Reimagined A community

HISTORY

When Pastor Rodney Hudson was appointed in 2008 as the new Senior Pastor at Ames Memorial United Methodist Church (Ames) he met with Bill Adams, a retired Baltimore City employee and member of the Ames congregation, who shared decades’ worth of ideas and research with Pastor Rod, thus planting the seeds of what would ultimately become the Resurrection Sandtown project.​

With determination and care, steady progress has been made — the purchase of adjacent lots, the gifting of two warehouse properties, the cleanup and maintenance of the project’s properties, additional fundraising, and the development of partnerships with other community and nonprofit organizations, educational institutions, businesses, faith communities, and government agencies. So much good has happened along the way, and there’s so much more to come.​

TIMELINE

2025
June – August 2025

Additional community engagement meetings are ongoing as plans progress.

Spring 2025

Continued Pre-Development Planning and creation of the Site Master Plan.

April 2025
April 2025

Release of structural analysis for the Ames Church structure after January 2024 wall collapse.

2024
May 2024 – May 2025

Pre-development preparations begin, including invaluable feedback gathered from community meetings and surveys which help the developers produce many options on how to best develop the three-site campus.

February 2024

The Ames Shalom Board of Directors selects a consortium of three developer partners to develop the Resurrection Sandtown campus – Enterprise Community Development for the housing component, and Seawall and Blank Slate for the commercial, educational and health components.

2023
June 2023

A Request for Proposal (RFP) for a Developer Partner is released.

May – June 2023

Ames Shalom and Dwyer Workforce Development announce their partnership, with a Memorandum of Understanding signing ceremony on June 8.

2022
October 2022

The architectural firm HGA delivers a Feasibility Study which delineates what the Resurrection Sandtown campus properties can become with existing zoning and provides multiple options of combinations of potential mixed-use outcomes.

May 2022
May 2022

Ames Shalom hosts a Transfer-of-Property ceremony to acknowledge the incredible generosity of the Cook Family of Northeastern Supply for donating their two Sandtown warehouses to the Resurrection Sandtown project. Pictured (L-R) Drew Cook, Bishop LaTrelle Easterling, Steve Cook, Stephanie Cook, Pastor Rodney Hudson.

April 2022

Ames Shalom hires Mr. Fran Anderson from Real Estate and Construction Property Management as the project’s Owner’s Representative.

2021
October 2021
October 2021

Ames Shalom is contacted by the owners of Northeastern Supply concerning their Sandtown properties on Pennsylvania Avenue and North Carey Street. Northeastern Supply offers to donate these properties to Resurrection Sandtown, a donation of over 36,000 sq ft, more than doubling Resurrection Sandtown’s footprint.

May 2021

Ames Shalom purchases eight additional vacant lots from Baltimore City through the Vacants to Value program. Those lots, when combined with the church structure and the first purchase of eleven lots, increases the Resurrection Sandtown property asset footprint to 31,000 sq ft.

2020
April 2020

Ames Shalom purchases 11 vacant lots across the street from the Ames Church building.

2018
May 2018
May 2018

The Baltimore-Washington Conference of the United Methodist Church approves funding to acquire property from private owners and Baltimore City to expand the project’s property asset footprint.

2017
2017-Present

Many additional community meetings, plus meetings with potential project partners, foundations, government officials at all levels, and community leaders.

2017

First meeting held with potential partners and foundations to further explore the feasibility of proceeding with the Resurrection Sandtown project under the auspices of the Ames Shalom Community, Inc., a Community Development Corporation (CDC) founded in 2000 and associated with Ames Church.

2016
October 2016

First meeting with Ames Trustees, Bishop LaTrelle Easterling, and other senior leadership from the Baltimore-Washington Conference of the United Methodist Church, Crystal Flowers (Director of Little Flowers Early Childhood & Development Center), and community and political leaders to explore whether the Resurrection Sandtown project was feasible. 

2008
2008 – 2016

Ames hosts many formal and informal community meetings to identify what resources and opportunities the community feels are most needed.

July 2008

Pastor Rod Hudson is appointed as the new Senior Pastor at Ames. 

1903
The Beginning
The Beginning

Ames Memorial United Methodist Church (Ames), a congregation with a 170-year history in Baltimore, began as Western Chapel and was renamed Ames Chapel in 1887.  Ames relocated to its current sanctuary at the corner of Baker Street and N. Carey Street in 1903.