Lower Garden District is a neighborhood of the city of New Orleans. A subdistrict of the Central City/Garden District Area, its boundaries as defined by the New Orleans City Planning Commission are: St. Charles Avenue, Felicity, Prytania, Thalia, Magazine, and Julia Streets to the north; the New Orleans Morial Convention Center, Crescent City Connection, and Mississippi River to the east; Felicity Street, Magazine Street, Constance Street, Jackson Avenue, Chippewa Street, Soraparu Street, and St. Thomas Street to the south; and 1st Street to the west.
The Lower Garden District is home to a number of historical landmarks, including St. Alphonsus Church.
In 2016, the Pikachu, also known as the Pokemonument,[5][6] a fiberglass sculpture depicting the Pokémonspecies of the same name by an unknown artist, was installed in Lower Garden District.[7]
The 5-foot (1.5 m) statue of the Japanese icon was erected as an apparent tribute to Pokémon Go on July 31, 2016, in a decommissioned fountain along Terpsichore Street, near Coliseum Square in New Orleans' Lower Garden District.[7][8] The fiberglass sculpture was coated to look like bronze.[9] The artist wrote '#pokemonument' in concrete near the work's base.[10]
Within a few days, the sculpture was vandalized by someone with a baseball bat.[8] It was repaired. Some two weeks after its placement, the "Pokemonument" was removed, and an online statement from the artist said that the artwork would be auctioned to benefit restoration of the park's fountains.[11] The work sold for $2,000.[12][13]
As of the census of 2000, there were 6,116 people, 3,332 households, and 998 families residing in the neighborhood.[14] The population density was 6,438 /mi2 (2,446 /km2).
As of the census of 2010, there were 6,363 people, 3,843 households, and 994 families residing in the neighborhood.[14]
ReNEW SciTech Academy, operated by ReNEW Schools, is within the former Laurel Elementary School within the Lower Garden District.[15][16] After Hurricane Katrina, Laurel was a school directly operated by the RSD. In 2010 Laurel had a performance score of 45, below the "65" score that was considered "academically unacceptable."[17]
The International School of Louisiana (New Orleans International School), one of the two schools in New Orleans that is chartered by the State of Louisiana but is not a part of the RSD,[18] operates the Camp Street Campus,[19] located in the former Andrew Jackson Elementary School in the lower Garden District.[18] This campus opened in 2000.[20] The Center for Education Reform in 2007 ranked the International School as one of the best charters in the United States.[18]
^ abcRitea, Steve. "Charter group hails N.O. school." The Times-Picayune. Thursday May 17, 2007. Retrieved on March 30, 2013. "The International School, one of two New Orleans schools chartered by the state but not part of the Recovery District, now operates out of the Andrew Jackson Elementary building in the Lower Garden District."