Re: Downtown needs large grocery store
Originally Posted by
Jack
The point would be to attract more residents downtown. Many residents don't want to live downtown because it's inconvenient. There are no grocery stores downtown. Bass Pro has kicked off Firefly, Boones General Store, Painted Door, etc.
I think that I see the point you are trying to make Jack, but just because these other business opened in Bricktown post-Bass Pro, it is a bit of a stretch to make a direct link. It's just not that simple. The only easily traced direct link, is the investment of public funds in the ballpark, canal, arena etc. And by the way, there is a mid-sized Homeland at NW 18th and Classen which is as close to the Deep Duece Apartments as most suburban houses are to the grocery store where they shop. It's just not a grocery store that most people think of as a downtown store or, frankly, one that has sufficient urban appeal.
Also, regarding the grocery store issue. The City of OKC is presently engaged in a market and site study to help attract an urban grocery retailer. Early this spring, after the study is completed, they will begin the recruitment process and no existing OKC grocers are on the short list. Unlike your view Jack, which lacks much thought or study, The City recognizes that the urban market requires a different approach. Chains like Whole Foods and Trader Joe's are the ones being considered.
A Whole Foods downtown would be a destination and attract consumers from the entire metro, not just downtown residents. There will be sufficient downtown housing completed by mid-2007 to provide the setting and base market for an urban grocery store. Granted, most OKCitians will still choose WalMart, Albertsons etc., just like most will still choose the burbs as a place to live. We're only talking about a few thousand dwellers downtown in the first place. No one is suggesting that everyone should sell their three-bed-two-&-1/2-bath-W/.175-acre-lawn-american-dream and move downtown. A lot of people just get way too defensive when they discuss downtown housing. Perhaps it is based in some unreasonable fear of the "creative class".
The way overused term "think outside the box" couldn't be more appropriate than as it applies to the new downtown grocery store issue.
The Old Downtown Guy
It will take decades for Oklahoma City's
downtown core to regain its lost gritty,
dynamic urban character, but it's exciting
to observe and participate in the transformation.
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