sarahzm said:
"Modern" placemaking cracks me up. It's been going on for a few thousand years.
sarahzm said:
I understand that a developer would need to make money. But perhaps weighing the potential fiscal return to the town vs the potential improvement to the quality of life of the town might be in order. The town spent millions on The Woodland. In previous years they built the Recreation center in DeHart Park, and the pool complex. Maybe this would be a case where a reduced price and a PILOT would be in order.
sarahzm said:
Maybe this would be a case where a reduced price and a PILOT would be in order.
Red_Barchetta said:
sarahzm said:
Maybe this would be a case where a reduced price and a PILOT would be in order.
I don't understand what you are saying. The current plan (call it a beheamoth or not) is being presented with the conditions of a reduced price and PILOT already. Are you proposing additional concessions be made?
sarahzm said:
Red_Barchetta said:
sarahzm said:
Maybe this would be a case where a reduced price and a PILOT would be in order.
I don't understand what you are saying. The current plan (call it a beheamoth or not) is being presented with the conditions of a reduced price and PILOT already. Are you proposing additional concessions be made?
My suggestion was not in reference to the current plan. It was to offer a reduced price/PILOT to a builder to make in financially feasible to build a smaller building with outdoor public space.
TimFryatt said:
Nice concept, but proposing the developer cut the building in half is a non-starter. The town needs a fiscal return on the deal. It's already too small to make it anything of real substance.
Red_Barchetta said:
Sarahzm:
"In every town in Europe there is a central square, a piazza, that is the heart and soul of the town. I've lived in Italy and several years ago I walked (hiked ) across Spain. I walked into and out of perhaps hundreds of small Spanish towns, some with only one main street, others that were beautiful small cities. Every single one of them had a plaza or a piazza where people gathered, sat at sidewalk cafe's came with their families, their dogs, their grandmothers. It was ( as Inda Sezcher said) an outdoor living room where neighbors could gather in community and enjoy the life of the town. "
This sounds like a great idea, but would it work here? I mean the towns you are talking about are hundreds of years old (or more) and this kind of gathering is their culture. My understanding is that the people you are referring to do not have back or front yards of their own, thus the square becomes their outdoor place. Would folks from the Hilton Neighborhood really drive over here and park just to sit outside and eat an icecream cone? Should the residents on the outskirts of town be asked to support infrastructure that mainly benefits the folks near town center? I'm open to consideration, but I fear this would become littered with debris and taken over by kids with skateboards.
krnl said:
I believe, that the new building gives Maplewood a chance to rethink and update Ricalton Square. Sarahzm is correct in that the space is currently used mostly as a pass through from the parking lot and train station to the stores....and, the Christmas Village. While I don't have any immediate ideas about how the space could be prefigured to encourage more 'square-like' activity, it would not surprise me if during the demolition and construction that the space will be affected and in need of a freshening up once the new building is completed.
Squares in many countries typically have a fountain or something in the center surrounded by public seating with walks radiating out to the corners and well as through the middle. Space limitations probably preclude this array, but with a modicum of creativity we should be able to improve this patch of green space in the village.
FWIW, I find the latest drawings of the proposed replacement for the PO to be a welcome improvement over the previously scaled ones and the old building.
IndaSechzer said:
krnl said:
I believe, that the new building gives Maplewood a chance to rethink and update Ricalton Square. Sarahzm is correct in that the space is currently used mostly as a pass through from the parking lot and train station to the stores....and, the Christmas Village. While I don't have any immediate ideas about how the space could be prefigured to encourage more 'square-like' activity, it would not surprise me if during the demolition and construction that the space will be affected and in need of a freshening up once the new building is completed.
Squares in many countries typically have a fountain or something in the center surrounded by public seating with walks radiating out to the corners and well as through the middle. Space limitations probably preclude this array, but with a modicum of creativity we should be able to improve this patch of green space in the village.
FWIW, I find the latest drawings of the proposed replacement for the PO to be a welcome improvement over the previously scaled ones and the old building.
You are all asking about more and better public space...but we are getting less:
If you look at the current site plan for the proposed building you will see that Ricalton Square is being made smaller and the trees along the Ricalton Sq edge closest to the PO site are being removed. The driveway into Ricalton lot is being shifted north. (How will the King's trucks ever maneuver?)
Why is the PO project being allowed to encroach on Ricalton Square? The Redev. Plan does not allow that.
sarahzm said:
How about if they built an "L" shaped building, that extended along the Village Coffee side and the train tracks . The plaza would have retail or restaurants lining two sides and would be open to Ricalton Square and Maplewood Avenue. If there were sidewalk cafes under an arcade and public seating in the plaza would that be enough of a draw.
ml1 said:
part of the reason we don't have many outdoor public space is that they aren't usable for at least 4 months out of the year. between winter months and rainy days throughout the year, you're probably looking at 150 days that an outdoor space is not usable from a practical standpoint.
The idea of outdoor cafes, performance spaces, fountains, benches sounds really terrific, I'm not going to argue against that. But the notion that development is going to be centered around outdoor space that won't be used at least 1/3 of the time seems quixotic to me.
Promote your business here - Businesses get highlighted throughout the site and you can add a deal.
But, what if we all took a step back and (as author would say) tried to color outside the lines.
THis is is a once in a lifetime opportunity to do something great for Maplewood.
Maybe shoehorning the biggest building the public will allow into the space is the right thing ( I like the new renderings and think it would be a real improvement over what is there now)
Maybe preserving the post office building (maybe for public space) is best choice.
Does it have to be one or the other.
What if something different turned out to be a really great thing for the town.
What if we thought about how we could most improve the already wonderful experience of being in our village. What would add to the vibe, the charm, the useage. What could we create with that space that we don't have now that would make being in downtown Maplewood better for those who live there, work there, shop there, eat there, walk there, drive there. What could we do that would most benefit all of Maplewood.
Are there better options than those that are being promoted?
Here's my two cents.
In every town in Europe there is a central square, a piazza, that is the heart and soul of the town. I've lived in Italy and several years ago I walked (hiked ) across Spain. I walked into and out of perhaps hundreds of small Spanish towns, some with only one main street, others that were beautiful small cities. Every single one of them had a plaza or a piazza where people gathered, sat at sidewalk cafe's came with their families, their dogs, their grandmothers. It was ( as Inda Sezcher said) an outdoor living room where neighbors could gather in community and enjoy the life of the town.
We don't have that in Maplewood, but if we did wouldn't it be fabulous.
The closest thing we have is the sorry space in front of the bank building and in front of the old post office.
We have Ricalton Square which is used for Dickens Village , but other than those 8 days a year its main function is to provide a nice place to walk through from your car to pick up Chinese food or go to the movies.
What if at the old PO site a small building, with perhaps 1/2 the footprint currently planned were built. It could have retail and parking on the lower level, Perhaps retail and an arcade facing Ricalton Square. ( covered area) on the main level that would lend itself to a sidewalk café ( think a modern much smaller version of the arcade in St Marks Square . But between the building and Ricalton, and adjoining Maplewood Avenue, there would be a beautifully designed, small paved plaza, with trees, plantings, people friendly architecture and space for people to gather, sell Girl Scout Cookies, get petitions signed and meet their neighbors.
If this were a perfect world I'd also want apartments for seniors above , additional parking, a through road in the back and a fountain.
What's your idea.