

Property manager ITEX worked with the Texas General Land Office, using Harvey relief funds, to rebuild the complex, which was heavily damaged by Tropical Storm Harvey in 2017. Photo made Wednesday, AugKim Brent/The Enterprise Kim Brent/The Enterprise Show More Show Lessĭebra Ambroise and Brittany Eck tour renovated units during a ribbon cutting and dedication of the newly renovated Ambroise Village affordable housing complex in Port Arthur.

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His family joined in Wednesday's grand opening event, and Mayor Pro Tem Donald Frank also presented a declaration on behalf of Mayor Thurman Bartie proclaiming August 25, Clonie Ambroise Day.

The Southwood Crossing Apartments was renamed Ambroise Village in honor of Port Arthur Housing Authority's Clonie Ambroise, Jr., who passed away several months ago. Photo taken Thursday, FebruKim Brent/The Enterprise Kim Brent/The Enterprise Show More Show Less 293 of375įamily joins in during a ribbon cutting and dedication of the newly renovated Ambroise Village affordable housing complex in Port Arthur. Some water damage to a permanent collection piece remains as artwork is rehung in preparation for Sunday's grand reopening of the Texas Artists Museum in Port Arthur. Kim Brent/The Enterprise Kim Brent / The Enterprise Show More Show Less In the two years since Harvey flooded the home in which she grew up and lived in since her mother passed away 10 years ago, the structure has continued to decline, and looters continue to break in, rifling through what remains. If the bills simply become too costly, Therrien says she will likely leave Port Arthur and relocate elsewhere. Photo taken Wednesday, JKim Brent/The Enterprise Kim Brent/The Enterprise Show More Show Less 191 of375 Kim Therrien is still displaced from her Harvey damaged home in Port Arthur and is staying with a friend while figuring out if she will be able to afford the cost of repairing and moving back. The low population level could effect city funding. Abandoned properties marked for demolition fill a portion of 10th Street in Port Arthur, which is concerned that its population decline, that saw a further decrease in the wake of Tropical Storm Harvey, will dip below 50,000.
