Showing posts with label Mound View neighborhood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mound View neighborhood. Show all posts

Thursday, May 23, 2024

Hy-Vee is a symptom of a deeper problem

 

1556 1st Avenue NE in 2014. It will close June 23.
(Taxable value per acre $1,204,012 on 1.89 acres)

I come not to bury Hy-Vee, but to praise it. It will be faint praise, but nonetheless, I think the impending the store closure highlights a broader problem with which we should be dealing.

Hy-Vee's announcement earlier this month surprised and outraged a lot of people, which is understandable. This is the only full-service grocery store in the core area of Cedar Rapids, located as it is at a major intersection in the Mound View neighborhood, just across 1st Avenue from Wellington Heights. It draws a lot of customers from both neighborhoods, including considerable foot traffic. I was impressed, while doing some observations at Redmond Park ten years ago, how many people were walking through the park on their way to Hy-Vee. Mayor Tiffany O'Donnell stated:

Generations of customers have relied on this store for their basic needs. It is unfortunate the company is leaving at a time when the nearby neighborhoods are seeing significant improvements and public investment.... We know that access to fresh, affordable food is crucial for our community's well-being, and we will work with local agencies to meet the needs of those impacted most by this closure. (Quoted at Murphy 2024)

City Council member Dale Todd called it "an abandonment of some of our community's most vulnerable," while State Representative Sami Scheetz said "its closure betrays the community's trust and investment." The local activist group Advocates for Social Justice organized a protest at the store's Oakland Road location for this Sunday. A few of my friends have posted their intention to move their grocery lives elsewhere--though of course Aldi, Fareway, and New Pioneer Co-op don't have presences in the core either.

This outrage is not without cause. Besides moving out of the core, many people recalled when Hy-Vee sought to close the 1st Avenue location in 2000, the City responded with subsidies and tax benefits to keep it there. This time the announcement appeared to catch city officials off guard. "[I]nstead of working with us to address the inherent challenges," said Todd, "this feels like an abandonment and a complete run for the hills" (all quotes at Murphy 2024). Those hills have increasingly been larger stores with large parking lots at the city's edge; closing 1st Avenue completes Hy-Vee's abandonment of walkable neighborhoods.

Hy-Vee, 5050 Edgewood Road NE, Black Friday 2021 (built 2005)
(Taxable value per acre $801,144 on 11.36 acres)

There is definitely something to be said for corporate social responsibility, but we're not going to say it here. There's a more important point to be made. If we are successful at rebuilding the core of the city, businesses will want to be here, because of the profits will be made. Being in such a primo location will be incentive enough. Put another way: We can't build a strong city on charity. We need to be attractive to profit-seeking businesses. Hy-Vee made a "business" decision, as frankly did the school district; how can we develop the city's core in ways that business decisions are to locate here?

Hy-Vee is only the latest institution to leave the city's core, in spite of significant residential construction and city investment in downtown, New Bohemia, Czech Village, and Kingston. The Cedar Rapids Community School District is in the process of closing most of its core schools. Even McDonald's and Subway have closed their 1st Avenue locations, and two of the four chains in the College Commons have left. The lovely new building at 1445 1st Avenue SE has never had a tenant. And that's just the first two blocks away from the Hy-Vee store. The efforts that have gone into rebuilding the city from the center out are for some reason(s) not computing for some people.

It's ok to be mad, and to vent that anger at the corporate giant that is Hy-Vee. But then we need to have some serious conversations about the core of the city. What do we, and I include the public as well as the private sectors, need to do to make this an attractive place to live and do business?

I have some thoughts on this, but at this point they're mere opinions. I think we're dealing with:
  1. an unbalanced national/global economy where a relatively small number of people have an outsized share of spending money, which has distorted commerce as well as social relations; 
  2. the ease of car driving in most of the metro has led people to develop "drive-to" urbanism based on boutique shopping in much of the core;
  3. nothing that looks like the transect can emerge out of the city center because we've walled it off with the MedQuarter, I-380, and the proposed casino; and 
  4. better development is inhibited because the property tax system incentivizes "land banking" by unscrupulous property owners.
As I say, though, these are just one observer's opinions. We need to have some serious, informed, intense conversations about the reality that Hy-Vee has helped expose.

SOURCE FOR ALL QUOTATIONS: Erin Murphy, "First Ave. Hy-Vee to Close, Leaving C.R. Grocery Gap," Cedar Rapids Gazette, 10 May 2024, 1A, 10A

SEE ALSO: "Hy-Vee Releases Statement on Closures, Offers Ways to Help People Living Nearby," kcrg.com, 22 May 2024

Wednesday, December 21, 2022

Five Favorite Streets

 

bakery with windows on front
1903 storefront at 73 16th Avenue SW

"What are your five favorite streets in your town?" asked someone on Mastodon the other day. Unfortunately, I can't remember who inspired this post, but it does allow me to promote my presence on the oddness that is Mastodon: You'll find me at @brucefnesmith@mastodon.coffee. There are lots of urbanists on Mastodon!

I mulled, cogitated, and in time came up with five streets in Cedar Rapids that I love. I'm going on pure visceral reaction here, though I will try to explain my love for each, which seems based in a stew of walkability and nostalgia. The streets are listed alphabetically; they are too different for me to attempt to rank them. I add the caveat that I've lived and worked my entire Cedar Rapids life on the east side, so I just don't know the west side as well. It gets some love, too, however!

Bever Avenue SE (2400-3000).

A lovely urban boulevard that lost quite a bit of its tree canopy in the 2020 derecho, but still retains its aesthetic charm. Pedestrians gravitate to it because many of the residential streets to its south lack sidewalks. On the north side is Bever Park, one of the town's largest and oldest parks which includes two playgrounds, a duck pond, swimming pool, picnic shelter and wooded trails. Average daily traffic count: 4980. Served by the #2 bus below Memorial Drive.

Yes, but: Despite the thoughtfully stenciled sharrow, auto traffic moves too fast for comfortable cycling, and the lack of stops requires cautious crossing from the residential area to the park. Besides the park, there are few attractions within an easy walking distance.

Street between houses and a park
Bever Avenue, looking west from park entrance

4th Avenue SE (1900-2100).

Old-fashioned houses are charming if on the large side. This is one of my favorite streets to walk at Christmastime. The poet Paul Engle (1908-1991) had a childhood paper route here, and in his memoir described the tree-lined street, trees that spread up and outward, meeting high above the middle of the street, so that walking along them in summer was going through a green tunnel. Those houses at a distance looked calm, quiet, outside the turbulent world. But to a boy of twelve they were crammed with excitement, with living, tense, often wild faces. Windows were the way I looked into their eyes (A Lucky American Childhood [University of Iowa Press, 1996], p. 62). The #2 bus runs close by.

Yes, but: Like 8th Avenue in Marion, which is another street I love, the lovely houses are going to be too big for most of us. It's a strenuous though doable walk to downtown or any other attractions.

Street facing large older houses
4th Avenue, looking east from 20th Street

Johnson Avenue NW (200-300).

Shady older street with a mix of houses, within walking distance of a supermarket, schools, churches and some small offices. At one end is Haskell Park, a pocket park named for the state legislator who championed the Lincoln Highway. Farther down Johnson is a Dairy Queen. Across 1st Avenue, alas a crossing not to be taken lightly, are Cleveland Park and the baseball and football stadia. Downtown is about a mile and a half away. Served by bus routes #8 and #10.

Yes, but: As a segment of the original Lincoln Highway, it connects two high-traffic stroads.

Street between two rows of houses
Johnson Ave NW (Google maps screen capture)

Longwood Drive NE.

Longwood and its sister streets, Dunreath and Gwendolyn, were shoehorned between 19th and 20th Streets some time in the 1920s or 30s. We lived on Longwood from 1997-2007, and I loved the closeness of the small lots. On the edge of the Mound View neighborhood, there is a pocket park (Tomahawk) at the end of the street, and beyond it the CeMar Trail and the athletic fields of Mount Mercy University. Franklin Middle School, the Tic Toc restaurant, and the Old Neighborhood Pub are within easy walks, and Coe College isn't terribly far, as I can personally attest. The street has neither curbs nor gutters, but slopes toward the middle, which during rainstorms creates a creek known as Big Al. The #3 bus runs close by.

Yes, but: There are no sidewalks. The closest elementary school closed years ago, and the second-closest is shortly going to be closed, too.

Narrow street with houses on either side
Longwood Drive, looking north from C Avenue
(Google Maps screen capture)

16th Avenue SW (000-120).

This was the main commercial street in pre-flood Czech Village, though bars and knick-knacks have replaced essential services to the neighborhood that is no longer. Thanks to visionary property owners like Mary Kay McGrath and Bob Schaeffer, Czech Village has managed to retain much of its historic charm through this transitionary period.The narrow street makes walking easy, and it contains probably my favorite bar (Lion Bridge, at 59) and coffee house (Cafe St. Pio, at 99). If I were a plant person, my favorite plant store would be Moss, at 74. The Cedar Valley Nature Trail crosses 16th Avenue at A Street. Average daily traffic count: 4720. The #7 bus stops at 16th and C.

Yes, but: There are few residences nearby now, though plans for development of the flooded area to the south are in the works.

Street with old-fashioned shops and parking
16th Avenue looking southish from A Street.
Lion Bridge's courtyard is on the left. 

SEE ALSO:

"The Urbanest Places in Cedar Rapids?" 16 July 2020

"The Place Where I Live," 1 April 2013

Cedar Rapids bus routes: https://www.cedar-rapids.org/residents/city_buses/routes.php

Cedar Rapids average daily traffic counts:   https://iowadot.gov/maps/msp/traffic/2021/cities/CedarRapids.pdf

Linn County trail map: https://linncountytrails.org/trails/

Sunday, September 10, 2017

Imagine Mound View


Imagine Mound View, the Cedar Rapids neighborhood festival organized by Corridor Urbanism, drew a steady and significant crowd to a normally empty block of the northeast side Saturday afternoon. They found an array of food and craft vendors, political candidates, and representatives from non-profit and government agencies. Competing as we were against the annual Iowa-Iowa State football game (if that doesn't impress you, you're not from here), we showed the appetite here for good urban development that includes food options, bike trails and other recreational opportunities--if nothing else we learned that Cedar Rapids needs more skateboard facilities, stat--as well as just plan old street life.
We arranged for the 1600 block of F Avenue NE to be closed for the day
Decorated crosswalk
Candidates for November's City Council elections were available


A soap box was available (here used by mayoral candidate Gary Hinzman)



More people used the idea boards
The skateboarders were tireless (installation by EduSkate)

Demonstrations of curling and new styles of bikes

While the skateboarders occupied the trail, cyclists were invited
to try out a pop-up protected bike lane with various types of treatments
City staff were on hand to solicit people's input about development




A variety of food and drinks were available from vendors like
Keepin' Up With the Jones's
More vendors: Lightworks Coffee, KB Woodworking, Fiddle Sticks
Non-profit booths at Imagine Mound View
So, what happens next? This depends entirely, as it should, on the responses of individuals. Ideally, entrepreneurs notice the opportunities available in an area which currently is served by some outstanding bars but not much else. Homeowners as well as the two colleges are amenable to a variety of new commercial and housing endeavors. Owners of low-performing properties are encouraged by rising values to sell to people with big plans. The city can help by form- rather than function-based zoning, and by contributing urban-friendly infrastructure. I don't think we're looking for a "home run" like a heavily-subsidized Google or Amazon facility, though.  Mound View has the good bones and access to colleges and downtown that should make it attractive to private investment, all other things being equal.

F Avenue on an ordinary afternoon

Tuesday, August 29, 2017

Three futures for Mound View

Mound View neighborhood as seen from Clark Field at Coe College
When Imagine Mound View, Corridor Urbanism's street fair-cum-tactical urbanism event, occurs in early September, it will bring people to one of Cedar Rapids' most historic, walkable and centrally-located neighborhoods. The event is intended to highlight the potential of this area, and to promote principles consistent with prosperity, inclusion and resilience. But what will actually happen in Mound View over the next 25-100 years will result from the uncoordinated decisions and actions of many people and institutions, much of them taken in an environment currently unpredictable.
The Tic Toc, 17th St and E Av: once a renowned neighborhood gathering place,
awaits a new life in better times
Mound View is the historic name of a working-class neighborhood on Cedar Rapids' northeast side. Its official boundaries are 1st Avenue, 20th Street/Prairie Drive, K Avenue and Oakland Road/College Drive. These are mostly intuitive boundaries, but K and Oakland don't really demarcate anything, so it may make more sense to include the area between Mount Mercy University and the interstate in our mental map. This corresponds to the city's land use map, where it is all designated "urban-medium intensity" while nearby areas on the northeast side are designated "urban-low intensity." On the other side of the interstate is Cedar Lake, a former industrial site being reclaimed by a very hopeful group of people.
Oakland Road approaching G Av. Mound View's streets are an interesting mix of residential,
commercial and light-industrial uses


Mound View grew up around small factories and stores, as well as St. Luke's Hospital and Coe College, welcoming Mount Mercy Junior College (now Mount Mercy University) in 1928. The family of the future artist Grant Wood moved here in 1901; he attended the old Polk School and spent his young winters sledding down the steep hill in the 1800 block of B Avenue. (The Mound View Neighborhood Association offers an online walking tour of Wood-related sites.)

Grant Wood lived on 14th St early in the 20th century
Mound View retains a lot of advantages of traditional urban form: mixed residential and commercial uses (with some light industrial), a street grid, sidewalks, older styles of houses with porches, a large park, and several gathering places. The two colleges are less than a mile apart, and both have a large number of events and facilities open to the public. Garfield Elementary School and Franklin Middle School are within walking distance. A biking/walking trail was recently constructed that connects on both ends to an emerging county trails network. This stretch of the trail...


...passes through the Imagine Mound View location, and will be the site of e-bike and skateboard demonstrations as well as a pop-up coffee shop.

From that location, the walking distances to:
 Daniels Park splash pad 5 minutes
 Dick's Tap and Shake 5 minutes
 Dairy Queen 6 minutes
 J.M. O'Malley's 6 minutes
 Garfield Elementary School 8 minutes
 Hennessey Recreation Center at Mount Mercy 11 minutes
 Clark Racquet Center at Coe College 12 minutes
 Franklin Field 12 minutes
 Hy-Vee (supermarket) 13 minutes
 Regis Middle School 16 minutes
 Franklin Middle School 16 minutes
 McLeod Run Trail Park 17 minutes
 Brewed Awakenings Coffeehouse 19 minutes
 Cedar Lake 21 minutes
 Brucemore National Historic Site 25 minutes
 Shaver Park (disc golf course) 28 minutes
 U.S. Cellular Center 33 minutes
 Cedar Rapids Public Library 36 minutes
 City of Cedar Rapids 37 minutes

As was the case in a lot of core urban neighborhoods, the last part of the 20th century was not kind to Mound View. Center Point and Oakland Roads were re-designed as one-way, multi-lane throughways. A lot of the factories closed or downsized, as did many of the small stores. (The last grocery store in the area, Hy-Vee, was saved from closing by a $1 million renovation grant from the City of Cedar Rapids in 2000.)

As industrial jobs disappeared, people left the area, and what had been single-family housing became vacant or was converted to short-term rentals. A lot of new construction along 1st and A  Avenues used suburban-style large parking lots separating the buildings from the street. Coe College bought and knocked down a couple blocks' worth of housing in the middle of the last decade in preparation for an anticipated expansion. Polk School, which began to experiment with a "year-round" schedule in the late 1990s, was closed and converted to an alternative education center about ten years later.
Polk's playgrounds and basketball courts remain important neighborhood resources
The location and design advantages of Mound View co-exist with very low real estate prices, suggesting there is a rent gap here which could attract future investment. That is in fact what drew the attention of Corridor Urbanism. But investment doesn't occur automatically, nor when it does occur is it always benign.

Future 1: Deterioration of assets. Cedar Rapids is not New York or San Francisco. Regional land prices are low, and there are no mountains or oceans to block physical expansion. Construction of the Highway 100 extension has just opened up many acres at the edge of the city for development. As long as energy prices remain low, there may not be the incentives for private investors in older areas of the city. The remarkable emergence of New Bohemia since 2008 is inspiring to the other core neighborhoods, but probably not specifically replicable. The colleges have heavily invested in their campuses, but neither is flush enough to fund neighborhood development, nor is the city. The school district's radical proposal to close all existing elementary schools and build new ones means their investment in this area is likely to decrease rather than increase. In the absence of private investment, existing long-term homeowners will continue to hold on, but they won't live forever, and "generational replacement" (social science euphemism) would likely bring dramatic disinvestment to this area within 25 years.

Future 2: Gentrification with displacement. On the other hand, it's possible that developers will see a potential market in upscale housing here: college or MedQuarter employees, or fitness enthusiasts attracted to the trails and college-based facilities. Mound View could see a surge in condo construction such as New Bohemia and Kingston Village have experienced, and/or new home construction replacing "tear-downs." An increase in property values would be welcome, and a fair amount of housing stock certainly is dilapitated, but would likely price many existing homeowners and renters out of the area. Peter Moskowitz's recent How to Kill a City (Public Affairs Press, 2017) provides some particularly egregious examples from other parts of the country of government's use of incentives and condemnations in ways that facilitate displacement.

For this reason, I take a strong stand against rebranding Mound View as the College District. I know the colleges are substantial assets just waiting for the neighborhood to leverage them. But rebranding shows lack of respect, not only for the neighborhood's history, but for long-term residents as well.

Future 3: Gentrification, gently. The best outcome for Mound View will result from investment that improves the neighborhood while allowing it to remain true to its current assets including its people. The city has begun addressing obstacles to walkability: adding bike lanes to key streets, improving trails and, in the next couple years will be converting Oakland and Center Point Roads back to two-way albeit only above H Avenue. I'd like to see improved connection to Cedar Lake, either by making H Avenue less dangerous for cyclists and pedestrians where it meets the interstate, or better yet by punching through a connection around E Avenue. The strange intersection north of Coe College could be improved as well, slowing cars but accommodating multiple directions, while improving connection through Coe College to the MedQuarter and downtown with a sidewalk along Coe Road.
Center Point Road was blocked in the late 1960s;
the two segments are one-way streets, in opposite directions

What it looks like on a map
The worst of the housing stock should be replaced, but there should still be places for low-income people to live. People should be able to walk to school, shopping and work. Corner stores, small shops and bars would provide public gathering places as well as jobs. New housing construction should fit well with existing stock as well as their streets. Allowing accessory dwelling units would provide a non-disruptive way of increasing density. The school district should commit to keeping a school within walking distance of Mound View children; Coe College should be encouraged to do something with its empty land. 

A lot of what's needed to mitigate the negative effects of gentrification requires policy decisions at the state or national level [see Richard Florida, The New Urban Crisis, Basic Books, 2017, pp 191-215] but strong expectations established by both city government and neighborhood residents couldn't hurt. If we know what we want, and understand the trade-offs involved, we might get it.


THANKS to Imagine Mound View sponsors:
Legion Arts
Acme Electric
Benchmark Construction
Coe College
Dick's Tap and Shake Room
King's Material
Mount Mercy University
Valenta Plumbing and Heating

NOTES:
For earlier posts on the theme of gentrification, click on the link under "labels" in the right column.

City Data report on Mound View.

SEE ALSO: Phillip Platz, "Urbanism Advocacy Group Stages Festival in Cedar Rapids' 'Next New Bo'," Corridor Urbanism, 25 August 2017

Tuesday, July 25, 2017

Design meetings last week


Two public meetings Tuesday raised issues of neighborhood design in the center of town, including enhancing walkability.


At the Metro Economic Alliance downtown, we got our first look at the wayfinding and branding signage chosen for downtown, the MedQuarter, New Bohemia and Czech Village (with City Council approval and timetable yet to come). The signage was developed by Corbin Design which is headquartered in Traverse City, Michigan.

Drivers would be served by this type of sign, indicating which section they're in, and orientation to other sections and attractions.

Pedestrians could benefit from more detailed markers, including "you are here" type maps and interesting historical facts.

Some signs would show walking times to various attractions, which might encourage people to walk more rather than returning to their cars and re-parking.

A closer look at the map, which is stylized and does not depict actual Cedar Rapids.


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