Staff photo.
Park South Plaza sits surrounded by flood waters on July 26, 2018. After heavy rainfall, flash flooding from the nearby Cahaba River tributary Patton Creek overflowed into the shopping center causing traffic issues for several hours.
As Vestavia Hills turns 75, we look at some key questions that will be addressed during the next 75 years.
Will there ever be a second high school? Talk of a second high school has surfaced before, then faded. As the population grows, will the system revisit the idea — and what would it mean for Rebel identity?
The U.S. 31 corridor is hot right now — a $1.2 million “Welcome to Vestavia” gateway project is sparking debate. But the bigger, longer fight is flooding. Will it ever be solved?
What will The Bray become? Liberty Park’s new town center is rising fast with $850 million in projected investment. Will it knit the city together or stay an east-side hub?
Is annexation over? Liberty Park and Cahaba Heights transformed the map. Surrounded by Birmingham, Hoover and Mountain Brook, is Vestavia now landlocked — or could new moves still be possible?
How do you connect a city that’s 19 miles long and 1 mile wide? Sidewalks and trails are on the drawing board, but geography itself makes unity tough. Can a town center or new projects bridge the gaps?
Who carries the torch? Vestavia’s civic generation is passing the baton. What leadership will the next 25 years produce?
VESTAVIA AT 75: THE SERIES
The official birthday is Nov. 8, but October makes more sense — better weather, fewer conflicts, and a chance to gather before the holidays take over.
For the past year, Vestavia Voice has been telling the stories behind that milestone. The people who shaped the city. The schools that built it. The decisions that set its future. What follows is a collection of those stories — one place to revisit 75 years of Vestavia Hills.
Commemorating 75 years of Vestavia Hills
From wolves on Shades Mountain to the vision of developer Charles Byrd, this story traces the journey from rugged ridge to thriving community of 37,000. Read the story here.
The vote that built Vestavia Hills
On Oct. 24, 1950, just 96 residents cast ballots on whether to incorporate. Eight voted no, 88 voted yes — and Vestavia Hills was born. Read the story here.
A historian’s front-row seat: Pat Boone unleashed
For more than two hours, longtime city attorney and civic leader Pat Boone recounted the city’s defining moments — from incorporation to desegregation battles, from annexations to his partnership with Sara Wuska. Read the story here.
Road to prosperity: How two boundary-crossing annexations reshaped Vestavia Hills' map and set its future
The annexations of Liberty Park in 1992 and Cahaba Heights in 2002 didn’t just expand the map — they secured Vestavia Hills’ path to growth, influence, and stability. Read the story here.
Schools that built a city: Vestavia system lives up to founders' dreams
Born in the turbulence of desegregation in 1970, Vestavia Hills City Schools have become the city’s soul — driving growth, identity, and achievement for generations. From federal scrutiny to national acclaim, the system has lived up to the vision of its founders. Read the story here.
Vestavia Hills City Schools: Key dates in the system's history
From the opening of East Elementary in 1948 to the district’s national honors in 2025, this timeline traces the milestones that defined Vestavia Hills City Schools. Read the story here.
From scrapbooks to the cloud: Shelia Bruce’s legacy of preservation
After nearly four decades with the Vestavia Hills Historical Society, Shelia Bruce has stepped back from leadership — but not before digitizing decades of archives to safeguard the city’s memory for future generations. Read the story here.
Grand Lady of Vestavia Hills: Sara Wuska broke barriers, built institutions
At 94, Sara Wuska remains one of the most influential figures in Vestavia Hills history — the city’s first and only female mayor, a founding member of its school board, and a leader whose imprint can still be felt today. She reflects on a life of public service and the legacy she helped shape. Read the story here.
Pillars of the Community: 75 for 75
A list of 75 key people and groups that helped make Vestavia Hills the city it is today. Read the story here.