The word on Main Street
In today's dead-tree Tribune, I opined in the Culture Vulture column about the state of Salt Lake City's Main Street - and how every attempt to "save" the neighborhood through some massive building project has sapped the street's viability to near-zero.
The recent announcement that Sam Weller's Books will be leaving its Main Street location, where it has been a fixture for 48 years, is just another example of a business finally driven off by city planning decisions that emphasized big shiny projects - Main Street Beautification in the '70s and '80s, TRAX lines in the '90s, the LDS Church's Main Street Plaza in the early '00s, and the under-construction City Creek Plaza - over the needs of neighborhood merchants.
I received one e-mail in response from Bruce Corrigan, owner of O'Shucks and Ahh Sushi, the bar and restaurant across the street from the City Creek development. Corrigan took me to task for some of the points in my column:
P.S.: I referred to The Gateway shopping center - from which I write this blog - as the Beigeway, a term reflective of both the paint on the outer walls and its generic atmosphere. But I neglected to credit my friend Bill Frost, over at the Salt Lake City Weekly, for coining the term Beigeway back in 2002. Good on ya, Bill!
The recent announcement that Sam Weller's Books will be leaving its Main Street location, where it has been a fixture for 48 years, is just another example of a business finally driven off by city planning decisions that emphasized big shiny projects - Main Street Beautification in the '70s and '80s, TRAX lines in the '90s, the LDS Church's Main Street Plaza in the early '00s, and the under-construction City Creek Plaza - over the needs of neighborhood merchants.
I received one e-mail in response from Bruce Corrigan, owner of O'Shucks and Ahh Sushi, the bar and restaurant across the street from the City Creek development. Corrigan took me to task for some of the points in my column:
Your "Can Main St. survive" column gave your readers a false view of the availability of libations in the City Creek development area. No need to take Trax West or to walk to 300 South - simply walk across the street to 22 East 100 South, and visit O'Shucks Bar & Grill, in the basement of the Brownstone Building!I also submit for your consideration this article from Utah Stories, which makes the historical observation that giant malls sucking the wind out of Main Street are not a new phenomenon: The same thing happened in the early '80s, when the ZCMI Center and the Crossroads Plaza (which were largely torn down to make room for City Creek) opened.
O'Shucks Bar & Grill has survived the construction dramas of the past 12 years by serving the downtown business crowd ice-cold libations and plenty of free peanuts. In 2002, O'Shucks added its' sister restaurant Ahh Sushi and has been rocking all along. O'Shucks has been bullish on downtown for years, and that's why were still here packing them in daily.
Please, give me a call, and I can give you the 20 step tour from the new City Creek development across the street to O'Shucks Bar & Grill. Thanks for all you do to make our city a better place.
P.S.: I referred to The Gateway shopping center - from which I write this blog - as the Beigeway, a term reflective of both the paint on the outer walls and its generic atmosphere. But I neglected to credit my friend Bill Frost, over at the Salt Lake City Weekly, for coining the term Beigeway back in 2002. Good on ya, Bill!
Labels: downtown

0 Comments:
Post a Comment
Links to this post:
Create a Link
<< Home