Ellen Murray, was a family friend who came to weddings and such. She had been my first grade teacher before she became the principal. Even as a high school student, when the Boston Latin School had days off (for city-wide testing), a few of us would go back and be like 'guest speakers' to the

 

"...this was a great little neighborhood institution that meant a lot to us..."

 

elementary school classes. When the school was threatened with closure, we weren't at first thinking about it as a landmark but more that this was a great little neighborhood institution that meant a lot to us.

In 1977, our fight was just to keep the school open and we were successful at that for 3 or 4 years. This was a school that had higher than average reading scores and was somewhat successfully integrated. It was attended by people from the neighborhood and was often chosen for busing by others. The ethnic make-up was about 1/3 white, 1/3 Black, and 1/3 Asian and others. But the School Department felt it should be shut it down because it didn't meet contemporary criteria. During the second year of our effort, we had applied for historical landmark status as a back-up plan. That involvement led me to the Brighton Allston Historical Society.

When Proposition 2 1/2 slashed state education funding in 1980, we could no longer save the school but we had already succeeded in having the building designated as a landmark.

The CDC [ Allston Brighton Community Development Corporation] had been formed independently around that time. I was also a member of that Board. The CDC had wanted to make a name for itself and sponsored community meetings to talk about what to do with the two schools that were being shut down in Brighton and Allston. It became apparent that the Oak Square building

 

"....I was also a big believer in the idea that if you're going to accomplish anything, you have to join together..."

 

presented an opportunity. Initially, the goal was not so much one of affordable housing but that of preserving a neighborhood landmark that people really wanted. So we asked them to put in the bid to buy the school and they did.

The architects were able to create ten 1 and 2 bedroom condo units out of the old classrooms which sold for between $50 - $80,000. Some of the owners chose to keep the original blackboards on their apartment walls.

So you don't know whether you're going to succeed at first, but you have to get involved to try. I was also a big believer in the idea that if you're going to accomplish anything, you have to join together - the whole 'united we stand, divided we fall' business.

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When you talked about the emergence of the Allston Brighton CDC (Community Development Corporation), you mentioned that "empowering the neighborhood" was part of the Federal CDC mission. I didn't know that. What does that term mean in this context, in your eyes?

Charlie: Unlike most community activist efforts which are volunteer, Community Development Corporations are actually companies. They have a staff, a budget, they can buy and sell things. Because of the nature and economy of our community, our CDC has always had a housing focus (rather than, say, economic development)...how to strive for a stable, diverse neighborhood while maintaining and increasing affordable housing.

What I realized from my city planning background is that the great thing about CDC's is that they give neighborhoods a tool to be pro-active instead of just reactive. Using the Oak Square School as an example, the

"They have a staff, a budget, they can buy and sell things."

school had closed and people wanted to preserve it. But if you didn't have a CDC, the most we could expect would be to influence who bought it, and maybe get a sympathetic developer. A CDC actually allowed us to, in essence, buy the building and to develop it ourselves, with our own vision...and this is what we've done with other affordable housing projects in the area.

About two years ago, people from Oak Square were in discussion with the CDC about a joint effort with the Brighton Allston Historical Society to buy the small gatekeeper's house at Faneuil and Dunboy Streets, which was vacant at the time. It is the only building left standing from the 18th century Faneuil Mansion complex on Bigelow Hill. The plan didn't pan out, but the idea was to renovate it historically and therefore preserve part of the neighborhood heritage.

To be on the CDC Board, you have to be from the community you represent. Members are elected at open community meetings. Generally, like with most volunteer projects, people aren't jumping out of the woodwork. If you're interested, you get on. There's an executive director

"Members are elected at open community meetings."

and, at this point, about 10 staff who generally work to support the decisions of the Board. Right now, I'm the Vice-President. There are working committees made up of Board members and other folks from the community, such as housing, economic development, "green space," finance and sometimes ad hoc committees that come and go.

 

More to come...

  • how has Oak Square changed over the years?

  • the significance of our local public schools

  • and more...

 

Return to Part 1 of the interview

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