Like I said before, this thread is for suggestions, ideas and other things of the such. Do NOT come in here bashing Greensboro. Please be mature and serious about this topic. If your coming in here to spread negativity, go elsewhere....
What does Greensboro need to do to reach the next level as a city?
#1
Posted 13 August 2010 - 03:40 PM
Like I said before, this thread is for suggestions, ideas and other things of the such. Do NOT come in here bashing Greensboro. Please be mature and serious about this topic. If your coming in here to spread negativity, go elsewhere....
#2
Posted 13 August 2010 - 07:04 PM
But if we can attract more high paying white collar jobs to the city, then the college students that go to school here will remain here. The Bottom line, jobs attract people and when you attract people to the city, the population grows at a faster rate as we are seeing in Charlotte and Raleigh. The larger a city grows, the larger its tax base grows which means the city will have the money to take on bolder projects. I know many like Greensboro because its in the middle. Its sort of like a big city but its like a small town as well. But we have to choose. Either we grow or we don't. We can't be in the middle forever so now its time for Greensboro to move to the next level. But I think its unlikely we will see a lot of traditional white collar financial office jobs moving downtown so the focus needs to be tech jobs and companies such as Honda Aircraft Company and RF Micro Devices who are establishing their corporate headquarters in the city. A main fiber optic line between Washington, DC and Atlanta runs under South Elm Street in downtown so there is great potential for some tech companies setting up shop downtown. Those jobs pay more than the bank and finacial services workers. The majority of the big tower projects in the near future will be mixed-use, a combination of office, residential and retail. Its a great way to maximize the height of projects and at the same time reduces the financial risk for the developers.
hehe maybe I'll live to see downtown look like this.
Edited by cityboi, 13 August 2010 - 09:28 PM.
#3
Posted 13 August 2010 - 10:04 PM
cityboi, on 13 August 2010 - 07:04 PM, said:
But if we can attract more high paying white collar jobs to the city, then the college students that go to school here will remain here. The Bottom line, jobs attract people and when you attract people to the city, the population grows at a faster rate as we are seeing in Charlotte and Raleigh. The larger a city grows, the larger its tax base grows which means the city will have the money to take on bolder projects. I know many like Greensboro because its in the middle. Its sort of like a big city but its like a small town as well. But we have to choose. Either we grow or we don't. We can't be in the middle forever so now its time for Greensboro to move to the next level. But I think its unlikely we will see a lot of traditional white collar financial office jobs moving downtown so the focus needs to be tech jobs and companies such as Honda Aircraft Company and RF Micro Devices who are establishing their corporate headquarters in the city. A main fiber optic line between Washington, DC and Atlanta runs under South Elm Street in downtown so there is great potential for some tech companies setting up shop downtown. Those jobs pay more than the bank and finacial services workers. The majority of the big tower projects in the near future will be mixed-use, a combination of office, residential and retail. Its a great way to maximize the height of projects and at the same time reduces the financial risk for the developers.
hehe maybe I'll live to see downtown look like this.
You make some strong points. The real reason why people move is because money! When you have more people with more money, you have more activity within the city. When you have that, everything that concerns entertainment will fall in place (even though Greensboro has gotten much stronger in that department). I agree that the job market downtown should be improved. Alot of the job opportunities in Greensboro are scattered throughout the city(a result of urban renewal?). And we are already attracting good tech jobs all well. American Express has agreed to build a data center in Guilford County . It wont be downtown but it could help attract more businesses that require office space. You also mentioned the small space downtown. This could be a gift or curse depending on how it is used. Smaller space can call for taller projects, and a more dense looking skyline(which would be more pleasant to look at).
#4
Posted 13 August 2010 - 10:16 PM
cityboi, on 13 August 2010 - 07:04 PM, said:
#5
Posted 14 August 2010 - 05:47 PM
-Greensboro is fortunate to have many colleges and universities close to its downtown. I believe downtown Greensboro should focus on it's surrounding collegiate neighborhoods through housing and retail that encourage students and staff that currently commute to live and enjoy downtown. This could be achieved through public and private developments. Having a vibrant downtown also being an extension of 4 different colleges and institutions would separate Greensboro from all other downtowns in our state.
-I would start with converting Market and Friendly to 2-way streets, I would close half of Morrow Blvd though its 6 lane and convert that to a 2 lane road with bike lanes, the closed half would become a park. Through downtown I would reduce the speed of Lee Street to 30 mph with an enhanced pedestrian street-scape.
Transportation wise I feel eventually Greensboro will become a major rail hub within the state connecting Winston-Salem to Amtrak via commuter rail, Commuter rail throughout the Triad, High frequency rail between Raleigh and Charlotte and High Speed Rail. These rail connections will encourage growth around the train station.
I think High Point Road/Lee Street should become a focus in Greensboro. If High Point Road/Lee Street goes down then you'll have another "Randleman Road" as the city's most important street (excluding Wendover Ave).
Attracting high paying jobs in Eastern and Western Guilford county should also help the city reach the next level.
Last but not least the city should invest in making itself more aesthetically pleasing to the eyes. Charlotte looks better than all the other large cities in the state IMHO.
Edited by Creasy336, 14 August 2010 - 05:48 PM.
#6
Posted 14 August 2010 - 07:51 PM
- I think if its possible, move Bryan Business School downtown, Maybe on Commerce Ave. Near Elon Law (UNCG could use the existing building for more class rooms as it continues to grow its enrollment) (This could go for A&T if they wanted to create a professional graduate school of business).
- Still continue to push for a Pharmacy School, even without the backing of UNC
- An IMAX theater downtown would help bring more people downtown, the triad has the market for it, the question is which one of the big three will be the first to draw it there
- It would be awesome if we could take steps to becoming a transportation research hub as well (pipe dream, though it would a natural evolution from being a traditional transportation hub)
- I'd also continue to look overseas to lure in companies, Greensboro's placement between Charlotte and Raleigh could be attractive considering it is equidistant from both and has cheaper land to build on (compared to Char. & Triangle)
And I agree with krazeeboi, we shouldn't just aim for big, we should aim for better
Oh, and as always, I hope one day the News and Record Building will be demolished
#7
Posted 15 August 2010 - 12:49 PM
Closing half the lanes on Murrow Blvd is a great idea, in fact that is the plan for the downtown Greenway. That segment of the greenway will indeed become a linear park. Because downtown is mostly surrounded by historical neighbrhoods, there isnt a lot of room to expand the downtown boundaries. There is an opportunity to expand downtown southward though. The IMAX theater has been brought up many times in Greensboro and Winston-Salem. I think there was suppose to be one in a development that called for a Krispy Kreme headqurters in downtown Winston-Salem but those plans fell through. An IMAX theater has been brought up a number of times in Greensboro. The developer of Triad Tower wants an IMAX as a part of the Tower. An IMAX theater is part of phase 3 in Action Greensboro's downtown comprehensive plan and the developer that wanted to build the Greensboro Triumph Center had an IMAX in his plans. Honestly the Triad should have had an IMAX a long time ago. The area can clearly support one and I think we will see one in downtown Greensboro in the near future (within 5 to 8 years). More than likely it will go on the Duke Power site next to the Children's Museum. The Church Street parking deck is across the street so there would be no need for a surface parking lot. Downtown Greensboro is blessed to have five colleges in the downtown area. Four of them border the central business district and one is located in the heart of downtown. The university population is clearly supporting the downtown night life and thats a big factor in its success.
Lester, I would love to see the News & Record building demolished as well. Its ugly, no room for street level activity. Its a big reason the south end of Davie and Church Streets are dead because it takes up a very large chunk of land. It would have been great if they moved to the old main post office site on East Market, but thats not going to happen since the House of Prayer for All People purchased that property.
Another problem with downtown is the streetscaping. Elm Street seems to be the only downtown corridor with nice streetscaping. That needs to change. All of those dull, 1970s highway style gray street lights on Eugene Street need to be removed and the streetscape around the ballpark needs to be improved. That should have been done at the time the ballpark was being built. Edgeworth and Spring Streets are a big problem. They are one way four lane corridors and they are NOT pedstrian friendly at all. They need to reduce the number of lanes on those two corridors, make them two way streets and add well lanscaped medians.
Edited by cityboi, 15 August 2010 - 12:55 PM.
#8
Posted 16 August 2010 - 08:37 AM
Fortunately, we have a lot of good attributes to pick from, but should be more progressive in implementing concepts. I think the items listed below would go a long way in improving our quality of life and distinguishing the city from our regional neighbors.
1. Continue to foster job growth of industries that make things. I think once Honda Aircraft gets going, it will attract more high paying jobs. The highly trained and educated workforce may fuel further downtown developments. The airport will be the center of much of our future development and should have a direct link to downtown via a light rail line.
2.The Triad should strengthen it’s ties and peruse more projects together. A great example would be light rail from the airport to downtown WS, HP and GSO. Also, a MSL Soccer team for the TRIAD would push the area’s visibility to ‘major league status’. We have the infrastructure to support a centrally located facility.
3. Control sprawling development with more urban infill. Greensboro can look physically different with more dense development augmented by open green space. The less sprawl the less it will cost to maintain sewer lines, etc in the long term – lowering taxes. For residents, it would reduce commute times. A walkable, bikable city would be the ultimate goal.
4.Better leverage our educational and cultural facilities by encouraging more joint research initiates with industry. There’s more manufacturing know how in the Triad than we realize. (see point #1)
5.Link bike paths through-out the Triad and treat them as real part of the transportation network. Current paths go nowhere and are not useful commuting resources for most people.
These things alone would make Greensboro really stand out from Raleigh and Charlotte. Those are nice places with their own distinctive vibes, but Greensboro should strive to be a major city by 21st century standards. We have always been a great place to raise a family and should build on those positive attributes. Highways, arenas and skyscrapers are nice but are not what makes a place great. Those things will come in time , but right now we just need to get the basics down first.
#9
Posted 16 August 2010 - 09:21 AM
Lee street bully, on 13 August 2010 - 03:40 PM, said:
It's hard to talk about how to move Greensboro to "the next level" without identifying shortcomings, which will include some negative assessments of certain facets of Greensboro. With that said, here are my recommendations. I will do my best to put forth actionable ideas in addition to criticisms.
1. Stop building freeways, especially the loop. There is no economic activity case for them existing today, and the major investment at the periphery only continues to siphon life out of the city's core. The first rule of holes is to stop digging, and this is one of the most important steps.
2. Listen to Krazeeboi. Greensboro is already big enough for the next 150 years, maybe longer. Geographic size and city quality are not linked. Physically, the city limits of Greensboro are similar to those of Detroit, at over 130 square miles. Of course, Detroit could physically hold Boston, Manhattan, and San Francisco with room to spare. Greensboro should grow, but its growth should be infill in nature, and not more clear-cutting of greenfields, suburban sprawl.
3. Develop citizen pressure groups for good urban planning.
4. Make David Wharton's blog required reading for Greensboro residents.
#10
Posted 16 August 2010 - 12:24 PM
gso27, on 16 August 2010 - 08:37 AM, said:
Fortunately, we have a lot of good attributes to pick from, but should be more progressive in implementing concepts. I think the items listed below would go a long way in improving our quality of life and distinguishing the city from our regional neighbors.
1. Continue to foster job growth of industries that make things. I think once Honda Aircraft gets going, it will attract more high paying jobs. The highly trained and educated workforce may fuel further downtown developments. The airport will be the center of much of our future development and should have a direct link to downtown via a light rail line.
2.The Triad should strengthen it’s ties and peruse more projects together. A great example would be light rail from the airport to downtown WS, HP and GSO. Also, a MSL Soccer team for the TRIAD would push the area’s visibility to ‘major league status’. We have the infrastructure to support a centrally located facility.
3. Control sprawling development with more urban infill. Greensboro can look physically different with more dense development augmented by open green space. The less sprawl the less it will cost to maintain sewer lines, etc in the long term – lowering taxes. For residents, it would reduce commute times. A walkable, bikable city would be the ultimate goal.
4.Better leverage our educational and cultural facilities by encouraging more joint research initiates with industry. There’s more manufacturing know how in the Triad than we realize. (see point #1)
5.Link bike paths through-out the Triad and treat them as real part of the transportation network. Current paths go nowhere and are not useful commuting resources for most people.
These things alone would make Greensboro really stand out from Raleigh and Charlotte. Those are nice places with their own distinctive vibes, but Greensboro should strive to be a major city by 21st century standards. We have always been a great place to raise a family and should build on those positive attributes. Highways, arenas and skyscrapers are nice but are not what makes a place great. Those things will come in time , but right now we just need to get the basics down first.
transitman, on 16 August 2010 - 09:21 AM, said:
1. Stop building freeways, especially the loop. There is no economic activity case for them existing today, and the major investment at the periphery only continues to siphon life out of the city's core. The first rule of holes is to stop digging, and this is one of the most important steps.
2. Listen to Krazeeboi. Greensboro is already big enough for the next 150 years, maybe longer. Geographic size and city quality are not linked. Physically, the city limits of Greensboro are similar to those of Detroit, at over 130 square miles. Of course, Detroit could physically hold Boston, Manhattan, and San Francisco with room to spare. Greensboro should grow, but its growth should be infill in nature, and not more clear-cutting of greenfields, suburban sprawl.
3. Develop citizen pressure groups for good urban planning.
4. Make David Wharton's blog required reading for Greensboro residents.
All those are great points!
When I was referring to Greensboro's size, I was referring to population, not geographic size. The more people a city has, the more amenities it has that will improve the quality of life. I agree, Greensboro is large enough in terms of geographic size. However looking at Greensboro's future annexation boundaries, it appears that Greensboro will one day double its geographic size. By the time that happens, Greensboro should have about 500,000 people but thats many many years away. Call annexation a good thing or bad thing. The bad thing about geographic expansion is that it can promote more sprawl but on the other hand when a city is spread out, it becomes more feasible for some sort of city-wide light rail system. But there are more negatives to geographic expansion than positives. For one thing cities that are geographically large have higher pollution levels.
Edited by cityboi, 16 August 2010 - 12:40 PM.
#11
Posted 16 August 2010 - 02:39 PM
transitman, on 16 August 2010 - 09:21 AM, said:
1. Stop building freeways, especially the loop. There is no economic activity case for them existing today, and the major investment at the periphery only continues to siphon life out of the city's core. The first rule of holes is to stop digging, and this is one of the most important steps.
2. Listen to Krazeeboi. Greensboro is already big enough for the next 150 years, maybe longer. Geographic size and city quality are not linked. Physically, the city limits of Greensboro are similar to those of Detroit, at over 130 square miles. Of course, Detroit could physically hold Boston, Manhattan, and San Francisco with room to spare. Greensboro should grow, but its growth should be infill in nature, and not more clear-cutting of greenfields, suburban sprawl.
3. Develop citizen pressure groups for good urban planning.
4. Make David Wharton's blog required reading for Greensboro residents.
I agree with pretty much everything you said. But just because you bring up something negative does mean your bashing anyone or anyplace. As long as the topic is discussed in a appropriate manner then things will be fine. Feel free to mention what needs to to be talked about.
#12
Posted 18 August 2010 - 01:05 PM

Edited by cityboi, 18 August 2010 - 02:33 PM.
#13
Posted 18 August 2010 - 01:17 PM
#14
Posted 19 August 2010 - 06:58 AM
sean, on 18 August 2010 - 01:17 PM, said:
The Randleman Dam has really helped water issues in Greensboro but you are right, as Greensboro continues to grow, we are going to have to have other water sources.
#15
Posted 08 September 2010 - 02:40 PM
260,083. Last year it was 257, 997
http://www.news-reco...pulation_260083
#16
Posted 26 September 2010 - 04:24 PM
#17
Posted 26 September 2010 - 09:52 PM
Lee street bully, on 26 September 2010 - 04:24 PM, said:
Thats great news! This should be good for Greensboro and it will be another project to help revitalize the Lee St/High Point Rd corridor. The old GTCC building downtown would be great for some sort of research center as well.
Edited by cityboi, 26 September 2010 - 09:53 PM.
#18
Posted 27 September 2010 - 12:47 PM
Lee street bully, on 26 September 2010 - 04:24 PM, said:
I believe that's the south campus of the joint A&T/UNCG Gateway University Research Park.
Would be ideal to see such a project done downtown halfway between both schools. I know, costs & land availability, blah blah. One of downtown Greensboro's greatest untapped resources, in my opinion, is its being flanked by two good-sized schools. I wouldn't consider Greensboro a traditional "college town", but such cities generally have A) an identity, and B) a vibrancy, that GSO arguably lacks. While they're geographically too far to be casual walking distance, I think greater efforts should be made to integrate the colleges and downtown. Heck, with its law school & rumored PA school on Edgeworth, Elon is investing more in the center city than the two hometown universities.
#19
Posted 27 September 2010 - 04:45 PM
crowe1856, on 27 September 2010 - 12:47 PM, said:
Would be ideal to see such a project done downtown halfway between both schools. I know, costs & land availability, blah blah. One of downtown Greensboro's greatest untapped resources, in my opinion, is its being flanked by two good-sized schools. I wouldn't consider Greensboro a traditional "college town", but such cities generally have A) an identity, and B) a vibrancy, that GSO arguably lacks. While they're geographically too far to be casual walking distance, I think greater efforts should be made to integrate the colleges and downtown. Heck, with its law school & rumored PA school on Edgeworth, Elon is investing more in the center city than the two hometown universities.
Yeah, I'm sure that land cost is the reason why this project is not downtown. And I find it pretty interesting that you don't see Greensboro traditional college town. I agree with you saying we don't have a identity, but in general I'd say Greensboro is fairly active when it comes to vibrancy. Epically when it comes to nightlife and major events. Alot of the major events that happen in North Carolina take place at the Coliseum. However, we could be more consistent in nightlife. What kind city do you consider Greensboro to be at this point?
#20
Posted 27 September 2010 - 05:53 PM
I remember a downtown research park was a part of Action Greensboro's downtown comprehensive plan back in the early 2000s. Unfortuantly the schools chose the eastern edge of town and the northern part of town for the other campus. Logistically it would have made more sense to build it downtown. But I do understand high land cost and limited available land. Clearly there is not enough land downtown to build a park the size of PTRP. But maybe at some point in the future a more compact satellite research park with a slightly different focus will be built downtown. That would be a great project for the South Elm/Lee Street development.
Edited by cityboi, 27 September 2010 - 05:54 PM.
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