​​
​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​
​​​​​​​​​​​​​

Spotlight Communities

Remington Neighborhood Revitalization

Baltimore’s Remington neighborhood is undergoing rapid change. The quiet, mostly residential ​​neighborhood in the city’s north central area has seen an influx of new uses – and new residents – in the last decade.
 

On this page

Rehabilitation of Miller’s Court has spearheaded positive changes in Remington.
​​

​​Miller's Court


Between 2000 and 2010, Remington’s population went up 7 percent, while Baltimore’s population fell. Younger people in particular moved to Remington, with the population of Millennials jumping 55 percent in the decade.

In 2013, Remington was named Baltimore’s Neighborhood of the Year by City Paper

Charmingtons Staff
Mike Burke
Where is Remington? View the 3D fly-through Watch our four-minute Remington video.
 

The neighborhood’s changes are in no small part thanks to the conversion of an old tin manufacturing warehouse into Miller’s Court home to residences for city teachers and offices for nonprofit organizations. The his​​toric warehouse was restored using, among other funds, a state Sustainable Communities Tax Credit.​

Remington circa 1905
Remington circa 1905

Remington houses
Developers Seawall Inc. renovated 30 vacant rowhouses and sold them to teachers.

Investments in the Miller’s Court development ​​​started a domino effect of positive change in the neighborhood, and results throughout Remington have been dramatic: a new theater at the site of an old automobile repair shop, 30 rowhouses for teachers sprinkled throughout the neighborhood, and redevelopment of the 29th Street commercial area. Community gardens and public art are dressing up the streetscape. ​​ 

​ 

​​​​​​​
​Interactive Timeline of Miller’s Court Transformation