Re: MAPS Success
Originally Posted by
MalibuSooner
I agree about the huge need for beautification and landscaping BUT...
...It's very difficult to accomplish when you have the massive sprawl that characterizes most of OKC. Millions could be spent on the Memorial corridor alone and it would still be ugly.
Also, until there are enhanced requirements for landscaping and signage for developers, what the city can do in public spaces would be a drop in the bucket.
I would enthusiastically support large beautification projects only if they were partnered with tighter development restrictions and some sort of endowment to maintain what is put in place.
The landscaping projects that you see around town that have signs indicating that they were done by OKC Beautiful and a corporate partner such as NW Expressway between Penn Square and 50 Penn Place with Chesapeake and further west on the same street at Baptist Hospital with Integris are all endowed with maintenance funds for the term of their agreement, which is usually ten years. After the term is up, the location rights (including payment of associated maintenance) funding can be required by the same corporate sponsor or a new one, which insures continuing upkeep.
Also, Last year, new landscape requirements were adopted by OKC for new development and sidewalk requirements on the surrounding major streets were added to the requirement for sidewalks within the development. The problem is that we have so many years of developing on the cheap to overcome. There are miles and miles of inner-city streets with bare dirt paths worn next to them where there should be sidewalks. Development in the burbs has been accomplished without any consideration for pedestrian activity so the challenges are even greater out there.
Memorial Road is an example of a few cheapskate developers subverting a good plan. The OKC Planning Department did a good master plan with thoughtful design guidelines for Memorial Road several years ago prior to Quail Springs being built. If you notice the quality of construction, landscaping and monument style signs at and right around Quail Springs as opposed to the south side of the turnpike and to the east; there is a marked difference. As development went forward post-Quail Springs, individual developers obtained variances through the Planning Commission, City Council and OKC Board of Adjustment to permit the tall signs, lower quality materials and cut backs on landscaping. For all practical purposes, Memorial Road is just a bigger and more ruined version of May Avenue between NW 23rd and Memorial. It's just ghastly.
Fortunately, The City is making more good planning and development decisions today and over the next few generations, OKC can become more appealing. City boards and commissions are not the candy jar for cut-rate developers that they once were. The citywide trails system and improved mass transit plans are a couple of examples. Also, the change of directors in the Public Works Department will have a major impact on what OKC looks like going forward. Unfortunately, it's a very slow process and obviously there's much more to do. At least we're moving in a good direction.
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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