One Good Street Per City…Is It Enough?
But 40 years of intense investment to still have the root of
the original problem exist is demoralizing. These streets are quaint and cute,
but they are really just a fake image of their former selves. It’s as if the original owners moved out or
were forced out and were replaced with absentee landlords. Now, it’s not my intention to criticize the
businesses that exist on these streets because in many cases they are locally
owned businesses, but drugstores have been replaced with optometrist offices,
nickel and dime’s with high-end bike
shops, department stores with law firms, grocery stores with lingerie shops, and
sporting goods stores with overpriced restaurants. In other words, the basic
services that used to exist on these streets no longer exists, instead boutique
shops line the streets because nothing is capable of competing with suburbia’s
big box retail outlets. Habitation on
these streets is typically limited to evenings, weekends, and holidays when it
feels good to stroll down the paths of a great place. I would argue that Ogden’s 25th
Street is a great street that is dedicated to the automobile and it is really only
great from Grant Avenue to its Union Station terminus. That seems to be the problem.
But the larger issue is that our American cities have one
great street, one great place, and it rests on a terribly fragile foundation. As long as our cities are dedicated to the
automobile we may have to be assuaged with having just one great street. Until we revolt and start imposing on our
cities a “walkable” and “walk toable” landscape, that will be what we are left
with. Take a walk down to your Main Street,
USA, inhabit the place. Walk it. Use it. Demand the need for it. Start your own revolution to make American
Cities great, one street at time, not just on one street, but the whole city.