Why is everyone so opposed to talking about the south side? Go look at the MAPS 3 election returns and you will notice something is fishy on the south side..
Why is everyone so opposed to talking about the south side? Go look at the MAPS 3 election returns and you will notice something is fishy on the south side..
Living on southside SUCKS!
It used to be nice, with full plazas giving homes to various retail outlets.
Now it is just full of empty plazas, with bingo halls that keep them afloat, while the plaza owners sit on degrading property, they refuse to upgrade to bring new business.
We have a dying mall, due to greedy owners who refused to upgrade the mall, even at the request of the merchants, who were paying high rent in a place that has virtually went unchanged, since it opened in 1974.
I don't think southside has anything good going for it, with many empty plazas, and a dead mall.
Notice how all the good stores are everywhere in OKC, except for southside?
Please don't call cheap strip malls "plazas"
With the down turn in the economy it seems that a lot more homes are on the market on the northside of town compared to the south....
From someone who has lived in 'Westmoore' (104th S. Penn) and Edmond (150th and N. Western) within the last five years here is my observation between the two.
-Edmond has few more trees and some areas are slightly hilly.
But that's only in older neighborhoods, in the new developments the landscape is as flat and treeless as the other parts of town. What Ive never understood is how someone can purchase a 200k house in Edmond and they are 'rich', but if someone buys a 200k house in Moore they are 'poor'???? If I had to choose between which one offered quieter evenings, less congestion, and slightly better quality of life I would recommend Westmoore(and i dont even live there anymore). For the record, I have had decent interactions with neighbors at both locations, but a lot of people in north okc have that 'heavily medicated 'feel to them if you know what i mean.
Two cents - Threads like this really do go no where, just live in which one offers the easiest commute to you.
The places I like to shop -
- Buckle
- Abercrombie
- Hollister
- LEGO Store
Are nowhere to be found here on southside. Question? Why won't they put those franchises on southside, instead of northside, Quail, and Norman? Bet no one can give an answer to that one.
Why is our mall dying, while Quail, Penn, and even Sooner, are thriving and getting the upgrades they need?
Why is Toys R Us bailing on southside, while locations in Norman, Quail, and soon Moore, will remain?
Why doesn't southside OKC have a Super Target, but every other location is a Super Target?
Why was northside chosen for the location of Incredible Pizza?
Why doesn't southside OKC have a Vintage Stock (a really cool store)?
Why along NW Expressway, are the developments mainly restaurants and retail, while southside is getting overpopulated with carlots?
Why does Walnut Squares buildings sit empty, or full of useless businesses, while other locations are being built with cool retail in mind? I see a huge building that used to be the old Walmart, then grocery store, sit empty for near 10-11 years.
Almonte plaza is filled with a peasy doctors office, bingo hall, and a cricket mobile and nail shop.
Dodsons plaza sits and rots with a daycare (?) and Rent-a-Center, across the street from a insane asylum.
Heck, even a new "strip mall" like 240 Penn Park, which was open in 2006, has a vacant building for a little over a year (what used to be Circuit City).
We don't have Warren theatres on southside, we only have AMC, which used to be Regal, and that place looks like it is falling apart. They can't even fix their lighting.
We don't have movie theatres inside our mall, with 24 screens to boot, and even a bootleg IMAX screen.
There are even rumors of Best Buy moving once their lease is up, as the only thing that surrounds them, is old Firestone tire shops that sit empty, a stupid votech college, and a place (the mall) that everyone wishes would turn into a government run complex (useless for turning southside into anything worthwhile).
Now please, without arguing and mudflinging, give me a logical reason to think southside OKC has made any progress?
We're the slums of this city. The compton of California. The ghetto. Only reason we got a Chick-fil-A, is because they were afraid the mall one was going to falter.
So what's our nice retail selection? Dollar Tree? Family Dollar? Hancock Fabrics?
We don't even get a Jack in the Box on southside. Only in Moore, Norman, and on I-40, in that shopping center that used to be a huge field, where I thought they would never build something of that nature, because to me, that was the slummy area. NOPE! Just southside OKC. Where we deserve nothing.
Now prove me wrong...
EDIT: Where's our bookstore? No Borders. No Barnes and Noble. Why does every location but us, have one? We recently lost our only bookstore, which was Waldenbooks, which was inside a dying mall.
Perhaps it is due to changing demographics? Maybe a certain type of target demographic that does not exist on the SS? I really do not now what the issue is regarding Southside since I was born and raised on the Northside. I know that the Southside is very working class, blue collar types which "nothing is wrong with this" because people will always need plumbers, electricians etc... I also realize there are professionals that do reside on the Southside of OKC. I do have to admit that shopping, dining out and attractions are more prevelant on the Northside. Borders Books and Barnes and Noble, Banana Republic, J Crew, Mr. Ooleys, Balliets Apple, Lego etc.. all have an indeliable foothold on the Northside. Also, there is Nichols Hills, Crown Heights, Edgemere Park, Mesta Park, Heritage Hills, Lake Aluma, Gallardia and Edmond all on the Northside of the Metro which accounts for alot of wealthy citizens. Do you think the Southside would support these types of stores? Since I no longer reside in OKC I personally cannot give an answer to that one??
Yes, I think southside could support anything, if the motivation was there by strip mall (plaza) owners to modernize their plazas.
When we got Chick-fil-A, that place was packed for weeks, and still gets very packed, which means that people here, can fork over at least 7 bucks for one meal, but we all know it is above 10 bucks, because not many people eat alone.
We got American Eagle in Crossroads Mall, and it was always busy inside there, before the mall flat out went downhill.
240 Penn Park was packed for weeks, and I always see full parking lots, for people going to Old Navy (one place I never expected to see on southside), Marshalls, Pier 1, and what used to be Circuit City.
The problem with southside, is that people who own plazas/strip malls, refuse to put any money into beefing the area up. I have stated time and time again, that they will sit on the money the bingo halls bring them, and retire on that, not giving a care in the world, what they could do with some rennovating, and attracting new business.
240 Penn Park filled up quick, and with good reason. It was new. It was modern. It didn't look rundown.
Walnut Square, where Big Lots, FYE, and Olive Garden is, always sits mainly empty. Another stupid little crap college is in place, which doesn't help bring new business. It only helps people get careers, so they can bail the hell out of what many call a, "flyover state, where everything closes early, tons of bible thumpers live, and buses don't even run past 7 pm." Really, many people in my life think that about this city/state.
Here's how I would do things, had I ran this city and had a say-so.
All plaza owners must either rennovate theior plazas, making them more modern/not rundown, so that new businesses will come to southside, and if they don't abide, the city will buy the land from them, to rennovate in order to attract business. Remember, when areas get more modern, and new businesses come, the property and the property around them skyrocket in value. Sometimes I think, it also puts motivation in surrounding areas, to keep the area looking better, and people with higher standards end up moving into said locations. I mean people are living more on northside/Quail/Edmond/Moore/Norman for a reason.
Then I would try and lure places wanting to move, to move into newer plazas.
Toys R Us, wouldn't seek to move, if their presence was known. There's no signs on the highway stating that a TRU is right off the 66th exit, so who knows it's there? Something hiding behind some call center is surely not going to attract business.
The perfect place for TRU to relocate, could be a rennovated Walnut Square, in that HUGE building that was a grocery store. Look at the Conn's building. Once I saw that being built, I kept thinking, now what if the whole plaza looked like that? It would attract attention.
I would entice someone to build on the land where Harrigans used to be, in hopes that others follow.
In 240 Penn Park, I would try and lure Best Buy to move into an albeit smaller location, instead of just closing down, and relying on north/Quail/Edmond/Moore/Norman locations to keep them afloat, while they shun southside, along with anyone else who is moving.
Point blank, I would tell these lazy asses who think more about money, and laziness, than fixing up their plaza, to modernize and give new life, potentially, to southside OKC, to handle their responsibilities, or get the hell out of dodge, and not let the door hit them on the way out.
I mean hell, there's still a movie theatre in Almonte, that's been closed since at least 1999, that could be rennovated and turned into another dollar theatre. Those bring business. Yet it sits unused.
There is a reason why southside doesn't see stores like JCP, Dillards, Hollister, Buckle, Lego store, and all the stores the person before me listed... It isn't the area... It's how the area is treated in looks, that makes the retailers run away.
240 Penn Park was attracting new business. Crossroads mall was losing it. What's the difference? One was modern. One had the same floors from the day it opened in 1974.
We perfectly supported Dillards, JCP, and continue to support TRU and Best Buy, CC, and other businesses in 240 Penn Park. However, they ran because nothing outside of 240 Penn Park, has been keeping up with the times. That's why Dillards and JCP bailed to Moore, and stayed put in PSM and QSM, but are no longer on southside.
If southside doesn't clean up the area, we will continue to lose more than we gain.
It amazes me the lack of perspective people can have.
I don't really think any one part of the city is particularly overly nice, or has any world-class attractions or stores for that matter.
Someone from the North Side travels to SW 29th and thinks that is the entire South Side. Brilliant. Someone from the South Side travels to NE 23rd and Lottie at 2 a.m. and thinks that is the North Side. Equally brilliant.
Edmond is no better. The same person claiming how wonderfully luxurious Edmond is typically is also buying .99 cent bologna at Wal-Mart and getting a $10 haircut down the road. It is all very laughable, and it is like watching two poor kids trying to beat each other up while arguing over who has the better family.
This city is 80% corrugated metal, Wal-Marts, and blown-out car washes. The remaining 20%, which is spread all around town, is livable. The sooner you all come to grips with that, the quicker we can move forward and try to start making things better for everyone.
^^^Dismayed hit the nail square on the head! Perfect analysis.
"...two poor kids [arguing over who's family is better]..." LOL BRILLIANT, yet totally embarrassing to watch them make fools of themselves.
I think some of us get it, I wish more okc residents could. When I first moved and people asked where i moved from I had someone comment ' you used to live there?' as if it was something bad. The bad thing about most edmond / nothside residents is that they know nothing of the town besides whats in their community. I think if they ever drove down there and saw the area they would be surprised that in a lot of cases its nicer than there side of town.
Business is going to go where it looks like it will succeed. If chain stores (restaurants, book stores, department stores) are putting their stores in some places and not in others, chances are it is more what the numbers are showing than the personal opinions of a northsider vs. a southsider.
When I read suggestions that certain shop owners should be made to spruce of their places, I have to shake my head. That person has absolutely no idea how business works. They aren't in the business, most of them, to raise the water level in the area. They are simply spending what they have to still make a profit. There is no bottomless sack of money to do that. Moreover, people will avoid crime ridden areas because people with money avoid them and insurance is higher. There is a certain amount of taking into consideration who will come to a business that has to factor in the area's reputation, certainly. A lot of places aren't going to get built up if they have a reputation for crime and failure. The best thing to do in those areas is for the community to shop near home, keep things clean and support civic improvements. Bitching that another part of town is not coming because they are snooty is a waste of time. That does NOT mean, you don't talk up your area of town and show pride in it to whomever will listen.
Apparently when people discuss the North side, they forget how much of it is ghetto.
North includes EVERYTHING north of Reno...not the river. That includes all that crap on the west and nw side. Miles of old houses that are barely able to stand. Old businesses from the 30's that haven't been touched since then that.....barely stand up. Hell, take a look over by OCU and you can count the crack houses on each street. You have to go WAAAAAAAY to the north or NW to get to the nice stuff...basically on the other side of the NW Exway/44.
So it does bug me that people say the south side is so crappy and the north is soooo good. They both have their areas of good and bad. The SW and SE sides are nice areas. South Central is more economically deprived because it's the oldest area....socioeconomics 101 boys and girls.
To each his own folks. Some people think if you don't live in Edmond, you live in crap. I'd rather shoot myself in the foot than live in Edmond.
Any big metro are will have its rich spots, and ghetto spots, that is what people are failing to realize. When you have a metro population of over 1 million people, you can't expect every part of the city to be developed, with nice retail outlets, restaurants and homes. There is always going to be an economic development gap in any metro area.
Secondly, people are getting this whole thread mixed up, the thread starter was talking about Northside (Edmond) vs. Southside(Moore-Norman), not North OKC vs. South OKC, there's a big difference.
Having lived in all four quadrants, I can say only this: "Meh."
[QUOTE=windowphobe;314292]Having lived in all four quadrants, I can say only this: "Meh."[/QUWow!!!!!![]()
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