The Condemned

Mother JonesVol. 30 Nbr. 1, January 2005

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Summary


Intended to enable government to tear down homes for public projects, eminent domain laws are instead being used to clear space for box stores and office parks. Here, Greenberg explores how homeowners in Ohio and across the US are battling cities and developers conspiring to seize their property.

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Extract


The Condemned

FROM HIS OFFICE at the top of Rookwood Tower, the seven-story, glass-and-steel building that his family's real estate company built, Jeffrey Robert Anderson Jr., or J.R. as he is known here in Norwood, Ohio, can easily survey his empire. Directly below the tower and its 185,000 square feet of professional and financial services offices is Rookwood Pavilion, 23 acres of shopping and eating. A little farther to the left is Rookwood Commons-not, Anderson advises me, a shopping plaza, but a "lifestyle center" containing a Gap, Ann Taylor, and 46 of the other usual suspects. This former brownfield, abandoned when a machine tool factory left Norwood, is now the premier shopping destination in Greater Cincinnati, if not all of Ohio, according to anyone around here that you ask. It's an impressive sight, and perched high up in his well-appointed office with its sculptures and paintings and enormous glass-topped table, you might believe that this tall and fit 32-year-old with flaxen hair and bright blue eyes rules over all that he sees, or at least all that lies thi...

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