Rebuilding Place in the Urban Space

"A community’s physical form, rather than its land uses, is its most intrinsic and enduring characteristic." [Katz, EPA] This blog focuses on place and placemaking and all that makes it work--historic preservation, urban design, transportation, asset-based community development, arts & cultural development, commercial district revitalization, tourism & destination development, and quality of life advocacy--along with doses of civic engagement and good governance watchdogging.

Wednesday, December 11, 2024

Lack of a system breeds more of the same: Source Theater, Washington DC, up for sale 2006, 2024

 A lot of my thinking about arts revitalization and more generally as an element of a community's culture was influenced by the failure of a bunch of DC arts organizations around 2003-2006.  

The Source Theater was one of the failures ("Debt-Ridden Source Theatre Closes, Plans to Sell Building," "Source Theatre's Last Act: Building To Be Arts Center," Washington Post, 2006).

The actual Source Theater group disbanded, and with the purchase by Cultural Development Corporation later in 2006, the building was retained for use by cultural groups, more as a rental facility.

Ironically, the building has been put up for sale again, 18 years later ("Small D.C. theater companies have a challenge: Finding theaters The stalwart Source Theater is up for sale, shining a spotlight on the issues many under-the-radar companies face in post-lockdown Washington," Washington Post).  From the Post:

... the Source Theatre, an intimate 120-seat stage at 14th and T streets NW that has served audiences for nearly 50 years, is up for sale — a turn of events that has arts leaders pointing the finger at both city leaders and one another. 

“Since the pandemic, the arts community, specifically the theater community, has not bounced back,” says Kristi Maiselman, executive director and curator for the arts nonprofit CulturalDC, which owns the Source. “If the city wants arts spaces, they have to find a way to support them in this landscape.”

With audiences not yet returning at pre-pandemic levels, many small theaters are turning to the city government for support. And the D.C. government spends more on the arts per capita than any state. But it isn’t just small companies asking for help, which makes a race for resources that much tighter.

Gosh, I've been saying that for almost 20 years.

Also see "“Free Our Source”: Theatre Washington Calls on CulturalDC to Keep Source Theatre a Theater," (Washington City Paper).  The discusses how the Theatre Alliance of Washington has called on the property owner to sell Source Theater to them or a similar organization.

The failure to think about those failures in terms of rethinking the local arts ecosystem as a network led to pieces such as:

-- "More on (DC's) Cultural Infrastructure," 2009 
-- "Building the arts and culture ecosystem in DC: Part One, sustained efforts vs. one-off or short term initiatives," 2015
-- "The song remains the same: DC's continued failures in cultural planning as evidenced by failures with Bohemian Caverns, Howard Theatre, Union Arts, Takoma Theatre...," 2016

-- about discipline-focused approaches to the creation of arts districts and arts presentation:

-- "Reprinting with a slight update, 'Arts, culture districts and revitalization'," 2009/2019

and what I would do were I given the task of creating in DC a robust local arts ecosystem--as opposed to the federal arts institutions "given to" and within DC such as the Smithsonian Museums, National Gallery of Art, Kennedy Center, US Botanic Garden, etc.

-- "What would be a "Transformational Projects Action Plan" for DC's cultural ecosystem," 2019

DC spends a lot of money on the arts, but it doesn't protect its interests very well, especially because it's not interested in managing and owning property.  Ultimately owning facilities is key to protect the city's interest.

This piece, "Cultural resources planning in DC: In the land of the blind, the one-eyed man is king" (2007) on the failures of organizations back in 2003-2006,  includes an extract from a memo from 2006 on how DC should organize cultural planning and presentation  that I wrote for use in a board planning exercise by the then reorganizing Historical Society.  From that memo:

Proposals/Recommendations

1. That DC develop a comprehensive cultural development, management, and funding plan, setting priorities for the development, harvesting, and funding of cultural resources assets;

2. And consider the development of an allied tourism management and development plan, either separately or within the same framework;

3. create a comprehensive Cultural Resources Management office, likely merging a variety of programs and assets currently spread around various agencies

4. Provide funding, both for capital improvements and operations, that that also considers providing significant ongoing funding to cultural resources deemed important.

5. Develop an open and transparent grant process.

I guess I should have added to the list, the thread about arts facilities being owned by a city, county, or community development corporation as a portfolio, the series Buy the Mother Fucking Buildings Already

-- "BTMFBA: the best way to ward off artist or retail displacement is to buy the building," 2016

-- "BTMFBA: maintaining arts spaces in the face of rising real estate values | Seattle, New York City," 2024
-- "New form of BTMFBA in San Francisco," 2023
-- "A wrinkle on BTMFBA: let the city/county own the cultural facility, while you operate it (San Francisco and the Fillmore Heritage Center)," 2021
-- "BTMFBA: Baltimore and the Area 405 Studio," 2021
-- "Revisiting stories: cultural planning and the need for arts-based community development corporations as real estate operators," 2018
-- "When BTMFBA isn't enough: keeping civic assets public through cy pres review," 2016
-- "BMFBTA revisited: nonprofits and facilities planning and acquisition," 2016
-- "BTMFBA: artists and Los Angeles," 2017
-- "BTMFBA Chronicles: Seattle coffee shop raises money to buy its building," 2018
-- "Dateline Los Angeles: BTMFBA & Transformational Projects Action Planning & arts-related community development corporation as an implementation mechanism to own property," 2018

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The town (or place) that art saved(?): arts as revitalization versus arts as community building

I suppose there is a book out there, modelled after The Town that Food Saved, about the arts.  The issue I have been attuned to going on 20 years is revitalization focused arts programming versus what I call arts as community building.  

The way of specifying the difference is a program versus a one off activity creating a mural, etc.  It's not that the latter isn't important, but it isn't a program with objectives, and it's the program that makes a difference in revitalization (Developing and Advancing a Cultural District Tools: Resources, and Templates for Creating a Successful Cultural District, Americans for the Arts)

Another way to think about this is sustained efforts ("Building the arts and culture ecosystem in DC: Part One, sustained efforts vs. one-off or short term initiatives," 2015).  My entry on arts districts and arts as consumption versus arts as production is about this kind of approach ("Reprinting with a slight update, "Arts, culture districts and revitalization"," originally 2009, revised 2019).  The entry discusses arts as production versus arts as consumption, relying on the writings of John Montgomery, the components of arts districts, and facilities as infrastructure.

Or from Urban Regime theory:

An urban regime can be preliminarily defined as the informal arrangements through which a locality is governed (Stone 1989). Because governance is about sustained efforts, it is important to think in agenda terms rather than about stand-alone issues. By agenda I mean the set of challenges which policy makers accord priority. A concern with agendas takes us away from focusing on short-term controversies and instead directs attention to continuing efforts and the level of weight they carry in the political life of a community. Rather than treating issues as if they are disconnected, a governance perspective calls for considering how any given issue fits into a flow of decisions and actions. This approach enlarges the scope of what is being analyzed, looking at the forest not a particular tree here or there. [emphasis added, in this paragraph and below] ...

By looking closely at the policy role of business leaders and how their position in the civic structure of a community enabled that role, he identified connections between Atlanta's governing coalition and the resources it brought to bear, and on to the scheme of cooperation that made this informal system work. In his own way, Hunter had identified the key elements in an urban regime – governing coalitionagendaresources, and mode of cooperation. These elements could be brought into the next debate about analyzing local politics, a debate about structural determinism.

So much about the arts in community and revitalization is the lack of a program.  Also see: 

-- "Gaps in Parks Master Planning: Part Five | Planning for Public Art as an element of park facilities"
-- "Gaps in Parks Master Planning, Part Six | Art(s) in the Park(s) as a comprehensive program "

Murals as community building: Philadelphia.  Can murals be a gateway to a more developed revitalization program?  Philadelphia is known for their mural arts program, which is massive ("Philadelphia's Mural Arts program will bring expertise, funding to Detroit," Detroit Free Press).  

But while it contributes to neighborhood stabilization and gets people involved, does it truly harvest the interests and needs of the community in terms of improvement of the local micro-economy?

I think it comes down to most artists involved in such programs not being interested in revitalization.  Often, city arts functions are part of the "economic development" cluster of city agencies.  But I'm not sure good the average arts council is on these functions either.  If, and that's a big if, cities want to achieve revitalization objectives from mural projects too, they're going to have to plan for it.  For example, Arts Councils probably need to add some economic development planners.

Springfield Missouri Museum of Art.  Somehow I came across a program by the museum which had community members go through the collection, especially items in storage and create exhibits of their reactions.  Again, I think this is community building. nd building awareness and interest in the institution and the community ("House of Art(s) to open at the Springfield Art Museum," Springfield News-Leader), "Drury Students to help with De-Installation of Springfield Art Museum Exhibit," Ozarks First, "Space as event as ouevre," Gerard Nadeau).  But that isn't revitalization, and again ikely that's not a goal of the museum.  From the first article:

In collaboration with Drury University's Art of Space, led by assistant professor Gerard Nadeau, the museum is erecting the outdoor House of Art(s) on the northwest corner of the museum's grounds. 

 Sarah Buhr, the museum's curator of art, says the project has been in the works for months and is funded with money from Missouri Arts Council grants. Buhr says the idea for the outdoor exhibit was born after members of Art of Space visited the museum. "We gave them a small tour of our storage spaces in our collection and a challenge: Think of a project that would connect with the interior of the museum from the outside," she says. 

The Drury students came up with the idea for the House of Art(s). Large weatherproofed panels that were painted by artists throughout the community will form the walls of the space. Plexiglas panels will form a sort of roof, to protect the contents.

Arts as revitalization.  Below are listed programs that I think qualify as arts as revitalization.  The list is by no means comprehensive.  There are dozens and dozens of such districts in the US and abroad.

Murals as community branding: City of South Salt Lake.  In SLC, SSL is considered "inner city." If they only knew.  SSL has a bunch of industrial land, is adding apartments, doesn't really have a center but claim to be creating one ("South Salt Lake’s “downtown” has been a bust so far. Its new transit station areas plan aims to change that," Building Salt Lake), although they have the opportunity because of a heavily used Trax station just a couple blocks away from State Street.

Main Street in Salt Lake is more a dividing line between east and west than a Main Street per se, that function is fulfilled by State Street  (Hwy 89, which crosses the entire state).  In SSL, Main Street is mostly a lot of low rise industrial, and so in today's post industrial society, brewpubs qualify zoning-wise, so there are many.

Nothing Lasts mural and Apex Brewing.  It's hard to develop vitality in a corridor when most of the buildings are fronted by parking.

This corridor has been targeted by SSL as the site for an annual Mural Fest in May ("Mural Fest draws international attention to new art in South Salt Lake," KSL-TV), where artists create new murals to add to the outdoor gallery.  It's comparable to Wynnwood Walls in Miami (see below), but the large size of the blocks and car dependency make it hard to develop a walking culture, especially because many of the buildings still function as industrial.

While SSL has designated this area as a Creative Industries Zone, I don't think it's had the same kind of impact of Portland's Central Eastside industrial zoning for small and artisan businesses.  Still, the very visual murals have been a way for the city to differentiate and develop an identity separate from Salt Lake City.

Pittsburgh.  I read a bunch of articles over the weekend from the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, and these are about mural projects ("North Side mural project will bring a splash of color to blighted streets," "New Sharpsburg public art highlights the borough's vibrant community and indigenous history," "“TThe Strip Mural,” on the Hermanowski building in the Strip District.9MORE Strip search: A Penn Avenue mural is filled with Easter eggs to the neighborhood it honorss,")

Pittsburgh Glass Center is one of the anchor institutions that was recruited by the Penn Ave. Arts Initiative.

OTOH, Pittsburgh has at least two national best practice examples of arts districts, one is the Pittsburgh Cultural Trust, operating Downtown and in other parts of the city ("The Howard and Lincoln Theatres: run them like the Pittsburgh Cultural Trust/Playhouse Square Cleveland model," 2012, "Pittsburgh Cultural Trust maintains diverse real estate portfolio to support arts," Pittsburgh Post-Gazette; "How the Arts Drove Pittsburgh's Revitalization," The Atlantic) at a bigger scale, more arts as consumption, and the Penn Ave. Arts Initiative, which is more a bottom up effort focused on expanding the work and array of art as production, centered on artists who live in the neighborhood, complemented by the development of arts anchors, sponsored by two neighborhood improvement associations along the avenue ("Artists revitalized Penn Avenue by creating Pittsburgh’s longest-running monthly art festival," NextPittsburgh, "Creating Place: The role of Community Development Corporations in Pittsburgh’s neighborhoods," 

Artfields, Lake City SC.  There is an educational television program I saw over the weekend, "Towns in Tune," featuring two communities, one in Canada, one in the US.  

The US program focused on Lake City, SC, a town which crashed in association with the decline of tobacco and other crops.  An initiative, called ArtFields, is both an 11 day event, held in spots around the community, an organization, and an ongoing program including galleries, public art, and arts education.  

They do interesting things, and is an example of a town that art saved, as business has increased, vacant storefronts have been occupied and became thriving businesses, a stream of tourists, etc.  Surprisingly the small community has access to a ton of money, through the generosity of Darla Moore, a hedge fund operator, who grew up there.

"Tin Man" by Bill Secunda, is on display at the Amway Grand Plaza Hotel in Grand Rapids. At 17 feet tall, it towers above pedestrians and traffic and is seen "offering to us his most prized possession, his heart." Chris DuMond, Special To The Detroit News

Grand Rapids, Michigan.  Art Fields is modelled after the Art Prize program in Grand Rapids, Michigan.  It's  a two week festival, with decent monetary prizes for artists ("ArtPrize to transform Grand Rapids in two weeks," "Why ArtPrize had a bigger economic impact in 2023," WOOD-TV,  "ArtPrize returns to downtown Grand Rapids. Here's what's different this year," Detroit News, "15 years later, can ArtPrize still wow Grand Rapids?," Grand Rapids Press).

Amanda Browder’s Spectral Locus, 2016, included in ArtPrize’s Project 1 biennial. Photo: Tom Loonan/Project 1.

Last year, they had over 700,000 attendees at 50 events.  Pieces are placed at hundreds of venues across the city, from coffee shops to an auto body shop, helping to make connections and generating income for local businesses.

Like Lake City, the program had a big donor, originally the DeVos Family.  Grand Rapids didn't need saving, it's one of the most thriving communities in Western Michigan, but you can never be successful enough.

Unfortunately, with covid, the program started disbanding, but was revived by the city and other entities ("ARTPRIZE DISSOLVES BOARD, ENDS COMPETITION," ArtForum, "ArtPrize calls it quits after 13 years," Grand Rapids Press).  Obviously there is a lesson there too.

Baltimore.  The Station North Arts District, anchored by Penn Station, Maryland Institute of Contemporary Art (a degree granting institution) and the University of Baltimore, has always impressed me.  It shines during Artscape, a weekend art festival run by the city through a separate nonprofit but government agency, but more recently Artscape has had problems because of city over involvement, rain wrecking most of one festival, and covid, "Artscape will return to Midtown and Station North in 2024; 11 new members join BOPA board of directors," Baltimore Fishbowl).

The Made in Baltimore market was part of Artscape 2023. Baltimore's Artscape festival returned in September 2023 after a three-year hiatus. Photo by Ed Gunts.

The district has many anchor organizations and buildings, with space for arts and organizations and programs ("Art Space: Former Station North Funeral Home Transforms Into a Community Art Hub," Baltimore Fishbowl).  Anchoring institutions include the Maryland Film Festival and theatres, and the Johns Hopkins theatre and film programs (the campus is a couple miles away).

A parking lot in the Station North arts district will become the setting for a six-story, 160-unit apartment building designed for artists, under a plan by The Severn Companies and CAM Construction..

Art House Baltimore is the name of the project.It  will house a community gathering space, management offices, a telework lounge, a fitness center, covered parking and about 13,000 square feet of commercial space that can accommodate a mix of artist studios, a makerspace and a café. The residences will be a mix of one-, two- and three-bedroom apartments.

And there is a good program for developing live work housing for artists.  It used to be that Jubilee Housing of Baltimore was the main actor, but now for profit developers are active too ("Artists’ housing: Six-story, 160-unit, $37 million apartment building proposed for Baltimore’s Station North area," Baltimore Fishbowl).

Both Station North as an arts district and the Penn Ave.. Arts Initiative have "an advantage" in that they are still weak real estate markets, so property prices, while rising, aren't the same kind of hindrance as they are in strong real estate markets ("Central Baltimore Partnership and Johns Hopkins unveil new plan for Station North," Fox5 Baltimore).

-- 2024 Station North Economic Development Implementation Roadmap

It is interesting that the University of Baltimore and MICA weren't also conveners of the study.  And 10 years ago I suggested that Morgan State should have moved their architecture school to the district ("Morgan State University should move their architecture and planning school to Downtown/Station North Arts District," ).

Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts has sponsored other big annual festivals and events, including a book festival and winter light festival.

The State of Maryland has an arts district designation program, which has some benefits to artists like tax exclusions on sales of art made within the district, but it's pretty limited.

-- State Cultural Districts, Policy Brief, National Assembly of State Arts Agencies

Mural by Reinier Gamboa.

Wynnwood Arts District, Miami.  Was created by gallerists, but a few years later the Wynnwood Walls program of mural production was created to extend the arts district to the outdoors and increase foot traffic and visibility ("n Miami, the Murals Are the Message," New York Times).  

It's become one of the city's arts centers, with galleries, five museums, private collections presented to the public, artist studios, performance spaces, various festivals, and Art Basel Miami ("Breathing Life, and Art, Into a Downtrodden Neighborhood," New York Times).

Interestingly, as rents rose the number of galleries shrunk from 70 to 10.  So the Wynnwood district is an example of arts uses preparing a neighborhood for reproduction of space in ways that displace the pioneers.  

Prince Edward County, Ontario. A rural community development program that pre-dates Lake City is the Creative Rural Economy initiative in Ontario ("Canada’s underrated answer to the Hamptons – halfway between Montreal and Toronto," Telegraph).

This economic and community development program focuses on food, agriculture especially wine, arts and related activities ("Creativity, Tourism and Economic Development in a Rural Context: the case of Prince Edward County," Journal of Rural and Community Development)

North Adams/Pittsfield/Williams College/Williamstown: Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art. In Western Massachusetts, between Albany and Boston, MassMOCA, the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art was created to show large works over the long term, in previously abandoned very large manufacturing facilities.  

I think this was one of the first arts districts I came across, when I first started working on urban revitalization ("MassMoCA: What Dallas can learn from a museum in rural Massachusetts," Dallas Morning News, "Mass MoCA sees momentum through 25 years," "How can a museum grow a creative ecosystem?," and "North Adams and Mass MoCA look to the future," BTW Berkshires, "Mass Moca, the museum that almost wasn't, celebrates 20 years," Art Newspaper).

From Art Newspaper:

The museum does not collect, which is another break from the institutional norm. It has some long-term installations, such Sol LeWitt’s dedicated wall-drawing retrospective that has an astounding 40-year run (it remains up until 2043). Only Mass Moca had the space and entrepreneurial spunk to do it. 

... Mass Moca is an anomaly in another respect: the museum has 37 commercial tenants that now generate $50m in economic activity for the region annually. The commercial rents are an essential part of the museum's financial model. This hybrid use of space will—and should—inform future museum expansions. 

Mass Moca is also different in the role performing arts play in its programming. Around half the museum's resources go to dance, theatre, film, concerts and festivals. Of the museum’s 300,000 annual visitors, around a third come for the performing arts. ... Few museums truly integrate the performing arts with the visual arts, although almost all great artists have been passionately engaged with the music and theatre of their times. Though this seems like a no-brainer, so thorough and organically united a programme is rare.

(An educational film on the project, "Downside UP," influenced one of my H Street Promotions Committee members, and we came up with an expanded concept for an arts district on H Street NE in Washington, DC.  While there are some organizations and plenty of eating and drinking establishments that have opened in the two decades since, no way is it an arts district.

We proposed incorporating the schools, and off street buildings into the program, and a couple of then abandoned city-owned buildings, when property was still "cheap" but it didn't come to pass.)

While the museum is super cool and some related businesses have opened, the area hasn't succeeded in becoming an arts district draw in the way that the other districts.  From the Boston Globe article, "Has Mass MoCA accomplished what it set out to do 25 years later,":

Mass MoCA has delivered on its artistic promise. It now ranks among the largest contemporary art museums in the country. Innovative long-term loans ensure works by art-world heavyweights fill its galleries. Lively music festivals draw tens of thousands of visitors each year, while its cavernous halls enable contemporary artists to create exhibitions at a scale seldom realized in the United States. One 2017 study put its annual lift to Berkshire County at just more than $50 million.

But the numbers tell a less convincing story when it comes to the museum’s economic impact on the people of North Adams. The median annual household income here — according to the latest estimates around $49,525, or roughly half the statewide figure — has grown by about $2,300 when adjusted for inflation over the past quarter century. Though it’s impossible to say where the city would be without Mass MoCA, the median household income has grown statewide by roughly $10,000 during that time, nearly four and a half times greater than in North Adams.

The lessons here are (1) you need a revitalization plan to extend beyond an anchoring facility, to make purposeful connections between potential assets, because (2) trickle down isn't enough, and (3) regardless it can take decades to see results.

Leimert Park, Los Angeles as a model of a POC centric commercial district.  Many years ago Leimert Park in Los Angeles was featured in the Washington Post as a black-business district ("Los Angeles's Black Pride: Taking In the Retro Vibe of Leimert Park," places, 2006).  

I visited it back then and wasn't impressed.  But it provided the bones for a model.  Especially with amped up investment.  The issue back then was disinvestment, not the concept.

-- "How a gentrifying Leimert Park is ending up in Black hands," Los Angeles Times
-- "Purchasing power: Leimert Park merchants come together to buy their building," Los Angeles Standard
-- "Leimert Park Art Village: The Struggle with a Sense of Place," PBS SoCal

Since 2007 when I saw it, there has been a lot of new investment in the district, not just adding rail transit service, but in revitalizing what had been an old theater into a multifaceted cultural center.

Leimert Park is decently organized, and successfully campaigned for a more directly accessible transit station as part of a new line being developed to serve their area.  Also see "Leimert Park plays to its own beat," USC, and "Leimert Park: where does it go from here?," KCET--the latter article discusses how since the approval of the transit station, an unknown buyer has purchased many properties in the district. 

The Vision Theater in Leimert Park Village will be a cultural anchor and will bring new customer segments to the commercial district throughout the day and into the evening,  Photo from Horizon and Skyline blog.  

Also see "Leimert Theater: Envisioning a Neighborhood Landmark," KCET.  

Key to the revitalization program has been the retention of existing businesses and the incorporation of new arts and culture anchors (Leimert Park's World Stage hopes to keep the music playing" and "Play festival heralds impending revival of L.A.'s Vision Theatre," Los Angeles Times), along with park refurbishments, streetscape improvements, and other public space improvements.  

Indianapolis.  Again when I first became involved in revitalization, I learned that Indianapolis was one of the first, if not the first, cities to create a cultural (arts) district programThe state later developed its own program.

At that time, they designated 5 areas, invested a lot in urban design, public art,. and sustainable mobility connections between the districts and Downtown.  They've since added two more districts.

A key anchor is the Indianapolis Cultural Trail, which provides high quality biking and walking connections to and within the districts ("The new Indianapolis Cultural Trail is a masterpiece of bike-friendly design Cleveland should emulate," Cleveland Plain Dealer).

The trail connections are pretty cool.  Many business have created back door entrances to facilitate patronage by people on the trail.

The UK and London's Cultural Capital programs.  One of the things the UK lost access to with Brexit is the Cultural Capital program sponsored by the EU.  Liverpool very successfully participated back in 2008.  So the UK created its own program, and London followed, creating its Borough of Culture program..

The UK program designates cities every other year.  Next year it's Bradford ("Why Bradford is the UK’s most underrated cultural city break," Telegraph, "‘The UK is invited’: Bradford reveals 2025 City of Culture lineup," Guardian).

Wandsworth is the Borough of Culture for 2025.  Two programs are selected on a four year cycle.

My criticism is that two to four years isn't enough time to build a program and improve civic assets.  Bradford is finding it tough ("Bradford races against the clock to finish works in time for city of culture," Guardian).

Arabianranta in Helsinki.  Is a good example of an arts as production district, anchored by the Aalto school of arts and design, and various other ventures ("Developing Creative Quarters in Cities: Policy lessons from “Art and Design City Arabianranta, Helsinki," Urban Research and Practice, 2013).

Large institutional arts districts. All of the arts districts listed above are a kind of ground up district, whereas there are many "arts districts" across nations featuring multiple large institutions, usually presenting institutions focused on arts as consumption.  The Dallas Arts District, /BAM Arts District associated with the Brooklyn Academy of Music.  Arts districts associated with City Beautiful, like Cleveland, etc.

You could call the Smithsonian Museums on the National Mall in DC an example except it's not managed that way.

Not arts districts per se but a program of adding or improving cultural institutions on a city-wide scale.  A couple cities come to mind that have invested heavily in the arts and culture, although the facilities haven't been grouped together.  Bilbao is one example ("Why can't the "Bilbao Effect" be reproduced? | Bilbao as an example of Transformational Projects Action Planning".  Also, Edmonton and Toronto ("Downtown Edmonton cultural facilities development as an example of "Transformational Projects Action Planning"").

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Monday, December 09, 2024

More on restaurant based revitalization: The town that food saved versus immigrants/ethnic cuisines?

To follow up on the previous post:

Food Town USA is published by Island Press.  It isn't a definitive framework for creating a locally-centric regional food system, but the book, which features discussions of seven different communities across the country, highlights lots of innovative programs and good ideas.

There is a similar book published earlier, The Town That Food Saved: How One Community Found Vitality in Local Food.

Both are very interesting and inspiring.  Along with other books about redeveloping community food systems.

But reading the Boston Globe article, "‘Why would I go to Boston if I could get this here?’ Quincy’s diverse population is making for a thriving (and affordable) food scene.," I realized that at least if I am remembering correctly, these books didn't mention communities and community food systems revitalized by immigrants, and their cuisines--first restaurants opened for the diaspora, and were later sampled by non-ethnics who came coming back for more.

In the early 2000s, I do remember a Main Street program in Boston promoting its bakeries, which represented many food cultures, and obviously commercial district programs promote restaurant-based revitalization.  

The PBS show No Passport Required, featuring Chef Marcus Samuelsson as host, does go to communities specifically focusing on one ethnic group and their cuisines--both in restaurants, cafes and other ways of delivering food, and in the home.

The tv show "Diners, Drive Ins, and Dives" often features ethnic restaurants, but not in a focused way.

Of course, separately I've written about how immigrants to declining cities (at the time) have sparked revitalization, including cuisine elements.

Culinary tourism as a phenomenon.  Tourism is a key economic development element for most major cities in the era of post-industrialization.  Before the pandemic, cities like Chicago and New York hosted many tens of millions of visitors annually.

And cities like DC, New York City, and even Providence, Rhode Island promoted food tourism quite heavily as part of tourism marketing campaigns ("The Future of Food Tourism Goes Beyond the Restaurant Experience," Skift).

Food is a key element of the visitor experience, especially because "we eat every day" and dishes can be quite memorable("Food, tourism, and culture: the keys to success of a global trend, TrekkSoft)

Culinary tourism benefits a city more than individual commercial districts.  We should differentiate between  "culinary tourism" for a city or region and "restaurant-based revitalization" at the scale of the commercial district.

It works for the city as a whole more than individual districts, except for large ethnic enclaves like a Koreatown, Little Italy, Chinatown, Mexicantown, etc.  Because people tend to be in and out focused, not interested in lingering, not interested in retail shopping as part of their restaurant visit, unless they are residents.

Ethnic-focused restaurant development versus culinary tourism.  Ironically, because of the Mormon Church practice of missions to other countries and parts of the United States, there is a wide diversity of food and immigrants here in Salt Lake.  It's just the food generally sucks.

(Someone took us to their "favorite" restaurant, Ethiopian.  It paled if it were to be compared against so many Ethiopian restaurants in DC.  Same with Indian food, "Mexican food," etc.)

I joke that Parkway Deli in Silver Spring, certainly a top 10 deli in Maryland--I love it--would be the number one deli in Utah.

What the Globe article ultimately is about is ground up ethnic-based restaurant development focused on serving the area community, less so a tourist.  But to work, you also need a decent critical mass of population too.  Quincy, a small city outside Boston, has 100,000 residents, which is large enough to make a difference.  Like the communities and cuisines represented in No Passport Required.

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Sunday, December 08, 2024

Richard's Rules for Restaurant (Food) Based Revitalization, Salt Lake City and DC's Chinatown

Suzanne and I had a spirited conversation about this in November, sparked by the failure of another SLC restaurant, which opened about 18 months ago.  I wish we were recording it, because we were saying lots of great stuff. 

The fact is Salt Lake City is a small place, population less than 215,000, and even with tourism and business meetings, especially given post-covid Work from Home, the Downtown is dead comparatively speaking,  

Funnily, people talk about the city's current growth and believe it can support a lot more retail while the fact is, each new resident supports less than 7.5 s.f. of retail (it's less than that because of the impact of e-commerce).  So 1,000 new residents support only 7,500 s.f. of retail.

That's not very much.

And complaints about being under-amenitized on the West Side center around a conspiracy against POC but because of lack of population and commercial centers, and historical developments--the west side population was close to downtown anyway, which was the regional business and retail center before sprawl.

Even before covid, the blocks are huge and the downtown business population was small so it didn't matter either.  

Regardless, there and throughout the city in other retail categories, like groceries, the city is way overstored.  E.g., we have more than 20 supermarkets within 5 miles or so of where we live, six within 2 miles alone!  Way more than in DC.

At the same time, post-covid inflation effects on food prices have led to a rapid escalation of restaurant meal prices, further reducing demand.

But restaurants keep opening, and supermarkets rarely shutter.  Plus there are tons of ethnic markets.

This takes us back to my writings on restaurant based revitalization:

-- "Richard's Rules for Restaurant Based Revitalization in the face of a pandemic," 2020
-- "Richard's Rules for Restaurant-Driven Revitalization (updated)," 2005, is the basic piece, with five rules (below) and a list of elements denoting quality restaurants
-- "Revisiting Richard's Rules for Restaurant-Based Revitalization," 2010
-- "Updating Richard's Rules for Restaurant-Driven Revitalization," 2013
-- "DC restaurants, location and equilibrium," 2014
-- "Ice cream shops as commercial district activation devices," 2018

and food-related commercial district revitalization: 

-- "An update to Richard's Rules for Restaurant-Based Revitalization on the failure of wine bar restaurants in DC and Baltimore," 2018
-- "Destination restaurants as a call for revisiting "Richard's Rules for Restaurant-Based Revitalization"," 2017

The basics:

-- you need a lot of customers to support a restaurant, and SLC is already overstored.  Those customers need to patronize the restaurant multiple times per week

-- high restaurant meal prices don't help.

-- Utah has a pretty bland palate (thank you Mormons), so savory concepts don't have the same opportunity to succeed that people think.

-- Being a hot chef isn't enough.  Being part of a restaurant group isn't enough ("Joe Englert, DC nightlife impresario, dies | Lessons about nightlife-based revitalization,"2020).  Standing on past laurels isn't enough.

-- Passion isn't enough.  Wanting "to give back to the community" isn't enough. You have to do retail trade analysis ("Revisiting older writings on the success of independent retail and neighborhood commercial districts,") and figure out if the market is there for your concept.

-- Seemingly seeing "holes" in the market ("How to spot a gap in the market," British Business Bank) leads people to open concepts new to the area.  Sometimes, the holes are there for a reason ("By the Bucket: Hot Spaghetti to Go closes in Sugar House," Salt Lake Tribune).

-- Private equity buys chainlets with the aim to grow them, and frequently dumb down the food in the process

-- Private equity holds chains that probably would die if they didn't get financial life support from PE

-  Food halls are about monetizing space by desperate properties who aren't so attuned to the needs of small vendors, especially wrt rents

-- Work from Home/Return to Office.  Most central business districts have half the daily employee visits that they did before covid.

====

So this has entry has been about Salt Lake.  But it pertains to just about everywhere.  DC's Chinatown has few Asian residents anymore--less than 500, so there are few Asian focused businesses.  That includes supermarkets/markets.

When I moved to DC in 1987, there was a small Chinese supermarket in Chinatown.  It was an okay size and in a pretty good location roughly at the intersection of 7th and H Streets NW and across from the Gallery Place Metrorail Station.

It had a decent run, but it closed in 2005 ("Wah Luck House maintains culture in dying D.C. Chinatown," Washington Post, 2011).  There is Da Tsin Trading Company, but it mostly focuses on canned goods, which make up less than 10% of the store inventory.  I sure never got into the habit of shopping there.

If I remember correctly, the three story white building to the right is 

where Da Hua Market was located, around 624 H Street NW.

So I think Kevin Tsien's move to open an Asian market in Chinatown ("Moon Rabbit chef Kevin Tien plans Asian market in Chinatown," Axios) is likely doomed to failure, especially with the significant decrease in downtown office workers post-covid, not that most ventured out much beyond the trip from transit to office anyway.  From the article:

Lofty plans for the still-to-be-named project include: 

  • A grocery stocked with Asian snacks, noodles, produce and pantry staples. 
  • Chef-y prepared foods, sauces and ready-to-cook items. 
  • A front-facing food stall that doubles as a mentorship space, inspired by the James Beard Foundation's NYC food hall. 
  • A "semi-hidden" rear tasting room with a handful of seats, like at Brooklyn Fare. 
  • An Asian bakery and cafe run by fellow James Beard finalist Susan Bae, Moon Rabbit's pastry chef.

Sounds like a cool, multifaceted concept to me, but it's not just about me.  You need thousands of customers per week to make the place work. OTOH, Tsien does know what he's doing.  But as many concepts as he runs today, he's closed an equal amount.  DC doesn't have a real Chinatown any more, but a dying one.  

Note that while people blame the Capital One Arena, built in 1997, for the decline of Chinatown, it started long ago, especially with the construction of a DC Convention Center in the early 1980s, and at the time, cheaper housing and more safety in the 'burbs, where the Vietnamese settled after the fall of Vietnam, first in Arlington, then further out.

Not to mention, it's typical of residential neighborhoods located next to growing central business districts to be absorbed and reproduced as part of a city's development.

Jenn Tran (center) leads a discussion on efforts to protect longstanding, Vietnamese-owned businesses at Eden Center (below) in Falls Church, Va. Her group, Viet Place Collective, used strategies developed by UMD researchers to impact the city's development plan. Photo by Eman Mohammed, Maryland Today

The DC area's Asiantown is in Fairfax County and Falls Church, with strip shopping centers dedicated to Asian businesses.  There are over 230,000 Asian residents in Fairfax out of a population of 1.2 million.  See:

-- "A New Chapter for the Eden Center?," Arlington Magazine
-- "At the Eden Center, historic businesses stand tall and new ones plant roots, ARLNow
-- "New Tools for Keeping Immigrant-Owned Shops in Place," (University of) Maryland Today

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Saturday, December 07, 2024

US DOT releases Climate Strategies that Work

-- US DOT releases Climate Strategies that Work

There are four sections:

  • Active Transportation
  • Electric Vehicle Charging Infrastructure
  • Freight Operational Strategies
  • Transit-Oriented Development
Active Transportation

Pedestrian infrastructure
  • Curb extensions (also known as Bulb-outs) 
  • Landscaping, Street Furniture, and Shade Quality
  • continuous, wide sidewalks
  • Tactile wayfinding systems to assist visually impaired travelers 
  • Signalized, high visibility pedestrian crossings with Audible and Visual Countdowns 
  • Mid-block/refugee islands 
  • Bicycle/pedestrian bridges 
  • Pedestrian Zones/Pedestrian Streets 
  • Woonerf or “Living Street” (Characterized by shared spaces where vehicles are allowed but must yield to non-motorized users, woonerfs encourage slower speeds and foster community interaction)
I think the US is too car centric for woonerfs to work.  And with Pedestrian Zones we think too hard.  Focus on a section of a street, a place that can be very successful, and build from the there.  I think Shade Quality should be a separate item.  In the bike section they mention "bike ambassadors, capacity building, and community riders." This goes for the pedestrian section too.  

Bicycle/scooter/micromobility infrastructure
  • Protected or shared bike lanes 
  • Separation/buffers Intersection treatments for bicycles (bicycle boxes, stop bars, lead signal indicators) 
  • Wayfinding and Signage 
  • Secure parking and storage facilities 
  • Bike Share Programs 
  • Bike Repair/Tool Stations 
  • Bike Rebates and Tax Credits 
  • Bike Schools, Bike Ambassadors and Capacity Building 
  • Community Rides 
  • Ramps Bike Racks
They mention secure parking and storage facilities.  This can't be emphasized enough  What's needed is a much deeper network of secure bicycle parking, especially with the rise of e-biking, where e-bikes are much more expensive.  They fail to mention more specific assistance programs to assist people in transitioning from car dependence to bicycling.

Shared infrastructure
  • Lighting 
  • Workplace or destination-based facilities / supportive infrastructure (lockers, changing facilities, secure parking) 
  • Traffic calming
  • Integration with Transit
Lighting is really important.  So are end of trip facilities for work trips. WRT traffic calming, in the citizen initiative capital projects program a resident of Sugar House developed a proposal for a multi block traffic calming program.  Salt Lake has since made the district concept part of the Liveable Streets program.  I also have the concept of treating streets in particular intersections as networks too.

And Safe Routes to School programs.  I am especially impressed by the approaches of the State of Washington, City of Tacoma, the Feet First advocacy group in Seattle, etc.

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Thursday, December 05, 2024

Brand America 2025

During the first Trump Administration, I wrote to Simon Anholt, the author of Brand America: Mother of All Brands, stating that Trump's brand for America was:

Can't Do.  Won't Do. You Do.  Fuck You.

It will get worse this go around.

An interesting story in the Financial Times, "What makes the US truly exceptional: Are American pathologies the necessary price of economic dynamism?."  From the article:

It is the best of countries, it is the worst of countries, or at least of the high-income ones. The US stands out for its prosperity and its brutality. 

This is how I have felt about it since I visited in 1966 and lived there throughout the 1970s. The sustained prosperity of the US is astounding. A few western countries have even higher real incomes per head: Switzerland is one. But real GDP per head in the larger high-income countries is below the US average. 

... Not surprisingly, the US economy also remains far more innovative than other large high-income economies. Just look at its leading companies. These are not only far more valuable than those in Europe, but far more concentrated in the digital economy... 

... The US then is an economic powerhouse, so much so that it has persistently run a large deficit in its capital account. Donald Trump protests. Yet this is a powerful vote of confidence. 

... So, how can such an economic marvel also be “the worst of countries”? Well, its homicide rate of 6.8 per 100,000 inhabitants in 2021 was almost six times as high as that of the UK and 30 times that of Japan. 

... More broadly, what does US prosperity mean when combined with such potent indicators of low welfare? These outcomes are the result of high inequality, poor personal choices and crazy social ones. Some 400mn guns are apparently in circulation. This surely is insane. 

... Then there is a related question, which is whether the relatively high inequality of the US and the insecurity of those in the bottom and middle of the income distribution inevitably lead to what I called “pluto-populism” in 2006: the political marriage of the ultra-rich, seeking deregulation and low taxes, with the insecure and angry middle and lower middle, seeking people to blame for what is going wrong for them. If so, what made the US dynamic, at least in this age of deindustrialisation and unbridled finance, led to the rise of Trump and so to a shift to a dangerous new demagogic autocracy. A big question for non-Americans, notably Europeans, is whether these pathologies are the necessary price of economic dynamism? Logically, it is not clear why an innovative economy cannot be combined with a more harmonious and healthier society. Denmark would suggest so. One might hope that the scale of the US market, its relatively light regulation, the quality of its science and its attractions to high-quality immigrants are the explanations. But there is this lingering fear that the technologically dynamic society Draghi and other Europeans now seek might require the rugged, nay dog-eats-dog, individualism of the US. It is a sobering possibility.

FWIW, I don't think pathology is necessary to economic dynamism.  We have a super conflicting element in American society, rank individualism ("Toward the Land of Self-Defeat," New York Times) versus a more communitarian approach.

But individualism is the side for people who want it all, don't want to share, don't believe in mutually beneficial outcomes.  And too much has changed in the economy, from neoliberalism to financialization, a winner take all economy, oligopoly, and the belief by Republicans that taxes are bad.

This extends to the social sphere by denying the value of the safety net, government action of any kind, building the wealth of of the nation by investing in people, etc.

It was pointed out that Reagan's plan was a form of austerity comparable to that of UK's Tories.  For a couple decades, because the US had previously overinvested in government and public goods, that could be withstanded.

It ended with the multiple failures of the Bush Administration.

It's amazing that the Trump posse is so focused on the destruction of America, not building its public investment ("Capital shallowing: the effect of disinvestment on government functioning").

We're in for it.

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Tuesday, November 26, 2024

Dr Oz at the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services: a chance to improve food service in hospitals

The people Trump proposes for the cabinet are mostly unqualified. And except for the fact that Trump wants to tear down government ("Trump takes aim at government as public faith in US institutions continues to erode," USA Today, "A big win for the Blow It Up Party, but what then?," Washington Post) not aiming for innovation ("Healthcare innovation: process redesign and innovation in DC and Prince George's County," 2011), so goes it for Dr. Oz, who has promoted Medicare Advantage plans, which tend to be a bad deal for patients and government spending ("Mehmet Oz loves promoting this inferior Medicare substitute," MSNBC, "The Great Medicare Advantage Marketing Scam," American Prospect). 

I have been admitted to the hospital a lot this year--5 times--once for 8 days (covid, pneumonia, myocarditis). One of the things that has surprised me about the hospital I use, which is a for profit owned by the largest hospital chain in the country, is that depending on time and availability, they send people from various units to talk to the patients, room by room (all private).  It turns out all for profit hospitals are not the devil.  And this one hasn't outsourced food service.

Last week when I was hospitalized, the leaders of the food service department happened to come around, and I had a long conversation with them (given my background in hospitality and familiar with some industry trends, it was pretty lively).  Despite various limitations, a few of their items are restaurant quality already, but certain key dishes are not and a majority of dishes are not.  

Opal Gordon and Sumei Rodriguez prepare fruit plates for patients at Lenox Hill Hospital. (Jeenah Moon for The Washington Post)

CMMS, among other things, regulates hospitals in many ways, including food service.  

While there are programs at various hospitals to improve ("Corewell Health among healthcare systems leveraging local farms for healthy food options," Rapid Growth, "Hospital Food You Can Get Excited About," New York Times, "Hospital food is a punchline. These chefs are redefining it," Washington Post) some of these efforts are hindered by CMMS.

One of the requirements is cooking proteins to extra well done.  Which makes eating cooked meat and fish--salmon should be medium rare--often intolerable when it comes to eating.  And I'd prefer to order salmon when it's offered because it is heart healthy.

"Dissatisfaction with food quality" was an element mentioned in the academic paper, "Hospital Food Service Strategies to Improve Food Intakes among Inpatients: A Systematic Review," Nutrients, 2021.

During his unsuccessful campaign for Senate two years ago, Oz complained about the high cost of crudités (a vegetable plate), for which he was pilloried for being out of touch ("Mehmet Oz’s crudité video gave opponent John Fetterman a golden opportunity," NBC News).  Regular people offer vegetable platters or trays and don't call it a crudité.

Instead Oz could redeem himself and focus on improving food service outcomes in hospitals.  

Except for that fact that the last thing the second Trump Administration cares about is improving services.

People claim government can't do (and there are serious problems with this, which I will write about), but Obama, Pelosi, the Affordable Care Act, Utah voters forcing the government to expand Medicaid, and Medicaid have saved my life.

I'm certain that is the case at least a million other times.  And there is plenty that the federal government does that is exemplary.  However, Republicans by focusing on cutting taxes, have made it impossible to provide the right amount of money to agencies necessary to fully fund services.

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Repeating b.s. about everything being about race and class: bike infrastructure in Washington, DC

I owe Marc Fisher (I wrote about a similar controversy he fostered on historic preservation 18 years ago!, "Preservation takes it on the chin (updated)" 2006) thanks for getting me off my ass to write--I haven't blogged in months--although I had been on the cusp recently.  My "eating disorder" led me to consume not enough calories to be motivated to write and do other stuff.

His column, "The truth about bike lanes: They’re not about the bikes" asks the wrong question.  He writes about people complaining about the construction of bike infrastructure in their neighborhoods since fewer people are biking to work or in their areas.

The right question to ask is "in a city that was designed to optimize walking, biking, and transit" why don't more people use those modes?"

Ironically, GGW reports ("CaBi breaks all-time annual ridership record…in October") that DC's bike sharing system CaBi is experiencing record use.  I think that's ironic because it has taken 14 years to get to this point--the system was launched in September 2010 and has been expanding, albeit primarily in the city's core, where biking works best (more below on this).

At the same time this illustrates how change takes time, especially when you rely on trickle down--if you build it they will come, rather than purposive strategies that focus on increasing bicycling ("Revisiting assistance programs to get people biking: 18 programs," "Biking to Work Isn't Gaining Any Ground in the US | Bloomberg Opinion," Bloomberg) walking, and transit use by assisting people with making the change.

Versus


Fisher makes it out that this is a racial and social class issue, the same way he did about historic preservation.  Maybe I'm just a racist, but that's a facile take.  

Transportation demand management in the Walking City ("Transportation and Urban Form: Stages in the Spatial Evolution of the American Metropolis" Muller) is about optimal mobility.

Also see the book, Reclaiming our Cities and Towns: Better Living Through less traffic by the founder of the concept of TDM; he realized that fewer car users meant less demand for expanding roadways.  Since when is forcing car use pro-race and pro-class?  From the article:

Rodney Foxworth, a longtime civic activist who now leads an anti-bike lane group, says the city “has a bias in favor of bike lanes no matter whether residents or businesses want them, and a lot of these lanes are being installed in Black, low-income communities. There is a nexus between bike lanes and gentrification.”

I have written about making sustainable mobility about race with frustration for 18+ years:

-- "Urg: bad studies don't push the discourse or policy forward | biking in low income communities (in DC) edition," 2014
-- "The co-existence of streetcars and churches elsewhere ought to counter anti-streetcar arguments by churches in DC today," 2014
-- "Why not get a bike?: 'He walked 17 miles a day to work until a stranger gave him a ride and changed his life forever'," 2021

So again, not realizing the right questions, bike lanes aren't about bikes.  They are about mobility and people throughput, just like more people ride a bus take up less room than 60 cars.

If I could ride until 63--for me, riding more has only been hindered by the onset of congestive heart failure and I hope to be riding short distances again, finally, within the next few months--so can older people in DC.  

Plus, for each person shifted to sustainable modes, that's one less car on the road, one less competitor for limited parking spaces, etc.

Plus it's cheaper ("AAA: Your Driving Costs: The Price of New Car Ownership Continues to Climb").  --over $1,000 per month.  For us, not owning a car supported $100,000 of our mortgage.

If anything it's about applying suburban ideas about bicycling ("DC as a suburban agenda dominated city," 2013) or transit ("Transit notes #2: Anti-transit opposition a form of defending automobility as a way of life," 2016) to urban areas.

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