Other cities series: Isn’t this Syracuse?

Quoting in full an article published July 25, 2009, by the Terre Haute Tribune-Star, it seems Mr. Bennett was actually writing about Syracuse. All bolding is mine; wherever you see “Terre Haute”, just envision “Syracuse” and where you see “Hauteans” think of “Syracusans”:

MARK BENNETT: Walkable neighborhoods of the ’20s make sense again

By Mark Bennett
The Tribune-Star

TERRE HAUTE — Tom Roznowski might’ve captured people’s attention as he strolled South Ninth Street in downtown Terre Haute.

Perhaps it was his striking linen suit, his fedora, or the sweeping gestures of his arms as he spoke. But, more than likely, the Bloomington writer raised folks’ curiosity because he was doing something rare for most Hauteans.

He was looking at the town’s big picture.

As Roznowski strode the sidewalk on an unusually cool July day, he marveled at the canopy of trees shading the neighborhood of old brick homes south of Ohio Street.

You can just walk and walk and walk in these neighborhoods,” Roznowski said, “and just have a wonderful after-dinner walk.”

Unlike many Hoosier cities, Terre Haute still contains — at least physically — a significant number of its early-20th-century neighborhoods. In that pre-Depression era, those areas were little communities within a larger community. People lived within walking distance of their job place, their kids’ school, their church, grocery stores, eateries, corner taverns, tailors, hotels, barbershops and hair salons, banks, drug stores, shoe stores, theaters and funeral homes.

Most small businesses from the 1920s are gone, but some of the houses remain.

There’s such an amazing historic housing stock in Terre Haute,” Roznowski said, “and from that arises walkable neighborhoods.”

The concept of “walkable neighborhoods” underpins Roznowski’s upcoming book, “An American Hometown: Terre Haute, Indiana, 1927.” The city, then, functioned as a network of self-sustaining neighborhoods. Less than two decades later, the popularity of the automobile allowed Americans to live farther and farther apart. We got used to driving longer distances to work, learn, dine, shop and recreate.

Now, in the 21st century, city planners around the country see wisdom in resurrecting or rebuilding those walkable neighborhoods. Some reasons for that revival are purely practical. Gasoline, as high as $4.19 just a year ago, is eating up a larger portion of U.S. incomes. Sustainable living, where local folks consume more locally produced goods and services, is making sense again. But also, having daily needs within a convenient walk restores a “sense of place” that small cities lost when Americans began relying on corporate chains and big-box retailers.

As Roznowski writes, “We are now witnessing the larger impact of scrapping mass transit systems, demolishing urban neighborhoods, paving green spaces and shifting from the reusable to the disposable.”

The renewed appreciation for walkable neighborhoods is not some dreamy, ’60s counterculture vision from Greenwich Village or Berkeley.

“People are paying attention to it across the country,” said Maria Choca-Urban of the Center for Neighborhood Technology in Chicago. “It’s not just a coastal phenomenon.”

“Their need has been reasserted by the realities,” Roznowski said.

Terre Haute is “uniquely positioned” to see some of its aging, surviving neighborhoods regain those bygone local amenities, he added. That’s because most of the once-sustainable, walkable neighborhoods of decades ago have long since been leveled in many Hoosier cities. Those towns would have to start from scratch, with new buildings and infrastructure. Terre Haute, in many areas, would not.

But can Terre Haute capitalize on that edge?

“Maybe,” said Roznowski, who spent 15 years researching the city’s 1920s history. “It’s a close call.”

The key is whether rank-and-file Hauteans, as well as their civic leaders, see walkable, sustainable neighborhoods as a realistic goal. “There are amazing resources and advantages this city still has,” Roznowski said, “but being aware of them, and being convinced that they’re still relevant and not just vestiges of the past, that’s the important thing.”

Neighborhoods, particularly their living conditions, have been in the consciousness of many Terre Haute residents in recent years. The Terre Haute Neighborhood Partnership Inc. regularly convenes groups from Farrington’s Grove, Ryves, the 13th Street Corridor, Collett Park, Dobbs Glen and other locales. Mayor Duke Bennett has also conducted summits in various neighborhoods around the city, with residents airing concerns about streetlights, crime and sidewalks. The sprawl of the expanding campuses of Union Hospital and Indiana State University into and over older neighborhoods has made headlines during the last few years.

Even with all those efforts to raise awareness, and Terre Haute’s rich past of urban neighborhoods, their importance is not widely embraced.

“The concept of neighborhoods is something that has escaped a lot of us,” said Marie Pontius, an advocate for the Farrington’s Grove neighborhood.

A few Hautean areas have several elements and amenities of a sustainable, pedestrian-friendly neighborhood. The neighborhood just south of Poplar Street, near the Meadows Shopping Center and Baesler’s Market, is a good example, said Todd Nation, president of the City Council. Much of that neighborhood has sidewalks. In addition to Baesler’s and the shopping mall, there’s a funeral home nearby, a banking outlet, a couple of churches, Woodrow Wilson Middle School and Meadows Elementary, and hair salons.

Though some older neighborhoods are struggling to stave off decline and preserve their bastions of self-sufficiency, Nation senses a turning point in public attitudes.

“I know that people are thinking this way now,” he said, “and I see evidence of it in Terre Haute.”

The economic sense of walkable, sustainable neighborhoods must be clear to people. The cul-de-sac suburbs are still real, attractive options for many people. But a variety of neighborhoods will help lure businesses and talent to the community — both those wanting to live close to their jobs at ISU, the hospitals or the local schools and their daily living needs, and those wanting space and distance.

Efforts to reinvigorate the pedestrian-friendly neighborhoods need to continue.

“The more options that we have as neighborhoods, the more likely we are to have a neighborhood that meets [a prospective employer’s] niche for the employee they want,” said Jeremy Weir, executive director of the Vigo County Area Planning Department.

Don Bradbury walks that neighborhood south of the Meadows daily, delivering mail for the U.S. Postal Service. He grew up within minutes of his local schools, then moved to the countryside to raise his family. Now, he’s living in a neighborhood along Brown Avenue.

“It’s strange, because there was a time when you had all these neighborhoods, and then everybody moved out to the country,” Bradbury said, in a brief stop between houses near Oak and 27th streets. “And now, they’re going back to it again.”

8 comments to Other cities series: Isn’t this Syracuse?

  • Ted

    Muggable Eastwood is thriving I see- no doubt Lonnie will have this post removed as it points out how this group is shafting Eastwood and so be it- after all it is her site so she has the right to hide the truth (like her accusation I was using a fake e-mail )- go ahead and ban me as you threatened – it will not keep me from posting the TRUTH . The reality is I have lived in the Eastwood area for over 12 years now and under this groups watch the area has been trashed. When we first moved here Eastwood was thriving and a nice place to live but thanks to the obstructionism of this group is transforming Eastwood into another Butternut St district by restricting legitimate development and allowing questionable places to flourish. Despite the perception that your Google group is private anyone with a g-mail account can set up alerts to read all thos group messages without joining. I have read all the posts about the marauding groups of kids and talks of a curfew (and even floating of an idea of an adult curfew -GUESS AGAIN IF YOU THINK YOU CAN RESTRICT ME AS AN ADULT) along with that hotbed of problems around Wilson Farms from the assaults to the harassment ( take a hint – even the police are ignoring your calls). Today was a nice day so I thought I would walk to the Rite Aid near Nichols but they were closed because they were just held up (OOOPS) so I took a walk around and can understand why the crime rate is climbing – this area is getting trashed. Even Aaron Knight- one of this groups stauncest supporters fled Eastwood. Yeah – he claims it was lack of suitable/affordable housing but I keep track of available housing/costs in case the city tries to raise my assessment so if an unedumated non-college grad as myself can afford a nice house so could he as a highly edumated col;lege grad- that says it all about him fleeing.

  • Ted

    Oh yeah – forgot to mention that one post the person made that runs a vigilante group – a lot of good that does!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • Aaron

    Wow, Ted: another nonsensical rant fully irrelevant to the post attached.

    “Even Aaron Knight- one of this groups stauncest supporters fled Eastwood. Yeah – he claims it was lack of suitable/affordable housing but I keep track of available housing/costs in case the city tries to raise my assessment so if an unedumated non-college grad as myself can afford a nice house so could he as a highly edumated col;lege grad- that says it all about him fleeing.”

    My budget for my first house ended at about $95k or so. I did not find a house that met my fiance and my own requirements (space, layout, work needed, etc.) at the time of purchase in Eastwood that wasn’t at least $10k over that, excepting one that came on the market two days after I put my offer in on my current home. A whopping mile away from Eastwood on Salt Springs Rd.

    I’ve been out of college a whole two years. I’m hardly rich :-)

  • Aaron

    Notwithstanding, I convinced friends of mine to buy a house, and they’re moving from Liverpool to Eastwood. They get to close very soon.

  • Maureen

    I find it fairly amusing that Ted is part of the problem and not at all part of the solution.

  • Ted

    Really Maureen?????- YOU find it amusing that this group is destroying the area but are blaming me ?? That speaks volumes about the attitude of this group- I am just posting my observations as a resident and I get trashed for it?? How does that make me part of the problem-because I seek to have the area advance instead of degrading into another Butternut St area?? Good lord – the crime is escalating, the police are ignoring your calls and I am to blame ????

    Lonnie – I know this is your site and to be honest I am surprised that this reply thread has remained- unless you have not seen it yet but if you read further you will understand my anger.

    Aaron- I do apologize for aiming my wrath at you but unfortunately you were an obvious/easy target. After deciding to take a walk to the Rite Aid near Nichols (despite my support for Walgreens I do look for the best deal as I am sure you know from my tangles with kkkid) and found them closed due to being held up. I chose then to walk down James and was absolutely infuriated with the degradation that has happened in the 12 years since we moved here (at which time the area was THRIVING) so when I got home from my “Walkable” experience I was furious. Once I get used to a work schedule I will be no doubt starting a blog/web site along the lines of Muggable Eastwood to show what this group has done. I know you realize from other forums that I AM A LIFE LONG RESIDENT of Syracuse and will not back down when it comes to helping the area. To me this group is the equivalent of SatCusan trying and keep Syracuse the equivalent of Hooterville or Mayberry RFD – enough said eh!

  • Maureen

    Ted, you said here that you desire to advance the area instead of degrading it into another Butternut street. You notice that crime is escalating and you are suprised that your reply thread has remained and you apologize to Aaron for aiming your wrath at him because he seemed to be an easy target. You decided to walk to Walgreens from Rite Aid (since it was close after being held up) and you found yourself infuriated with the detioriation of James Street after having lived in Eastwood 12 years (in 1997 you said it was thriving) and having been a lifelong resident of Syracuse. You said that your walking experience caused you to become furious. You see the Walkable Eastwood group trying to “keep” Syracuse as Hooterville or Mayberry RFD….

  • A single self-sufficient speech with Cnn in the Tv show. He features a actually hard immigration law policy. They graduated on the Harvard School. At this time he has their a single Airwaves Show. He did not such as your America chief executive.

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