Tag Archives: Fortune

Day 53-Parking Woes

Day 53Today I took a quick trip through the Eastwood neighborhood, near Liberty and Fortune Drive.  This was a residential neighborhood, and most of the houses were townhouses, with some small houses as I moved further from Fortune.  These seem to be relatively young, mostly early 2000’s homes.

With this area being dominated by multifamily homes and thus fairly dense, one thing that stood out was parking.  Parking appeared to be a big problem here.  No Parking signs were all over the place, in front of mailboxes, in front of trash cans, in front of private spaces.  And cars were everywhere, too, even in the middle of the day.  What do these people do when then want to invite company over?  The interesting thing is that there really didn’t appear to be a lack of spaces, with units having garages in most cases, and often a second dedicated space.  There were additional visitor spaces too.  So how many car spaces does a family living in a townhouse need?

I was reminded of something I saw recently about a residential parking garage in Portland that is well under capacity.  And while there are a lot of differences between downtown Portland and Lexington outside of New Circle Road, clearly there are conditions where people survive, get to work, get groceries, all presumably contentedly and with something less than 2 cars per family.  To an extent, we understand what those conditions are and they usually involve “density” and “transit” which are four-letter words in many places.  So part of the question for a city like Lexington may be whether it is desirable to create those conditions, and part of the question may be, if so, could they be created in a specific location such as this one.

Day 25

day 25Today’s walk was a quick one, through an office park and industrial area at the interchange of New Circle Road and Winchester.  There weren’t a lot of surprises for me here, likely because I’m already familiar with this area.  But, some of the industrial use is a little more intensive than I expected.  It was also neat to see the back of one of the neighborhoods I walked recently (Brown Ave, from day 23) from the adjacent commercial/industrial street.

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Walking trail signs along Beasley and Fortune allow lunchtime walkers to measure their walks

The south side of this stretch of New Circle Road is home to Paul Miller Ford and Paul Miller Mazda.  The Miller Family also has hands in a number of other area businesses, including Fortune Realty, Beasley Digital Printing and Fortune Collision Center.  Meanwhile, a business on the north side of the street features a large poster supporting Alison Lundergan Grimes as a Senate candidate, a tour bus for said candidate is parked nearby, as are a whole lot of cars with lots of “Alison” bumper stickers.   Two prominent local families have made this interchange a focal point, and this should emphasize its importance.

Back to street names.  “Jingle Bell” seems like an unusual name for a street, especially one that is so industrial.  My assumption has always been that, like many other streets in Lexington, it is named for a more or less famous Thoroughbred racehorse.  And though it may be named after a horse (three horses named Jingle Bell have their pedigrees listed), I think the “famous” part is in serious question.   And, the Paul Miller Ford building (at Jingle Bell and New Circle Road) has a hyperbolic paraboloid “saddle” roof  and is probably a lot older than the most likely Jingle Bell.