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The first and foremost thing to do is make it safe. Downtown is well known to have problems with murders, muggings and assaults. Particularly once the sun goes down. Get rid of those businesses that attract these elements and the problem goes away.
We've had this discussion before and there are people who question where the bars/clubs are supposed to go. I don't care where they go, they just need to leave downtown. The students at ECU don't have a God given right to have a place to drink and act like fools. Let alone an entire city block full of places to do that.
Like some have proposed before I think we need to make "downtown" big enough where we can cater to the college crowd and the older crowd. The area on dickinson could be a place where you bring in the more desirable businesses while keeping the bar district on 5th street for the college kids. the area on 5th street still needs to be cleaned up and I wouldnt mind if places like the phoenix, rumors, half way house etc. left. Most college towns are able to balance between the college bars and other places that cater to older people and families. No reason we cant do that here. Drunk college kids arent the problem. Its the greenville locals from west greenville.
Drunk college kids are part of the problem. No one wants to be around that.
Greenville SC is rather large to use as a comparison (Greenville/S-burg is the largest metro in SC) but Columbia is a good example of how to split it up. They have the Congaree Vista for professional/older crowd and Five Points for the USC students. Five Points, by the way, is just as crummy as our downtown is now (that's why I say no one wants to be around the drunk college kids).
Status:
"48 years in MD, 18 in NC"
(set 13 days ago)
Location: Greenville, NC
2,309 posts, read 6,103,251 times
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Jvllepirate
Its the greenville locals from west greenville.
That's why I suggested that gentrification may be the answer there. Gentrification can be encouraged with tax breaks and other municipal offerings. Where will the people that are there now go? Try Kinston.
well, Dick's Sporting Goods opens today...how long until one or two of the smaller local sporting stores shuts down? I give it six months maybe. Regardless, I'm glad they are here!
Maybe north west Greenville needs some good old fashioned gentrification. That area is very close to downtown. I've seen it done before and it can work wonders for downtown areas. Look at Annapolis, MD. You would not have recognized it 30 years ago.
Are you referring to west of Pitt St, south of the Tar River, and points westward? I wouldn't mind seeing downtown try to claim that area, up to the railroad tracks.
But how would one start a gentrification process there?
So the Visitors Bureau will be building a four-story building. There will be an alleyway there to connect Evans to the Parking deck, to be constructed at the Moseley Lot.
Also, do y'all recall Georgetown Apartments getting razed? That whole block (Evans, Reade, Cotanche, 8th, minus the old Ham's) will be torn down for an upperish scale apartment complex, with retail. A great corner to redevelop.
With the location being the ONLY variable in this hypothetical, where would you want a minor league baseball park to be built?
Dickinson/Pitt/Bonners/Railroad track
Dickinson/Ficklen/9th/Evans/10th
On the eastern or western corner of the Town Commons
Somewhere else
Just curious to everyone's opinion. This isn't for the cost or anything like that. Each one has their perks and pitfalls. I personally like the second option best.
Also, do y'all recall Georgetown Apartments getting razed? That whole block (Evans, Reade, Cotanche, 8th, minus the old Ham's) will be torn down for an upperish scale apartment complex, with retail. A great corner to redevelop.
Is this a done deal...if so that would be a huge development for downtown to get things started in the right direction...that area needs to be torn down & something new started..prime location for a new apartment complex / businesses.
Is this a done deal...if so that would be a huge development for downtown to get things started in the right direction...that area needs to be torn down & something new started..prime location for a new apartment complex / businesses.
I don't like saying yes until the first bulldozer is there, but basically.
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