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And they are asking me?

Got a call just before lunch today- from Jim DeBrosse at the Dayton Daily News. He was working on a “State of Downtown” piece and was looking for some input/insight.

It will be interesting which pieces he picks for the article- some points I made:

This was off the top of my head- and really quick. There are a lot of other things that can still be done.

What ideas do you have?

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Phillip Ranly

The idea of diagonal parking spaces is good. In addition we need more medians down the center of the streets with trees/greenery. Many of the streets are wider than needed. The Oregon District feels so cohesive and easy to navigate without a car, partly because the streets aren’t excessively wide and the wonderful aura created by the trees that overhang the streets. It actually feels like it was designed with people in mind! And isn’t that what the city is about anyways? But I think that is a simple and inexpensive way to start creating a little bit of action and movement on the streets/sidewalks. Who wants to cross a 4 or 5 lane street with cars whizzing by? These large gulfs of asphalt aren’t helping anyone.

Jeff

I think they should have more Dave Hall Plazas and dedicated parking like the RTA has. Tear down all those empty and grungy buildings downtown.

Tear down the Arcade, McCrorys, that abandoned high rise next to McCrorys, the DDN complex, the abandoned “Schwind” building (Moraine Embassy Apartments), Patterson Vocational, and a few other empty old buildings, and replace them with parking and landscaping. This will make downtown seem more like a pleasant suburban office park like Newmark or Lexis-Nexis, and less the vacant wasteland, and solve the problem of parking being “away” from offices.

For example, a part of the Arcade site could be used as dedicated parking for tenants of the Kuhns Building. They can drive downtown and park next to their offices in a secure private lot.

They can tear down Patterson Vocational and also tear down that gay bar and beauty school over on 2nd, and turn that part of the block into a park like Cooper Park. For that matter turn that huge parking lot south of 2nd into an extension of Cooper Park.

It could be the start of “The Greening of Downtown”.

Lynn

Hi David, my name is Lynn and I am a Sinclair marketing student that contacted you several months about a marketing project. I just found your blog from the Dayton Daily News website and never realized that you had so many great ideas for the city. I too live, work, and attend school in Dayton and am a Dayton supporter. I have a lot of ideas that I have sent to Ms Mclin with no response. ITs great to see someone that has a lot of ideas for Dayton that also lives in Dayton rather than most suburbanites that just complain about the city from afar. I like your ideas on the county tax and Sinclair not moving out of the county. So many both in and out of the city complain about Dayton but dont do anything to stimulate economic growth or plant ideas with real thought. Anyhow glad to see someone active. Take care