
Northern Avenue under construction
One of the best immediate benefits to Armenia joining a number of European bodies after independence was their agreement to join the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR). This article in the Armenian Weekly is about the residents who used to live in the very heart of central Yerevan. Their homes were taken with eminent domain in order to build the Northern Avenue – a pedestrian bulevard connecting the Opera to Republic Square.
Most of the homes were very dilapidated, due to the fact that for about 75 years they had been slated for demolition in order to build this street. It took a while, but the residents knew the day would come. The problem was not so much in the taking of the property, but rather the problem was that the compensation for their land was for most residents unconscionably low. Instead of their home and land in the center of the city, they couldn’t even buy an apartment in the center with the money they received, they had to move far from their neighbors, shops, friends, etc. The buyers of the land were developers who were building luxury shops and apartments, selling at prices never before seen in Armenia. If they had given the previous owners of the land fair market value, or had given them equivalent apartments in the new buildings, I don’t think anyone would have complained. Read more »