Move Up at Hilltop Townhomes: Living Where the Problems Are
Press Coverage: Kansas City Star, Sunday June 2, 2002; Group Hopes Presence Spurs Change in Complex
In 2002, a grass-roots community organization called Move Up launched one of the most ambitious direct action campaigns Kansas City had ever seen. The initiative was called "30 Ways in 30 Days," and the concept was simple but radical: community leaders and public officials would take turns living and working in a troubled apartment complex to experience firsthand what residents endured daily, and to bring services, attention, and accountability to a place the system had forgotten.
The complex was Hilltop Townhomes, 301 row houses on 34 acres near the intersection of 39th Street and Topping Avenue. About 1,800 people lived there. The neighborhood was plagued by open-market drug dealing, crime, and neglect. Management had stopped maintaining the property. Residents were afraid. They had called the police. They had filed complaints. Nothing changed.
I moved into one of the homes at Hilltop as part of the Move Up initiative.
The Move Up Model
Move Up was organized by Ricardo Lewis, a community activist who understood that the only way to change conditions at Hilltop was to be physically present. Lewis and his team designed a rotation where members of the group would take turns living in a four-bedroom apartment at the complex during the next month. The idea was that sustained presence — not a one-day visit, not a drive-through — would create the pressure needed to force management accountability and bring city services to the community.
The Kansas City Star covered the launch on June 2, 2002. The scene included children, community members, and leaders distributing flyers and setting up operations at the complex. The article noted that Move Up also launched a broader effort to bring services to the troubled East Side apartment complex: anger management sessions, parenting instruction, health services including changing certain habits through diet and exercise, children's recreational activities, and job training.
City officials and local celebrities had been invited to spend a night at Hilltop. Students who completed surveys for Move Up had already been engaged. Nearly 100 residents participated. The Kansas City Star described the initiative as an effort to bring "a range of services — and, they hope, energy and attention — to this community."
My presence at Hilltop was part of this broader community effort. I moved into another home at the complex because I believed that an elected official's participation would amplify the message and increase pressure on management and city agencies to respond.
What I Experienced
Living at Hilltop confirmed everything the residents had been reporting for years. The low-income neighborhood had been plagued by open-market drug dealing and crime. A minister involved in the effort described dealing with "substance abuse users" and "crime in this neighborhood." Residents had tried to get attention to the problems for years without success.
The experience was different from the fire station sleepover in an important way. In the fire stations, I was documenting conditions that affected city employees. At Hilltop, I was documenting conditions that affected families — mothers, children, elderly residents. People who had no choice about where they lived because they could not afford to live anywhere else.
The daily reality was relentless. The criminal activity was visible. The maintenance was nonexistent. And every day, families with children walked through those conditions because this was the only housing they could afford.
Why This Model Mattered
Move Up demonstrated something that most government programs fail to achieve: sustained presence in the communities that need help most. The group did not just visit Hilltop for a photo opportunity. They moved in. They set up operations. They brought services directly to the residents rather than expecting residents to navigate a bureaucracy to find help.
My participation as a sitting council member added a dimension of political accountability. When an elected official lives in a troubled housing complex, the city cannot pretend the problem does not exist. Media coverage increased. City inspectors paid more attention. Management faced scrutiny they had avoided for years.
The Impact on My Work
The experience at Hilltop changed how I approach every development. When The Nash Group builds housing, we do not just meet minimum code requirements. We build housing where people feel safe. Where families can let their children play outside. Where a resident can walk from their car to their front door without fear. That standard comes directly from living in a complex where none of that was true.
The design implications are specific. We think about sight lines — can residents see the entrance from their windows? We think about lighting — are the parking areas, walkways, and common spaces well lit at night? We think about access control — who can enter the building and how? We think about maintenance — because a building that is not maintained sends a signal to criminals that nobody is paying attention.
Most people in the housing industry have never lived in the housing they build. I have. The Move Up initiative at Hilltop Townhomes gave me an education that no classroom could provide, and that experience is embedded in every project we do at The Nash Group.
Ricardo Lewis and the Move Up team understood something fundamental: you cannot change a community from the outside. You have to be in it. That principle — showing up, being present, and using whatever platform you have to create change — is what drives this firm today.
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