Have you ever taken a walk in one of your city's oldest neighborhoods? Have you been to Lawrenceville or the Mexican War Streets (pictured above) in Pittsburgh? How about Ohio City in Cleveland or Crandall Park in Youngstown? You will find beautiful buildings clustered together that have been around since the nineteenth century in most cases. That's probably 150 years on average compared to places built after World War II, which are starting to show their age.
Old commercial districts functioned well with a human scale. They are still intact in most cities, regardless of vacany rates. Compare these charming business districts with today's strip malls and big box stores out on the fringes. Developers and big box retailers consider their buildings "throwaways" for the most part. Consider the Walmart in Warren, Ohio, which was built in 1994. Within 10 years of opening this store, plans were in the works to open a newer Super Walmart across the street. This store was vacated in 2008. It currently sits empty on Elm Road with a few small stores barely hanging on in its parking lot. If you look 1/4 mile to the north and across the street, you will find Super Walmart flanked by a brand new strip mall. This land backs up to Mosquito Creek, part of Trumbull County's largest watershed. Less than 5 years ago it was a forest. The first Walmart site was thriving. Downtown Warren was and is experiencing a lack of activity. Today the forest was bulldozed and we have yet another vacant greyfield on our hands and another downtown not living up to its potential.
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Now I don't want to sit and rant about Walmart any longer, as I'm sure this is one of hundreds of cases of this situation occuring all over America. The real problem is the mentality that new is cheap. Old was built to last. In some neighborhoods, such as Italian Village in Columbus, urban infill is occurring as it should. Developers are building hearty homes and businesses which are designed to fit in with the existing context. The new row houses above match the
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What are the places in your city that make you proud? Which neighborhoods are rich in character and quality? Which "neighborhoods" were built for the sole reason of filling the developer's pockets while selling out the greater community's potential for quality?
I looove crandall park! I grew up in youngstown and I go to school for architecture and alot of that passion has to do with crandall park. god those houses are so amazing. I just want to walk into them. ugh! what I would give to tour a few of them. my friend lived in one of the "smaller" houses a few years back- it only had 4 or 5 bedrooms so it wasn't one of the good ones, yah no. idk, old mansions fascinate me for some reason. yah no what? I am going there 2marrow. yep. maybe people will see me stocking and invite me in!... hopefully I dont get one of the gangster houses. haha! where r u from, anyway? if your from yo, you will probably understand what I mean. crandall park is great, but the people they share their back yards with are either a collage fraternity or drug dealers. probably why all the kids are drug addicts. hey, I am not knockin, i used to be one. if you still come to your blog hit me back! and p.s. you need a much better picture of youngstown! I will get you one 2marrow - no joke
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