I will agree that the distribution of wealth and overall equitability of OKC is vastly underrated. That said, any place worth being has traffic. It's not "you can have good development and traffic" or "you can have bad development and no traffic" though, as both that truism and your post tend to suggest. Communities that are more established than OKC aren't that different in terms of having "big city headaches." They all actually make these exact same mistakes, just not at the alarming clip that OKC is tearing down its historic buildings.
That said, considering that other cities also mistakenly tear their urban fabric down, each historic asset that OKC loses is another lost opportunity to become just as established as other cities. With a little vision, it's a huge opportunity that we can take advantage of. With the continued dearth of vision, it's slipping away.
You take his comment on London as an example of that RickOKC. London obviously has a much longer history and has had to evolve over hundreds of years. Great work over the years to maintain history and urbanness, but yet they still have traffic problems and it's so expensive to live there that there is a nice long list of issues that go with it. I think, and Spartan please correct me, what he was saying is that a lot of the comments here tend to be of "the grass is greener" type in that we often post here in reference to things that are done better in other cities, but we often forget to also think about the problems those cities have...which are often even worse than ours. We might do better in some areas and we do worse in others. A major part of things is the point in time OKC started to develop...heck, or even become a city. Like Houston, the advent of the car and A/C made a huge different in how the city grew compared to older cities like Boston that had their core developed long before that.
Agreed bomber.
I have said it a few times and will keep saying it because it will always hold true: Tulsa, OKC, and Oklahoma are YOUNG.
We are a young state with young cities, we don't have near the history as pretty much anything East of the Mississippi, or West of the Rockies.
When we look at things from that perspective, you'll realize that our two major cities and state are actually doing just fine given how long we've been around and what we have to work with.
Room for improvement? Of course, but it's not all hellfire and doom as many would suggest from time to time.
Never mind - it doesn't matter.
I don't even undetstand why they are saving that sign. If the structure itself wasn't worth saving then who cares if its former location is memorialized? All it will do now is confuse people looking for the bus station.
^I think that's actually how a lot of people feel about it...
In the trial, Shadid's attorney called the plan to save the sign a "glass casket".
From jeepnokc:
And gone:
Maybe the sign should go in the amazing Baum Building remnants museum - the museum of what might have been.
I've wondered why Curtis Hart couldn't get his hands on that sign. It would make a nice addition to the Muscle Car Ranch. That way it could be saved, plus be on display with many other vintage signs.
Because the sign is neat and it's a homage to the history of that corner? For what it's worth, I care. It's really the least they could do... I don't want to see the sign shipped off to some hobbyist or museum where it is forgotten about and looses all remaining context.
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