Home Pre Katrina Home Orleans Parish Lakeview District Lakeshore/ Lake Vista Snapshot
Lakeshore/ Lake Vista Neighborhood SnapshotCensus 2000 Data Tables: People & Household Characteristics, Housing & Housing Costs, Income & Poverty, Transportation, Employment, Educational Attainment, Immigration & Language, Disabilities, Neighborhood Characteristics Lakeshore and Lake
Vista, which are adjacent to City Park and the Lake Pontchartrain shoreline,
are two subdivisions that grew out of the lakefront reclamation. Residences
in the area range from the comfortable to the luxurious, comprising one
of the wealthiest residential areas of New Orleans (Census 2000). Some of the Lakefronts early historySpanish Fort was constructed at Bayou St. John and named San Juan by the Spanish in 1769. It was first used in 1793 under the authority of Governor Carondelet. During the Battle of New Orleans, Major Jean Baptiste Plauches battalion carried out observation from the fort under the direction of General Andrew Jackson.
In 1823, the government sold the Spanish Fort to Harvey Elkins. Elkins transformed the fort into a hotel. In 1874, a railroad was constructed between the Spanish Fort resort and downtown New Orleans. Spanish Fort was sold four years later to Moses Schwartz who built a casino with a restaurant and theatre in 1881. In 1903, the popularity of Spanish Fort declined as a result of the suspension of steam railroad services. The buildings burned shortly after that time. In 1909, New Orleans Railway and Light Company acquired and revived the Spanish Fort area. Around 1932, the resort closed to facilitate the implementation of the Orleans Parish Levee Boards plans for development of the lakefront from West End to the Industrial Canal.
New Orleans lakefront reclamationPrior to the 1920s, the lakefront was largely marshy swampland comprised of scattered fishing shacks and camps. In an effort to develop strategies for eliminating unhealthy conditions that existed in the marshes and for providing improved levee protection from flood disasters, the Louisiana legislature named Colonel Marcel Garsaud to be Chief Engineer of the Orleans Levee Board in 1924. He was commissioned to plan and implement the reclamation and improvement of the lakefront. Garsaud submitted a plan for a waterfront resort, a beachfront, an amusement park and several artificial lakes. Financing was a major problem with his plan. In 1928, a Missouri engineering firm presented two compromise plans. The compromise plan that was adopted included provisions for a public park area between the lake drive and the lake, recreational features and residential development with one section of homes fronting on the lake. The principal reason for the adoption of this plan was its potential for generating revenue to make the project self-supporting. In 1926, prior to
adoption of the compromise plan, pumping and draining of the swamps as
well as seawall construction began. By 1930, work on the lakefront plan
began. The new lakeshore consisted of a stepped concrete seawall built
3000 feet out from the shore with a filled area raised five to ten feet.
Above the lake level were a beautiful public waterfront, beaches and parks.
This transformation of the lakeshore allowed for the construction of the
Lakeshore/Lake Vista and Lake Terrace/Lake Oaks neighborhoods.
Descriptions of Lake Vista and Lakeshore subdivisionsLake Vista was designed with the primary purpose of affording convenience and safety for its residents. Its most striking feature is its break from the traditional linear alignment of streets in favor of an arrangement of cul de sac streets all leading to a central community center. The design would result in diagonal parks accessible to all homes. Homes would be built to face either lanes or parks and would be designed to have kitchens facing the streets and living rooms fronting on the parks. Lake development was completed in 1938 and building restrictions were introduced to insure a unique, high quality, safe residential area. The west half of Lake Vista was placed on the market in 1938. However, when the nation entered World War II, sales and building halted until the mid 1940s. By 1946, all of the lots were sold. When building was completed, Lake Vista had a real community atmosphere that continues today. The twin neighborhoods of the Lakeshore development are located to the west of Lake Vista. They are bounded by the New Basin Canal, Lake Pontchartrain, the Orleans Canal and Robert E. Lee Boulevard. Canal Boulevard divides West Lakeshore and East Lakeshore. West Lakeshore, former site of the LaGarde Hospital, opened for sale in 1951. East Lakeshore, formerly the site of Musser-Gorden Hospital, was opened in 1955. The Lakeshore neighborhoods have a traditional design with linear streets that provide some privacy but extend to major boulevards. The area is comprised of single-family residences, apartments and a shopping center. Lakeshore and Lake Vista helped to transform the New Orleans lakefront from swampland into some of the citys most valuable property. For more information:Tommy
Cranes description of the Lakeshore, Lake Vista and other lakefront
neighborhoods Neighborhood Profiles Project Document prepared by the City of New Orleans Office of Policy Planning and the City Planning Commission. Published December 1980. Study available at the Williams Research Center (non-circulating collection). Census 2000 Data Tables: People & Household Characteristics, Housing & Housing Costs, Income & Poverty, Transportation, Employment, Educational Attainment, Immigration & Language, Disabilities, Neighborhood Characteristics Home Pre Katrina Home Orleans Parish Lakeview District Lakeshore/ Lake Vista Snapshot
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