Re: Re-urbanizing Downtown
You know, after reading some of the recent comments in the 499 Sheridan thread I got to thinking more about OKC's culture and what could be done to change it. What was mentioned were examples of people who would complain about walking a block after finding a parking spot for a venue or those who would insist on moving their car closer to another district (Bricktown) when they'd already parked (in the CBD) but wanted to patronize a restaurant. This got me thinking, what could be done to change or convince people that walking a few blocks is ok; and there are several things that can and need to be done.
1) create an environment that encourages walking. This means well LIT sidewalks, with trees (in OKC, this is essential), sitting benches, and transit cutouts/stops. It also means having something to 'see' along the way (such as public art or private investment). Pedestrian-ize the traffic signals - make them slow down traffic in most corridors to encourage critical mass (and let them fully cross). These are all 'simple' ideas that could easily be implemented and is something DowntownOKC and the downtown groups should quickly get behind.
2) better wayfinding/signage. So far most of what I've seen has been vehicle oriented, but how about implementing human scale wayfinding and/or signage? Perhaps the city could allow new businesses to post signage directing pedestrians to their business for a period of time, sort of an incubator if you will. Vehicular wayfinding identifying the districts and best attractions, pedestrian wayfinding identifying venues and how "close" everything in downtown OKC really is (instead of X miles, convert to XX feet or blocks). Bricktown Canal 2 blocks E, Myriad Gardens 3 blocks S, OKC Memorial 1 block W: all examples of human scale wayfinding.
3) build density of establishments along the way - this will take longer to implement in most areas of downtown but I was a little disappointed when nobody responded positively when I mentioned opening up retail fronts in the Santa Fe garage along EKG. I personally think it could be a great revenue source for the city/owner and could provide a more positive urban environment if there were something to see along the way. If businesses were good enough, then folks could even patronize them. But to me, Santa Fe is a missed opportunity in its current state of a mall type interiour only access and should have frontage to at least allow window shopping while walking to/from Bricktown; at minimum. ..
4) Organize downtown civic groups to "walk-the-city". This may be a little out-of-the-box but is a great way to encourage people to get out. OKC has enough downtown organizations now, so why not have a day for each one to have its members get out and walk throughout downtown. This wouldn't be a race but instead an organized walk to patronize businesses and/or educate citizens on what downtown has to offer. This may have a side effect of drawing people out of their cars along the way, to participate. which itself has a domino effect. Here, think bar crawl where a hopping district has so many folks moving that people driving want to park and participate. Not (ONLY) a bar crawl but a downtown OKC crawl... Perhaps a bad example but probably the best example I could think of in relation to OKC's demographic.
5) Likely one of the best thoughts in my mind here - OKC needs a civic Television/Radio magazine. Here in Seattle we have 'Evening Magazine' on King 5 Television, which showcases things to do in the PacNW and has the anchors OUT participating in whatever event/venue they cover. OKC should do the same and have it focus on getting out downtown and the inner city. Not only would this be beneficial for businesses downtown but it likely has an 'educational' side effect and greatest opportunity to change OKC culture when a mass audience observes people they admire getting out and patronizing the city. If emphasis could be made on HOW to patronize downtown - Drive (eventually transit in), park the car once, enjoy your venue, and then walk if you want to go somewhere else since downtown is only 1 square mile or so. The host/ess could even 'show' how its done by doing it themself and dressing appropriately for it.
What I'm thinking here is a show highlighting a night out downtown, where the young hostess is going to dinner and a movie downtown with her date. They drive to the city from Edmond and park at a garage. He has an umbrella ready and both are dressed nicely to go to Broadway 10 or Red, they go inside and enjoy (showcasing their meal and eating ettiquit), then decide to go to the Harkins for a show or Civic Center (walking from AAlley leaving the car parked), then they get ice cream (somewhere) and hang out in the myriad gardens for a romantic end of the evening with no more mention of their car. ...r
There could be other shows, such as "going to a Thunder game? What to do before/after", "taking transit to downtown and using your feet IN downtown", "Exploring Automobile Alley and Film Row in one trip", "Diamonds are a Girl's Best Friend - so is downtown's Park Avenue" (showcasing BC Clark and the shoppes in the CBD), "Going DEEP into Deep Deuce", "Hotels, hotels, hotels of Downtown OKC", "Riding the Canal" (urbanized will love this show), "What Is In Downtown?" (this could be a recurring, central theme updated as new businesses open/close), "I'm moving downtown", "My next vacation is, Downtown". You get the idea?
Over time, these shows would be ingrained into OKC area residents and likely could help motivate or at least show people how to live/participate in the most urban environment of the state. Also, the shows would give area businesses the chance to advertise (which could be cheap if say DOKC purchases 30 second blocks and sold 5 second bits to locals) and the Television station likely may see a ratings benefit as being the LOCAL station (notice King 5's motto). ..
Oklahoma City, the RENAISSANCE CITY!
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