Tag Archives: Broadway

Day 126-Gravity

This route covers a portion of the Northside area, and much like the recent excursion through Gratz Park, there is plenty of history here and I’ll leave that for people who can speak to it more eloquently. It’s enough for me to feel the weight of hundreds of years, to sense the tremendous change these areas have witnessed.

Relative to that change, there were two amazing things to me. One is that I walked past houses, restaurants, schools, churches, cultural institutions. And this was, relatively speaking, a short walk. In many newer neighborhoods, I can take a longer walk and not pass anything but single-family houses. Some of this is certainly the impact of cars but certainly some of this is inevitable as a city grows. I sense that larger cities have more gravity, too. This seems to be in evidence somewhat as the activity level drops off noticeably between Short and Second street.

Day 114-Sights, smells, sounds

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Today’s walk was through an interesting neighborhood near the ballpark on Broadway. This was one of those walking experiences that I really enjoy just because of the variation of stimuli. Sure, this is a visual experience, with some amazing trees, like the ones at Twelfth and Broadway, plenty of colorful or otherwise visually interesting structures, but there also lots of sounds and smells. Some of these are some standards–the yapping dog, but also the crowing rooster. A fragrant tree but also flavored tobacco. I’ve heard people conflate “interesting” or even “vibrant” with “dangerous” when speaking about neighborhoods. The reaction has been to build safe, bland places. It’s hard to put a price on safety or vibrancy, but it’s also hard to imagine that at this moment, the tradeoffs involved in building safe places have been worth it.

Day 113-Almost all of the pieces

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Today’s route brings me back to Joyland. Similar to some of the neighboring areas I’ve visited, this neighborhood was quiet, almost subdued. There are positives here: access to a park, an elementary school, even (in a limited sense) shopping. The housing stock appears to be in good condition, too. Someone has to do something about the struggling retail, though!

Day 47-Divided on the Mayor

day 47Today took me to the neighborhood near West Sixth and Broadway.  This stretch of Broadway is a commercial corridor, and the neighborhood sits behind it.  It’s an older neighborhood, one of the oldest I’ve seen so far, with many houses dating to the first decade of the 20th century.  There were also some gaps, vacant properties that probably won’t stay undeveloped for long.

As this is the season of yard signs, one thing stood out to me.  This area appears to be split geographically in terms of energized support for the two mayoral candidates, with the older portions to the south and west favoring the incumbent Jim Gray and the (slightly) newer portions supporting the challenger Anthany Beatty.  One could come up with plenty of reasons for this, and it could be a fluke.  I do think Beatty’s campaign slogan is worth some thought.  He claims he will be  “Mayor of ALL of Lexington,” leveling criticism at Gray that he is too focused on the downtown areas at the expense of the suburban and rural parts of the city.  I think it’s a good slogan, getting right to the heart of the problem that planning-oriented or big-project mayors have.  Attention on big projects or urban centers can appear to neglect major portions of the city, and even stakeholders in areas of focus if development may change neighborhood character.

Early 1900's house on West Sixth St.
Early 1900’s house on West Sixth St.

Appearing to neglect and actually neglecting are different things and campaigns rarely have time for nuance.  But Beatty’s signs are pretty widespread throughout Lexington and it’s easy to believe the residents of this area have a good reason to support him.

 

What works:  This appears to be a cared-for area with character.

What doesn’t: It may be a neighborhood trying to go in  two different directions.