Friday, October 2, 2009

News Roundup: Coordinating Downtown, Trains on Parade, and Transit-Oriented Development for Cumberland

First Ward Alderman Patti Haugeberg is taking initiative to make downtown Des Plaines work; there is also a creative move to bring fiberglass "art trains" downtown.

This is a good start. The National Trust for Historic Preservation's Main Street Program is the model to follow for downtown, and it rests on just four points: Organization, Promotion, Design, and Economic Restructuring. So far, this is a start towards the first two. The Main Street program has turned around hundreds of communities around the country, and they know what works and what doesn't. And what they tell us is that, like a four-legged table, you need all four for it to work. And they need to follow the eight principles. Des Plaines has the resources for a success story; it needs the plan. Recessions are a time when you don't have money for the "big idea that will save the city" (like Metropolitan Square or the Des Plaines Mall), so they are the time to make a careful plan and initiate the small changes that put you at a competitive advantage when better times come. A nice downtown will be better to shop at, yes, and it will give residents something to do. But in the bigger picture, it improves Des Plaines' marketability - companies look for a vibrant downtown when seeking places to relocate. I hope the leaders will brush up on the Main Street program; conveniently enough, a great book on it just came out in July, Revitalizing Main Street: A practitioner's guide to comprehensive commercial district revitalization.
And Patti has another cool idea up her sleeve: Trains on Parade.


Trains Rolling Onto DP Sidewalks?

So, sure, it's not the most original promotion, but it's fun and it gets people looking at downtown. Sounds like a smart idea to me. The trains aren't going away, so maybe it's time we learned to stop worrying and love the train.
And, again in train-related news, there are plans afoot to take advantage of the Cumberland Metra station and make the area around it more suited for dense, transit-oriented development. That part of Des Plaines has always seemed a little quiet, considering it is on a highway and there's a train stop there. There's a smattering of retail - like the wonderful L&L Snack Shop. But not too many people are walking from home to the train. Rather than continue to overbuild downtown, some new development should probably occur around Cumberland.
If I could make one suggestion:
Maybe this:
Cumberland Station 1952
Might be a little more attractive than this:
11-Cumberland

It may have burned to the ground on April 5, 1956, but it could use a train station that actually looks like a train station. That's why Metra has replaced almost all of these modernist shack stations, like at Dee Road and Park Ridge.

2 comments:

  1. Something that Des Plaines could do with its connections to trains is to create a Railroad Park at De Val (Des Plaines Valley) Junction. The Choo-Choo restaurant and a souvenir shop could make a living on train watchers, railroad buffs, railfans, and all watching the parade of train going through Des Plaines while buying souvenirs and grabbing a bite to eat. Maybe even a small railroad museum would take root to reflect the historical connection between Des Plaines and its railroads. Parking is an issue around the De Val Junction. It would be hoped that the city would make such a park beautiful and parking-friendly in order to attract visitors from the whole Chicagoland area. Rochelle, Illinois, where the BNSF and UP cross each other, has a railroad park that could be used as an example. ~MaggieKat

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  2. That could be a cool idea if you could figure out a way to make it visible and safe. One way might present itself if the "S-curve" on Northwest Highway is ever straightened. If that happened, the old alignment and bridge could be retained as a pedestrian and bike route. Here's another missed opportunity: a 1916 Des Plaines history book notes that "It may not be generally known that the first depot built on the Chicago
    & North Western R. R., not excepting Chicago, was located here. Chicago had only a shelter shanty at that time. This first depot on
    the line has since been moved a little west right next to the Sigwalt Lumber Yards, and is now used for a freight house." From my understanding, this structure was moved again a few years later down Western Avenue. It stood as an onion warehouse until just a few years ago, when it was torn down along with an old factory for a new condo development. The papers didn't even mention the demolition of what was likely the oldest structure in the city and the closest remaining link to its formation. This would have been perfect to move and restore as a coffee shop, visitors kiosk, something like that.

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