LizzieMaine
Bartender
- Messages
- 33,771
- Location
- Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
The single biggest factor in decimating older portions of American cities and towns was the so-called "urban renewal" movement of the sixties and early seventies -- where perfectly serviceable old buildings and facilities were demolished en masse to better reflect the car-oriented culture of the time. The result was the loss of innumerable commercial downtowns, and their replacement by repulsive concrete-brutalist office parks, shopping plazas, and parking lots.
Here, we lost our 1870s-vintage post office/custom house in 1970 in favor of a parking lot and a faceless concrete/fake brick bunker of a "Federal Building" across the street. Entire side streets in the downtown area were leveled for parking lots around the same time. Thousands of towns experienced a similar decimation thanks to the "vison" of urban planners and Robert Moses disciples who had no vision at all.
We still have our 1860s-era courthouse, though, which is still impressive even with the eye-bruising addition they stuck onto the side of it a few years back. And we have a deco-influenced public recreation building put up by the WPA in 1935 that's one of my favorite structures in town.
Here, we lost our 1870s-vintage post office/custom house in 1970 in favor of a parking lot and a faceless concrete/fake brick bunker of a "Federal Building" across the street. Entire side streets in the downtown area were leveled for parking lots around the same time. Thousands of towns experienced a similar decimation thanks to the "vison" of urban planners and Robert Moses disciples who had no vision at all.
We still have our 1860s-era courthouse, though, which is still impressive even with the eye-bruising addition they stuck onto the side of it a few years back. And we have a deco-influenced public recreation building put up by the WPA in 1935 that's one of my favorite structures in town.
Last edited: