Originally Posted by
BigD Misey
Spartan,
Housing is right! With the new condos and apts in deep deuce, the recent 7 story conversion of City Place/Ramsey...there is evidence that not only are developers interested in housing downtown but so are residents.
But, literally how many residences and apartments are currently downtown? A handful? Granted, that is all that has been needed in Downtown itself. It shocks me that even 5000 actually live downtown, unless your definition of downtown is a little broader than mine. But for clarity...I wonder if you could find out specifically how many live between walker and I235 and between 6th and the river. There are no grocery stores and few retail stores to support what most Oklahomans, or anyone else, is a comfortable suburban lifestyle, with a Grocery store, electronics store and sport clips within a few blocks. Where all you have to do is open the sliding glass door to let the dog out! That is the way most citizens would choose to live.
You can’t get that in Downtown right now. It’s vastly industrial and high-rise.
That’s why mixed use is so successful these days. Dry cleaners, small restaurants and small markets and stores to get the basics, and for now the occasional big grocery run a mile or two away. Then, once a few see it’s not such an inconvenient lifestyle, more make the jump. Then there will be the need for a full fledge grocery store. Then, next thing you know, everyone can have the same lifestyle as the suburbs, in a vibrant metropolis downtown. It’s what many successful 30 and unders want now days. About 10 years ago Dallas started the ball rolling and it hasn’t stopped yet. Fort Worth likewise is converting a lot of older multi story buildings into condos and apts.
To add to your point, the bigger picture shows useless dilapidated property south of the current downtown. Filled with a few companies and buildings that were useful to the city in the forties thru the 70's, but now are strangling market improvement which will benefit the many. But that doesn’t mean that people wouldn’t choose to live downtown, it just means downtown right now and in the past isn’t giving them what they need.
Surviving Cities must take risks to attract Corporations and people. Corporations need transportation, suitable living and a city that looks more modern than the 50's. With the property between the river and downtown, you first have to get through the 50's to get to the modern age. It’s not what companies want, what people want or what visitors want.
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