N. David Milder at DANTH, Inc.

Downtown Revitalization Specialist

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← TOWARD MORE SUSTAINABLE DOWNTOWN AND MAIN STREET TOURIST INDUSTRIES
More on Central Social Districts, a Webinar on Downtown Retail, and an Article on Downtown Retail and Restaurants →

The Downtown Curmudgeon’s Take on Downtown Central Social Districts

Posted on July 15, 2021 by DANTH

As the readers of this blog probably know, I have spent a lot of time and effort on identifying the components of our Central Social Districts and analyzing what makes them succeed or fail. I’ve dug deeply into public spaces, movie theaters, housing, and various other components in cities large and small.

Recently, I was asked for one article that put it all together. I realized that I did not have one, so I consequently set out to write it. That article was recently published in The American Downtown Revitalization Review – The ADRR at https://theadrr.com/

Doing the topic justice meant that it would be long, about 30 pages, and more like a monograph than an article. Readers wanting a quicker take can just focus on the first six pages. However, if you are looking for more guidance about what to do and not do, you will need to dig deeper into the article.

Some of the important things I tried to do are to establish that some components are much easier and cheaper to establish than others, and which work better in different types of downtowns. I also tried to strip away a lot of the advocacy hype about some components that too often hides the challenges involved and obscures how progress needs to be evaluated, e.g., the arts venues, while spotlighting venues whose importance still goes widely unrecognized, e.g., libraries.

Here’s the article’s tease and link:

Strong Central Social Districts: The Keys to Vibrant Downtowns

By N. David Milder

 DANTH, Inc.

CSDs and Some of Their Frequent Components. Since antiquity, successful communities have had vibrant central meeting places that bring residents together and facilitate their interactions, such as the Greek agoras and the Roman forums. Our downtowns long have had venues that performed these central meeting place functions, e.g., restaurants, bars, churches, parks and public spaces, museums, theaters, arenas, stadiums, multi-unit housing, etc. The public’s reaction to the social distancing sparked by the Covid19 pandemic, and the closure of so many CSD venues, was a natural experiment that demonstrated how much the public needs and wants these venues. They are the types of venues and functions that make our downtowns vibrant, popular and successful. To read more click here : https://theadrr.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/Strong-Central-Socia-LDistricts-__-the-Keys-to-Vibrant-Downtowns__-Part-1-FINAL.pdf

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This entry was posted in Central Social Districts, Creative Class, CSDs, Downtown Merchants, Downtown Niches, Downtown Redevelopment, Economic Development, Entertainment, Entertainment niche, Entrepreneurship, Formal entertainment venues, Housing, Informal entertainment venues, Innovations, Market research, New Normal, Pamper Niche, Parks, Planning and Strategies, Public Spaces, Small Towns, Suburban Downtowns, Superstar downtown, The Arts, Tourism, Trends, Uncategorized and tagged Central Social Districts, CSDs, Downtowns.. Bookmark the permalink.

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← TOWARD MORE SUSTAINABLE DOWNTOWN AND MAIN STREET TOURIST INDUSTRIES
More on Central Social Districts, a Webinar on Downtown Retail, and an Article on Downtown Retail and Restaurants →

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