Cowtown
Senior Member
I agree 100%, and I've seen this be the case with Calgary where over the years streets like 10th street (Kensington), 4th street (Mission), and 9th (Inglewood) were not particularly nice streets at one time, but over the years, the streets simply evolved. Having a BRZ of some sorts may have helped, but for the most part these streets simply evolved organically.
Some really passionate writers in here - I like it. A couple of cents from me (mostly subjective views):
1) Vibrancy can't be fabricated - it tends to be emergent. The burbs generally have very generic shopping, commodity retail, Starbucks, credit tenants but are super boring and have a lifecycle of ~30 years without significant investment. Great streets & areas emerge with a authentic, artisan, or unique, unreplaceable anchors. I like Banyan Tree as the anchor in Lahaina, on their Front Street which used to be a fishmonger's market. I generally find Hawaii retail and streetscapes total dogshit, but this street is very special, and you feel it as soon as you get there. This is why I think we need to focus on ways and reasons people gather, cross, bump into each other. Calgary has this, I think, in Inglewood (love the gun store and convenience store amid upscale furniture) so does 17th ave and Kensington. I'm not convinced about Marda Loop - I think it has a bit more improvement but the nimby-sun-paranoi will basically clip the real growth and resilience of the neighbourhood.