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preservationengineer

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Posts posted by preservationengineer

  1. My dad told me today that the mayor is putting up a fight with the Rockets Landing folks b/c he's not sure how it's going to "fit in" with Richmond, as far as the river goes.

    It is unfortunate when our city's political leader cannot see a good thing when it's infront of him. He is too quick to criticize - does he not realize that our government was partially responsible for the lack of sustainable infrastructure causing the abandonment of buildings in the shockoe bottom/manchester industrial areas for SEVERAL years and now people are finally taking the initiative to rehabilitate them. Does he see any places in Richmond where you can go to eat/shop/boat/work on the James? EGO.

  2. Yall I went to the Chesterfield County growth management meeting a couple weeks ago and have been asked to serve on a small work group with Ed Barber, as a way to foster suggestions for other ways to deal with our county's infrastructure needs other than by raising building proffers to $17,000 - which makes homes completely unaffordable.

    It seems to me like Chesterfield needs to mend their comprehensive plan and adopt 'prescriptive' zoning codes to allow for traditional neighborhood developments, thereby providing secure live/work neighborhoods (centered around schools) that would serve as small business 'incubators.' These would lessen our dependency on vehicles, thereby diminishing the need for additional road infrastructure. I also believe that we should work on utilizing access to the James River through federal tax credit programs, in order to encourage tourism as an industry-particularly with jamestown 2007 nearing- thereby giving us a broader tax base.

  3. Eric, did you read the posting by preservationistengineer about this very subject?  It's in this forum somewhere, but Coupe will have to tell you how to find it.  This guy knows what he is talking about.  Just wish he would shorten his tag! :lol:

    <{POST_SNAPBACK}>

    it's good to know people think i'm a "guy," but i'm really a girl! :D

    and here is the article i sent in to the rtd but they never published it

    Providing a heritage for the future involves opening our arms for

    change, but holding on to our values. My favorite professor in college

    once said, "a city that is not changing is getting worse." He was

    right! A city is a living, breathing organism, and when change does not

    occur, that organism grows weak and stagnant. Eventually the

    environmental image of that city deteriorates in the minds of its

    residents. In fact, when a city resists change and neither creates nor

    implements an effective plan for reorganization, citizens loose a sense

    of emotional security in their external environment.

    Many iconic places in the metropolitan Richmond area separate our

    great historic city from others. They include, but are not limited to:

    the Confederate statues on Monument Avenue, the mansions of Cary

    Street, Church Hill's association with the freedom of our country, how Manchester Industrial District sustained our city after the Civil War, the Diamond, and Shockoe Bottom as the foundation of our culture as Richmonders.

    Shockoe Bottom is considered by many as the city's most prized

    possession, for not only was it the site of William Byrd's original

    plan for our great city and once fully-packed Tobacco Warehouses, but

    it served as the Devil's half-acre during the civil war. Why then, on

    an average day, are there few visible out-of-town visitors except those

    that drive along 95? Why then, are there only but a few commercial and

    retail buildings and activities (and most on the weekends) praising and

    celebrating our history? Why is it structurally neglected, rampant with

    crime and left to the mercy of an unstable floodwall?

    People are afraid of what they do not know. Many people in Richmond

    have been misinformed about Shockoe Bottom, with the specific regard to

    the proposed four-block construction of a ballpark for our beloved

    Richmond Braves. There are 35 properties in the four blocks. According

    to GIS information on the city of Richmond website, eight of those

    properties are parking lots and another eight pieces of property are

    classified as vacant land. Most of the commercial buildings that remain

    are up for sale or rent. The area is actually losing tens of thousands

    of dollars a year for the city. Richmond, what are we doing? Are we so

    resistant to change that we would rather crumble than reinvent and

    provide a pleasant, safe and profitable place for our children?

    As a preservation major and member of the" young and restless" group

    returning to Richmond after college, I am excited about joining a club, starting a new job, and driving along Cary Street on a beautiful summer day. However, I am ashamed at the willful neglect and disregard for my native city's historic center by both her governing body and many of her metropolitan area citizens, and even at times the Richmond Times-Dispatch (which I faithfully read almost every morning

    even though I am a student at a College 430 miles away). As a presently

    sensitive and pressing issue in Richmond, I dare each citizen to be an

    advocate for change. When was the last time you enjoyed a good tour

    through the Bottom and ate at a place like the Hill Caf

  4. I love my city dearly, she has so much to offer us it is unbelievable. Part of the problem with the way the city has been for so long is that the municipality has neglected basic infrastructure needs, thereby diminishing the public's ability to feel emotionally secure with their surrounds...I think this ultimately leads to more people, and businesses moving towards the suburbs. A main example of what I am speaking is with the recent deaths and paralyzing effects of Gaston toward Shockoe Bottom, and the neglect of several areas of Broad Street, though there are many more.

    Why things like 'small business buffers' are not advertised on television in order to attract businesses downtown are unbenounced to me. Also, I recently heard that the average age of Richmonders is 66. Does someone know otherwise? We need to make efforts to attract people in the "young and restless" category, because they are the future who will sustain older cities.

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