21 years later H Street NE commercial district is still dirty
I've been amazed at how much cleaner Salt Lake City tends to be compared to DC.
For example, a few years ago, I walked from Manor Park to Columbia Heights and back, and picked up and disposed of over 500 recyclables...
This is a query on Reddit DC, looking for people to help clean up H Street NE.
As chair of the H Street Main Street Promotions Committee back in 2003 this is something we did too. I wrote about it in a couple entries:
-- "Every Litter Bit Hurts," 2005
-- "Community cleanups (and other activities) as community building and civic engagement activities," 2011
I would say it gave me a much better ground-based appreciation about the nature of the trash. In DC commercial districts, it's pretty typical for trash to flow into the first residential block on either side of the street.
So clean up programs should include the abutting residential areas where appropriate.
It also illustrates that commercial district revitalization is a never ending effort. Perceptions of public safety are shaped by cleanliness, the presence of graffiti, etc.
-- "Updating the post The "soft side" of commercial district revitalization," 2006/2016
Decades ago, DC used to pay people to clean the streets of commercial districts, but that program ended when the city was in bankruptcy.
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This article is interesting. Back when I did Main Street commercial district revitalization work, I used to make the point that small cities and big cities often missed the point when approaching their work. A big city wasn't all downtown. The neighborhood commercial districts are more akin to smaller town commercial districts. Therefore small towns can learn from neighborhood commercial districts in cities and vice versa.
This article about commercial district revitalization in smaller towns across Minnesota illustrates the point ("From Owatonna to Red Wing, Minnesota's small downtowns see resurgence," Minneapolis Star Tribune, archive.ph copy).
Labels: commercial district revitalization planning, public safety, public space management, retail entrepreneurship development, retail planning, urban design/placemaking
2 Comments:
Chuck D'Aprix here. I am the founder and President of an award-winning commercial district revitalization nonprofit in Richmond. I concur with your perspective here. My firm Downtown Economics recently completed a multi-commercial district plan in Roanoke. Interestingpost--thank you.
I think the issue is engagement, people, not just government workers, engaged in the cleaning up. Since they are there all the other times government workers are not. Plus focused enforcement.
https://www.inquirer.com/news/philadelphia/residents-welcome-phillys-citywide-cleanup-complaint-data-shows-trash-quickly-returns-20240730.html
Residents welcome Philly’s citywide cleanup, but complaint data show trash quickly returns
Mayor Parker’s Office of Clean and Green aimed to deep clean every Philly neighborhood this year. Halfway through the program, Philly 311 data show that trash complaints have not receded.
The cleaning impacts neighborhoods in different ways
Williams said the aim is for residents to see their city clean, and feel motivated to keep it clean. But delayed trash pickups and illegal dumping — frequently cited by residents as the top cleanliness concerns in their neighborhoods — cause uncontrollable spread of garbage.
Here are some solutions that residents said would have a longer lasting impact:
- Hold illegal dumpers accountable
- More trash cans
- reliable trash pickup
Cleaning and greening is just the start.
-- Hold illegal dumpers accountable
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