Originally Posted by
Spartan
This is such a northsider perspective.
OKC used to have a fabulous riverside neighborhood. Wheeler Park and especially Delmar Gardens were far closer to Central Park than this MAPS3 "Central Park" will ever be. It was lush, beautiful, and very active. Yes it used to flood a lot so the Army Corps of Engineers clear cut the whole area and damned up the river so we could instead mow it for the next 60 years. They solved the problem of a wild and untamed river flooding occasionally into a beautiful urban area by eliminating the beautiful urban area.
One of the buildings the city is going to wipe away is the original Film Exchange before all that activity migrated to the western edge of downtown. What's funny about the northsider perspective on downtown is that they've remained consistently moderately involved with downtown. In the OKC of old, the Capitol Hill community and greater southside was more connected to downtown and what's changed over the decades is that the southside has been completely cut off from downtown and hence today's descendants of Capitol Hill, Southeast, and U.S. Grant people all live south of I-240. Another thing that made me laugh the other day was when Steve Lackmeyer boasted on his chat that soon "downtown" will stretch from the river, to NW 13th, to Western, to Lincoln. As if it doesn't already?? In the 1960s city leaders were boasting that soon downtown was going to stretch west to Penn. That was visionary, perhaps too much so.
Along Robinson are a lot of great old buildings that could easily be renovated into a remarkable district wi PLENTY of room for newer infill. You guys should really drive around Robinson, S Broadway, and Shields. There's old bones there, at least much historic fabric as exists in Midtown, and you don't see anyone saying Midtown is a desolate wasteland shantytown that should be wiped clean. The problem here is that the northside still has no respect for the southside.
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