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Thomas Bardenett

Urban Planning - Writer - Filmmaker
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Washington Square - A Future More Lively Than Franklin Square

January 10, 2019

Syracuse is filled with beautiful historic buildings, many of which were factories and warehouses from the early 20th Century. Over the years those in Armory Square and Franklin Square have been saved and repurposed, creating a vibrant bar and entertainment scene (Armory) and an exclusive condo and office park (Franklin) in the process. One area that has the same good bones but has not seen the same level of investment is Washington Square on Syracuse’s Northside.

Along North Salina St., from Lemoyne Ave up to Hiawatha Blvd., and over to Carbon St., you have many beautiful old buildings, including the famous factory with a house on top, that are ripe for redevelopment. Currently the neighborhood is occupied by multiple strip clubs, a smoke shop that doesn’t hide its products are used for pot, and numerous nearly if not completely abandoned warehouses along Wolf St. and Hiawatha Blvd. While these buildings could use TLC, they maintain their original beauty and a surprisingly walkable street, even though some of the sidewalks are in desperate need of repair.

Unlike Franklin Square, these buildings are right in the heart of the neighborhood, not separated by an invisible gate that makes the area feel exclusive. At the same time it has easy access to the nearby highways as well as a quick walk to Destiny USA, the Regional Market and NBT Bank Stadium. Development at the Inner Harbor is just blocks away, only adding to the feeling that time has come for these buildings to see new life.

Transforming this small section of Washington Square should be done with the lessons learned from Franklin Square and Armory Square, while keeping true to its working class history. This should not become an exclusive neighborhood like Franklin Square, or too rowdy of a bar scene like Armory Square. Instead it should embrace its manufacturing history. Some of these buildings would make perfect makerspaces; places open to artists, craftsman and small scale manufacturing. Matched with affordable apartments for those using those spaces would help to create a community that invests within itself as well as attracts outside investment.

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Another step would be helping a local brewery move to the area to make use of the spaces, which would be a key anchor to the neighborhood. Look to the new Labatt Brew House/ Draft Room in Buffalo for inspiration, or even the more local Middle Ages Brewery off Park Ave. These breweries embraced old warehouses and manufacturing sites, repurposing them into thriving social scenes. With the ever expanding craft brewery market throughout the country, and especially in Syracuse, this could become an epicenter for creativity and innovation in brewing.

One of the downfalls of Franklin Square is the lack of street facing businesses. As you walk around the neighborhood there is little street life as a result. Washington Square, on the other hand, already has walkability built in. Empty storefronts line the streets, ripe for investment. This should be embraced and expanded. Extending sidewalks around Park St. and Wolf St. would allow for outdoor seating in nicer weather. Adding street trees, bike racks and bike lanes will help make this neighborhood more attractive to young families and other young professionals the city is continually looking to attract.

Being one block away from Washington Square Park and within walking distance of so many amenities, this can easily become an attractive neighborhood for young families looking for a more urban experience but still away from downtown. These mini neighborhood centers should become the focus of development within Syracuse moving forward.

While downtown continues to grow, others will be looking for neighborhoods with their own character that still offers that urban environment. As a city that grew up around the streetcar, Syracuse is filled with business and industrial areas that were once the hearts of their neighborhoods. The Northside has many of these former districts, with Washington Square being the most centrally located. If the county continues to prevent development around NBT Bank Stadium, this neighborhood can help connect the stadium to the rest of the city, providing gathering points for before and after games just a short walk away, as well as the freedom to walk to the Regional Market for groceries and entertainment at the mall.

It’s time to reinvest.

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In Urban Planning, Syracuse
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Grant Boulevard and the Heart of the Northside: Part Three - The Baseball Stadium

September 14, 2018

So far in this series I have focused on a very small section of Grant Blvd., from Darlington to Butternut. This has always been the core of my neighborhood, where everything happened on a day-to-day basis. But that is not the only part of Grant, and in reality its most important resident resides at the very end of the street: the baseball stadium.

Growing up on the Northside I was lucky to be so close to the stadium, and in recent years I’ve loved taking advantage of living so close to where I could stop by a game whenever I wanted. You start to see the same faces in the stands and make a connection to the team, to the point where you’re one of the few people to have a favourite Syracuse Chief (Irving Falu over the past few seasons). This stadium and this team create a community within the city. Sadly its physical placement has never allowed for that community to expand outside the gates.

The stadium is surrounded by its own massive parking lot, a refrigerated warehouse and its parking lot, and industrial wasteland. There are no sidewalks leading to the stadium, and even if there were you’d have to walk gingerly through a busy parking lot before getting to the actual stadium. Many people will see that parking lot as an asset, along with its close proximity to I-81 for quick entrances and exits, but both of these factors work together in isolating the stadium from its Northside community, where the team has played for over 80 years.

I include this as part of my Grant Blvd. series because Grant should act as the main entrance to the stadium area. Its the path I’ve always taken in and out and provides the greatest opportunity in reshaping this community. The corners of Grant and Hiawatha and Grant and Wolf provide a business corridor that should be expanded with mix-use facilities that grow towards the stadium.

Proposed renovation to NBT Bank Stadium

Proposed renovation to NBT Bank Stadium

With the Mets coming to town next season and a major stadium renovation being discussed, I think its important to look beyond just the stadium and see the potential that is there.

When I think of the truly great baseball stadiums I have been to, its hardly ever just about the stadium. The neighborhoods around these stadiums are filled with bars, restaurants, shops, and apartments. The neighborhood takes on a full on pride for the team, every bar broadcasting every game, becoming the home for fans even when the team is out of town. And this isn’t just true of stadiums in downtown areas, the Red Sox and Cubs are both in neighborhoods outside of their downtown areas, but the areas grew up around the stadiums. Or for a minor league comparison you can look to Rochester where their stadium is in the High Falls neighborhood outside of downtown, but in an area with a lot going on.

Our stadium will never be downtown. Let’s move past the arguments of the 1990s and focus on what is possible where the stadium sits and will continue to sit.

The first major change is the one most people will object to; we need to remove the massive parking lot in front of the stadium. This is crucial for the rest of my proposal. I do believe we need parking, but I think its worth investing in building two parking garages, one out behind right field where there is currently industrial wasteland, and the other across the street in the large parking lot in front of the refrigerated warehouse. These would not be massive, but they’d be assisted by newly created street parking.

NBT Bank Stadium today
NBT Bank Stadium today
Proposed street grid with zoning ideas
Proposed street grid with zoning ideas

Where that parking lot stands would be converted into a street grid, extending Grant Blvd. right to the baseball stadium and opening up this land for development. Under the proposed Rezone Syracuse effort this area still remains zoned as industrial, which is a grave mistake. They should look to repurpose this land as mix-use development. There has already been a successful repurpose of an old warehouse just beyond the parking lot, proving that there is desire for modern apartments in the area. We should look to include some of that historic architecture into the other buildings in this newly formed grid. Take cues from the stadium and the neighborhood to make a cohesive environment, much like those that have been built up around Wrigley Field and Fenway.

This new development would become an anchor for the entire Northside, as not only Grant Blvd. but also North Salina St. lead to it, both streets being central business corridors for the neighborhood. This would bring the stadium into the neighborhood, becoming a focal point and gathering space. With additional park area within this new development there becomes opportunities to do pre-game festivals during the summer and keep people involved with the team during the winter. The annual Hot Stove dinner can be moved to a restaurant or bar right next door, ideally a bar that becomes to central hub for all things Syracuse sports; a bar that has every Chiefs and Crunch game playing on TV, as well as all of the SU sporting events.

The baseball stadium has been separated from its home neighborhood for too long, and its time that the Northside reclaims this land. With all of the assets this neighborhood has, it has sadly done a terrible job of connecting the people to them. With this grid, not only does the baseball stadium become more accessible, so does the Regional Market, our transportation hub, Destiny USA, and the new development around the Inner Harbor. We need to stop thinking of things in a vacuum, but instead envision how they all should connect to build upon each other.

The last bit of all of this is something I’ve talked about many times; revive and improve OnTrack. I’ve discussed this project idea before (I-81) so I won’t get into the nitty gritty of it, but its important to bring up. The idea of this rezoning and redevelopment would be to create a new central hub within the city, which would help create an increased demand for public transit. Allowing the public to have options to get around the city without a car is paramount to developing a city for the future. There is a want for walkable neighborhoods and freedom from car ownership, but the majority of our city has been gutted of these types of neighborhoods. This could be one of the catalysts to relaunch OnTrack and change how we interact with the city as a whole.

The vast empty land by the stadium.
The vast empty land by the stadium.
 What an urban neighborhood could begin to look like.

What an urban neighborhood could begin to look like.

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In Sports, Syracuse, Urban Planning, Baseball
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Butternut Circle via Google Maps

Butternut Circle via Google Maps

Grant Boulevard and the Heart of the Northside: Part Two - Butternut Circle

September 5, 2018

Butternut Circle is not only the central focus of this business district but also a sort of dividing line. To the north is a fairly stable middle class neighborhood, to the south is one of the poorer areas in Syracuse. Both converge at this point, making it vitally important to the well being of the neighborhood as a whole.

The circle is surrounded by mainstay businesses; Peppino's Pizza, Liehs and Steigerwald, a flower shop, dry cleaner, Rite Aid, Blueberry Market (a convenience store that replaced Byrne Dairy), a dentist office, and a barber shop. Amongst these businesses lingers a large vacant building that once housed an arcade and other small businesses. It is one of the most visible buildings on the circle, hanging a dark cloud over what many would consider a successful business district.

In order for the neighborhood to grow and move into the future, I believe its important to make sure this circle is filled with life. 

Butternut Circle present day
Butternut Circle present day
Proposed Gym/ Market
Proposed Gym/ Market

This building presents a lot of opportunities with its central location, but something that has been missing from this neighborhood as long as I have lived here is a gym and wellness center. This may seem like an odd fit for a working class neighborhood, but in reality it can fit if done in the right way.

This would not be a high end gym with every amenity you can think of. Instead it would be more in line with another local gym, Flex House of Fitness in Eastwood. A neighborhood gym where you come to know everyone there, where you walk to it from your home down the street. It becomes a community within itself. We can find ways to get donated or lightly used equipment. It might not be brand new but who really needs brand new weights? They're just going to get banged up anyways.

With finding reduced price equipment we can keep prices affordable for the community, and avoid requiring the long term commitment policies of chain gyms. Pay by the day or pay by the month, no need to commit to a year with a "maintenance fee." 

In addition to the gym I believe there should be a wellness center that sells fresh foods and provides weekly classes on cooking healthy meals. Although there are convenience stores and delis around the circle, there is not a place to get fresh produce. You can walk further and get to a Tops grocery store, but for many older folks and people with disabilities it is difficult to get around on the hills. This convenient location would also encourage those using the gym to grab fresh food on their way home.

Providing cooking classes weekly would also provide opportunities in the community that are not readily available. Many people overlook the health differences between those in higher and lower income brackets, so this center would help level that playing field and give those in the neighborhood a new skill set. 

Although the main focus here is this structure, we must also work to reconnect this circle for pedestrians. A few years ago the city took down the traffic lights and replaced them with stop signs and a new traffic flow. This was a huge first step in making this circle more navigable for pedestrians, but there is still room for improvement. The next step must include raised pedestrian islands where paint currently sits. This would help slow down drivers through the circle and provide a safer spot for pedestrians to linger as they wait for traffic to halt or clear. 

The sidewalks in the area must also be expanded, or in some places added. In front of Blueberry Market there is no separation between pedestrians and vehicles, especially as some cars try to cut the corner coming from the west down Grant Blvd.  Curbs must be replaced and crosswalks need more defined entrances. All of this would also help create a more welcoming feel in the central green area of the circle. As the green space sits right now there is little appeal to pedestrians to linger amongst the trees and flowers. With traffic slowed and walking made easier, it may become a more peaceful place to spend a little time. I would remove the current standard parks sign and replace it with a more welcoming piece that focuses on its place at the center of the Northside. 

 

In Syracuse, Urban Planning
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Grant Boulevard and the Heart of the Northside: Part One - The Northsider

September 5, 2018

Growing up on the Northside of Syracuse, Grant Blvd. was the gateway to the city for my friends and I. We rode bikes down to the cemetery or over to an ice cream shop, went out to eat at the Corner House or went down to a Chiefs game. Everything we needed was somewhere down Grant.

Slowly some of those businesses went away. The Corner House closed up shop after years of service, the old arcade (which I never personally experienced) had been vacant for decades, shops changed hands and went in-and-out of business, but the street remains a focal point on the Northside.

This is why my mind continually comes back to ways to improve this street, which will be the focus of these posts. Taking back the abandoned buildings, restructuring the street, and making a neighborhood you never want to leave.

The Northsider

When I think of my neighborhood the first thing I think of is the Corner House, a family friendly restaurant that thrived for decades. Families walked down to eat on the weekends, the smell of food would fill the air, it was the heart of the neighborhood in a lot of ways. 

Now its abandoned frame stands there with broken windows and a shoddy paint job covering up graffiti. It doesn't always feel safe to walk through its parking lot knowing you're blocked from the street light. An upscale restaurant tried to set up there a couple years after the Corner House closed up, but it was never the right fit for the area; its faded curtains still hanging in the front windows and its sign spray painted over.

That building is a defining piece of the neighborhood that needs to be revived. And that's where the idea for the Northsider has sprung up from.

As I contemplated what would be an ideal fit for the neighborhood, I started to look at what was already offered just west down the street. Peppino's offers up some of the best pizza in the city, Change of Pace is a neighborhood bar with wings and fried food that people love, and you've got Leihs and Steigerwald as one of the best deli's in the area. These institutions already anchor this street and compliment each other. The new Corner House should build on these successes.

The Corner House present day
The Corner House present day
The Northsider with side patio
The Northsider with side patio

The Northsider, as I've come to call the idea, would be a bar and sandwich shop, infusing the different flavors from the cultures that populate the Northside. As a neighborhood, the Northside has experienced a tremendous amount of immigration; from the Germans and Italians over a hundred years ago to the Burmese and Sudanese families currently filling the community. All of these cultures have distinct flavors and dishes that would be remixed together to create a unique cuisine of its own. As the only sandwich shop, New York Roast, closed down years ago, there's been a want to fill that casual dining experience, but in a way that hasn't been done before in this area.

Along with the sandwiches would be a unique beer selection to the area. The bars along Grant Blvd. have always been focused on staple beers like Budweiser, Coors, and Blue Moon. Not that I wouldn't want those beers available, I think it'd be smart to focus on more locally produced beer and some drinks from the countries represented in the neighborhood. This would allow the Northsider to distinguish itself from the other neighborhood bars as well as compliment them. Like Tipperary Hill and Downtown Syracuse, you need a variety of bar atmospheres for people to bounce between to create a social scene.

Another important aspect of this would be to open it up to the community. Currently the Corner House has a small parking lot wrapping around its exterior. In order to truly reinvent the space and draw the community in I would look to remove the half of the parking lot that is closest to Grant Blvd.. In its place would be a courtyard feature that the restaurant would open up to, much like what was down at Now & Later on Tipperary Hill. This would allow the sounds and smells of the restaurant to waft through the neighborhood and draw people in. Fun murals could be painted on the exterior cinderblock wall, adding to the vibrancy of the place.

Corner House present day
Corner House present day
An added patio area with historical mural along the side of the building
An added patio area with historical mural along the side of the building

One of the critiques of the current zoning laws in Syracuse, and the newly proposed changes, that I have is parking minimums. Requiring businesses to have off-street parking not only increases costs for the business, but also deprives neighborhoods from developing walkable business districts that people are drawn to. If the City Council speaks up enough and removes these parking requirements, it would allow for a space like this courtyard to exist. 

This is just one idea for that space, but its an idea that invites the involvement of the neighborhood. There's vibrancy in the community and there needs to be more spaces for neighbors to come together. The Northsider, or something like it, could be that place. The future of the Northside begins at the Corner House.

In Syracuse, Urban Planning
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A Streetcar named Salina

May 6, 2018

"Streetcar Suburb" is a term I've come across a few different times over the years. The idea is as streetcars expanded outside of traditional downtown areas, dense business and residential areas sprouted up directly along the route. In older cities you still see remnants of these neighborhoods, usually in the form of local business districts where small cafes and restaurants still exist. They tend to be the most walkable parts of the immediate neighborhoods as well as their major thoroughfare. 

In Syracuse these areas are extremely prevalent, from James Street to South Ave. Out of all of the former streetcar routes, the length of North and South Salina Street help create what functions as Syracuse's Main St. This route stretches the length of the city, through the heart of Downtown, with businesses and dense residential neighborhoods the entire way.

When I started to search for a bit of Syracuse's streetcar history, I came across a blog post from 2011, calling for a reinvestment in and rebuilding of the Salina St. streetcar:

reThink Syracuse - Syracuse Streetcar

As I read through his arguments, I could only think of how much things have changed in the years since its writing. In 2011, Downtown was just starting to rebuild and businesses were only just starting to migrate back into the city. In the years since this growth has only quickened and we're now looking at ways to bring that growth into the areas immediately north and south of Downtown.

I've previously written about how and why OnTrack failed and ways in which we could improve the system along that route. This streetcar proposal solves many of those issues, the biggest one being stops in residential areas. OnTrack failed as a commuting option because it only stopped at destinations, and only a handful at that. This streetcar has the right mix of residential and commercial stops, allowing for commuters to take full advantage of it.

Proposed Syracuse Streetcar along Salina Street.

Proposed Syracuse Streetcar along Salina Street.

It would also benefit from many of the new developments occurring along its route. Hotel Syracuse is back up and running creating an anchor institution in the south end of Downtown, Red House Theatre has now moved just down the block from the Landmark Theatre creating a more centralized theatre district, a new food hall will be constructed starting next year, the old Post Standard building is being reinvented as a mixed use facility, and the continued growth of Destiny USA and the development at the Inner Harbor. All of these help create density and attractions that will require ease of access.

In order to make this work, the streetcar must be built in the right way. Tracks need a right of way that is separated by a barrier from auto traffic. Without this barrier the streetcar would be little better than our current bus system. They should also run directly down the middle of the street as they had in the past, with street center loading and unloading. By placing this system in the center of the road shows its priority and its permanence. 

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The street, as is, holds 4 lanes of auto traffic along with street parking. With the streetcar we would remove the center two lanes of traffic for the tracks and barrier. We would also want to remove the street parking for the length of Salina and replace them with a protected bike path. This would certainly get pushback, but this would allow the street to truly be complete. Our main street should be built for people, not for cars. Focusing Salina on a streetcar with additional bike paths would allow it to be the most accessible street in the city. These improvements put the emphasis on people.

The city of Syracuse needs to take inspiration from the past when planning for the future. Our city was originally built in ways that promoted dense growth and as we look to grow again it should be along our deep streetcar roots. 

I won't reiterate all of the points made in the original post, as I feel its worth reading in its entirety, but I wanted to also draw attention to the placement of the train storage on the South Side. This is an incredible opportunity to create well paying maintenance and operation jobs in a neighborhood of the city in need of that sort of investment. With the available space and the need for jobs, it would be a boon for the community and the city as a whole. 

In Syracuse, Urban Planning, Transportation
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