Posted: 6:17 p.m. Friday, May 2, 2014
MIDDLETOWN
City needs strong vision to revitalize
downtown, officials say
By
Amanda Seitz
Staff Writer
MIDDLETOWN — A long-term plan for Middletown will be vital to develop a
successful downtown, create more jobs and lure tourists to the area, city
leaders said Friday.
Local
leaders here are inspired by a recent trip to Greenville, S.C., a city where local
stakeholders spent the last 35 years redeveloping its downtown and turning a
long-term vision of the city into a reality.
Roughly
80 residents, city officials and local business owners gathered Friday evening
at the Pendleton Art Center on Central Avenue in Middletown to share highlights
from their visit to the South Carolina city and brainstorm
ideas for future development in Middletown.
A
total of 23 Middletown leaders and residents
traveled from April 21-23 to Greenville to understand how the
Southern city of 61,000 people became one of the fastest growing areas in the
country, established a downtown dining mecca and lured in more than 1,700
condominium and apartment units to the town.
Planning
was key to execute such a turnaround of Greenville and will be important
as officials revitalize Middletown, said Calista Smith,
the interim director of Middletown Moving Forward, a community improvement
corporation.
“They
had a long-term vision, a long-term vision,” Smith said. “When they say
long-term, we’re talking 30 years.”
Smith
said Greenville officials faced
challenges to create a well-visited downtown; city officials had to narrow down
the city’s main drag of streets from four lanes to two lanes in order to create
a more walkable city, for example. Greenville also had to pay $6
million in an eminent domain lawsuit, in order to gain the right-of-way for a
development project, Smith said.
“They
type of challenges Greenville has faced, they
looked in them in the eye and said, ‘I’m not going to let you beat me,’” Smith
said.
Greenville officials also worked
with local business owners to create a cohesive looks for storefronts
throughout the city and brokered deals with universities to develop new
campuses and programs that now churn out students educated in the automotive,
health, science and business fields.
Middletown will need investment
from the private sector as officials work to redevelop the city downtown but
first, leaders need to develop a grand plan for economic development in the
future, Smith said.
To
kick off that planning, city leaders are launching a challenge called “What if Middletown?” to collect ideas
for city development. Residents can submit their idea for the city’s future on
a website that will launch May 9. Smith said the city is also seeking input
from college students, who will be entered into a $1,000 scholarship
competition, sponsored by the Middletown Community Foundation, when they submit
an idea.
Smith
said she wants to hear feedback from all of Middletown’s residents and
business owners to create a plan for the city’s future.
“This
is just the start — we know it’s not the end,” Smith s aid. “We want you to
stay engaged.”
Constructing
a green space and pavilion between North Verity Parkway and Manchester Avenue was one of the first
ideas discussed during Friday’s meeting. Smith unveiled a sketch for the
project, which illustrated a stone walkway between a grassy lawn.
Denise
Brodsky, one of the owners of the Sorg Opera House in Middletown, said she wants to
see more green spaces in Middletown — eventually. First,
she said, the city needs to focus on rehabilitating the city’s empty, downtown
storefronts and properties.
“Until
we begin to rehabilitate and fill our vacant and blighted properties, to me,
green space is not the priority,” Brodsky said.
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