N. David Milder at DANTH, Inc.

Downtown Revitalization Specialist

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“How Our Downtowns’ Three Most Important User Groups Can Help Their Sustained Recoveries”

Posted on January 16, 2024 by DANTH

By N. David Milder

I am proud to share with you my article “How Our Downtowns’ Three Most Important User Groups Can Help Their Sustained Recoveries” that was recently published in the IEDC’s Economic Development Journal. It focuses on downtown workers, residents and visitors and covers our largest downtowns as well as those of more modest size. It presents several analytical conclusions that counter conventional wisdom. For instance, while the media have focused on the reduced presence of downtown workers in our largest downtowns, the drop in downtown visitors was far larger, and smaller downtowns were less impacted by remote work because they are not usually the primary locations for their cities’ office prone workers.

The article relies heavily on data from the CCD’s Downtowns Rebound project led by Paul Levy, Placer.ai, OnTheMap, and my field experiences, as well as a dataset created by Bill Ryan on all the cities with population between 25,000- 75,000 in seven Midwest states.

To download the article CLICK HERE

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This entry was posted in Captive Markets, Central Social Districts, Central Social Functions, commercial nodes, CSDs, Downtown Merchants, Downtown Niches, Downtown Redevelopment, downtown retailing, Downtown Visitors, Economic Development, Entertainment, Entertainment niche, Formal entertainment venues, Housing, Informal entertainment venues, Live-Work, Pamper Niche, Parks, Pedestrian traffic, Planning and Strategies, Public Spaces, Remote work, The Arts, Tourism. Bookmark the permalink.

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← The Cockamamie Conclusions andAssumptions of the Downtown Doom Loop Analysis
How downtown multifunctionality is packaged is a key to its success →