View allAll Photos Tagged NewDevelopment
Mary Hill looks over the continually soggy patch of grass behind her home in Suffolk, Va. Recurrent flooding, land erosion, and septic problems are just some of the constant issues for Hill and many other residents.
Newly developed and large-scale housing complexes and the expansion of a developing city have caused issues for the original residents of the neighborhoods, whose family members have lived there for generations. Septic issues, stormwater runoff, overflowing ditches and flooding, shoreline erosion, and water accessibility are just some of the issues worsened by the new developments surrounding this historically African-American neighborhood. April 12, 2022. (Photo by Aileen Devlin | Virginia Sea Grant)
Mary Hill walks around her neighborhood in Suffolk Va. on a warm spring day. Recurrent flooding, land erosion, and septic problems are just some of the constant issues for Hill and many other residents.
Newly developed and large-scale housing complexes and the expansion of a developing city have caused issues for the original residents of the neighborhoods, whose family members have lived there for generations. Septic issues, stormwater runoff, overflowing ditches and flooding, shoreline erosion, and water accessibility are just some of the issues worsened by the new developments surrounding this historically African-American neighborhood. April 12, 2022. (Photo by Aileen Devlin | Virginia Sea Grant)
Though the ground was somewhat dried out from earlier rains, the impressions from the machinery was still left. The dirt looked fragile and disorganized, but retained a noticable shape unlike the landscape.
Mary Hill weaves through the Macedonia Baptist Church cemetery plots and points out the eroding land around various headstones and tombs. Most of her family members and many generations of Pughsville natives are buried on land that is quickly eroding into a ravine connected to the Nansemond River behind the cemetery.
Newly developed and large-scale housing complexes and the expansion of a developing city have caused issues for the original residents of the neighborhoods, whose family members have lived there for generations. Septic issues, stormwater runoff, overflowing ditches and flooding, shoreline erosion, and water accessibility are just some of the issues worsened by the new developments surrounding this historically African-American neighborhood. April 12, 2022. (Photo by Aileen Devlin | Virginia Sea Grant)