Remembering Railroad Row
(http://photos.metrojacksonville.com/photos/1030663368_KQPbD-L.jpg)
Ever wonder why Jacksonville lacks a famed district like New York's SOHO, Atlanta's Castleberry Hill, New Orleans Warehouse District, or Dallas' West End? Twentieth century demolition removed the building fabric needed to spur such a district. Today, Metro Jacksonville remembers Jacksonville's Railroad Row.
Full Article
http://www.metrojacksonville.com/article/2012-mar-remembering-railroad-row
It is AMAZING what Jacksonville destroyed. The city forever screwed itself over, and that is the mentality that still exists! Now the city is filled with suburbanite family transplants and 3rd generation natives who simply know no better and know not what the city used to be like, so the mentality that downtown is and should be forgotten/neglected is perpetuated.
Supposedly Jacksonville's rallying point to prevent further demolition was in 1982 with the Union Terminal, but I think it had to be lukewarm at best, and where was everybody in the 50s, 60, and 70s when literally 90% of the city was paved over for surface lots?
In Atlanta the rallying point was 1973 with the potential razing of the Fox by Southern Bell (Atlanta still lost many treasures, including its own Union Station), but that was a really strong rallying point and holds today. Georgia Tech has wanted to demolish a building that is relatively insignificant, and the city and the whole community continues to protest and block GT's advances towards purchasing and demo'ing the building. The only buildings razed are projects - and then they are replaced by new garden-style affordable apartments and townhouses.
In NYC the most famous example of public outcry was Penn Station in 1963, and that effort failed, but look at Manhattan now. Buildings still go down, but bit by bit and only to build further up. Nothing is razed for surface lots and they just have so many buildings to begin with. My company has been instrumental in preservation in NYC, particularly in Chelsea where we restored the two largest buildings there (and sold one to Google in 2010 for $1.8B - the largest office deal of the year). And NYC did not completely destroy its waterfront.
Back to Jacksonville there is just no sense of preservation, history, 21st century thinking whereby we connect to our roots as we reach to the future. There are still people who just don't care. Even amongst the more highly educated, business-oriented and potentially intown readers of the Biz Journal there were still a good 15-20% of people who voted that a *private* investor should just demolish the Laura Street trio rather than renovate.
The destroying of the waterfront in Jacksonville for me is particularly damaging as waterfronts are unique to waterfront cities, and Jacksonville would have had the only "northeastern" style waterfront in the south with wharves.
Despite popular belief, Birmingham, Nashville, and Atlanta were all much larger than Jacksonville until the 60s. Birmingham had over 600,000 people in the 40s and 50s for instance. Their building fabrics were always more substantial to begin with, but keeping their fabrics was not going to ensure their growth. Atlanta had to look at building an airport, keeping it civil during the 60s race riots, and going for things like the Olympics to rise above the rest of the south. But Jacksonville is waterfront in Florida. It never had to invent expensive gimmicks to ensure its growth, in fact as much as it "sucks" now it is still growing rapidly. No state income, an unbeatable climate, the beach, etc. If in fact it had kept its downtown intact AND had developed the suburbs, it could potentially be 3rd in the south behind Atlanta and Miami. Its tourism could be strong and it could be an attractive place to educated creative types and 21st century businesses.
Good points. The loss of the waterfront is somewhat disturbing to me as well. While Atlanta and Birmingham were larger, Jacksonville (173,065) passed Nashville (167,402) before 1940.
http://www.census.gov/population/www/documentation/twps0027/tab17.txt
I'm not as familiar with Nashville during this era but it could be a good comparison case study, considering they have been similar in size/scale since 1920 and both consolidated during the 1960s.
Quote from: stephendare on March 21, 2012, 07:37:57 AM
Ennis, congratulations on the scope invoked by this article. We have been discussing the importance of this district to the growth and economy of the city for the past year---ever since we discovered this economic reactor of the past while researching the bordellos so long ago with Beth Slater.
I hadnt seen this piece before today, and its hard to project to our readers how much research you had to do in order to get this information compiled. magnificent job!
Our history has been so destroyed, and falsified that you had to go back to original sources and references in the old papers of the time to determine what the buildings were used for.
But to be able to invoke even this partial view of what this all was like and what it could have been used for?
just genius.
Thanks.
Thank you Stephen for articulating what I was also thinking... Great Job Ennis!
There wasn't a sense of preservation or planning, and that mentality is obviously still around today (Springfield's struggles as an example & our huge sprawling footprint that never ends). It's those single factors that doesn't give me high hopes for the city overall. I don't know that its "forever screwed", but it sure is for a while. That stuff is really difficult to reign back in & recover from. And leadership still seems to be asleep at the wheel regarding these things, including transit.
Speaking of which, looking through these pictures it still blows my mind that someone thought it was a good idea to not only level half the town, but put a raised transit system OVER the barren land, like it was just too lively down there on the ground or something. And at a cost of $70 Million a mile no less. Brilliant.
Quote from: thelakelander on March 21, 2012, 07:33:26 AM
Good points. The loss of the waterfront is somewhat disturbing to me as well. While Atlanta and Birmingham were larger, Jacksonville (173,065) passed Nashville (167,402) before 1940.
http://www.census.gov/population/www/documentation/twps0027/tab17.txt
I'm not as familiar with Nashville during this era but it could be a good comparison case study, considering they have been similar in size/scale since 1920 and both consolidated during the 1960s.
I guess I should have specified counties.
Duval County 1940 - 210,143, 774 sq. miles, 272 ppsm
Davidson County TN 1940 - 257,267, 502 sq. miles, 512 ppsm
Fulton County + Dekalb County GA 1940 (ATL is in both) - 479,828, 797 sq. miles, 602 ppsm (392,886 in Fulton alone over 502 sq. miles, 743 ppsm in 1940)
Jefferson County KY 1940 - 385,392, 385 sq. miles, 1,000 ppsm already in 1940
Jefferson County AL 1940 - 459,930, 1,113 sq. miles (though mostly uninhabitable), 413 ppsm (B'ham was the king of the south until the 60s)
Shelby County TN 1940 - 358,250, 755 sq. miles, 475 ppsm
And of course NOLA and Richmond were already huge, and surprisingly Chattanooga and Spartanburg were similar in size to Jacksonville at this point. Hamilton County TN had 180,478 people in 1940 over 542 sq. miles (333 ppsm).
I guess my ultimate point is that Jacksonville was dense and thriving for the relatively small size it was, and that was due to its waterfront, its location as a winter destination in FL, and its utilization of the economies of its day. The city has completely lost all of that.
Good ole southern conservative leadership...dontcha just love it?
Sounds like the Jacksonville "Renaissance" was a smashing success...
Quote from: simms3 on March 21, 2012, 08:22:38 AM
Quote from: thelakelander on March 21, 2012, 07:33:26 AM
Good points. The loss of the waterfront is somewhat disturbing to me as well. While Atlanta and Birmingham were larger, Jacksonville (173,065) passed Nashville (167,402) before 1940.
http://www.census.gov/population/www/documentation/twps0027/tab17.txt
I'm not as familiar with Nashville during this era but it could be a good comparison case study, considering they have been similar in size/scale since 1920 and both consolidated during the 1960s.
I guess I should have specified counties.
Duval County 1940 - 210,143, 774 sq. miles, 272 ppsm
Davidson County TN 1940 - 257,267, 502 sq. miles, 512 ppsm
Fulton County + Dekalb County GA 1940 (ATL is in both) - 479,828, 797 sq. miles, 602 ppsm (392,886 in Fulton alone over 502 sq. miles, 743 ppsm in 1940)
Jefferson County KY 1940 - 385,392, 385 sq. miles, 1,000 ppsm already in 1940
Jefferson County AL 1940 - 459,930, 1,113 sq. miles (though mostly uninhabitable), 413 ppsm (B'ham was the king of the south until the 60s)
Shelby County TN 1940 - 358,250, 755 sq. miles, 475 ppsm
And of course NOLA and Richmond were already huge, and surprisingly Chattanooga and Spartanburg were similar in size to Jacksonville at this point. Hamilton County TN had 180,478 people in 1940 over 542 sq. miles (333 ppsm).
I guess my ultimate point is that Jacksonville was dense and thriving for the relatively small size it was, and that was due to its waterfront, its location as a winter destination in FL, and its utilization of the economies of its day. The city has completely lost all of that.
Simms, thanks for your detailed explanation. Now I understand where you were coming from in regards to community size from that era.
As an urban planner, I tend to view the demographics between pre and post WWII american cities as being different. For example, a rum running trip from Jacksonville to Pablo Beach would have took a full day during Prohibition. That trip would have been all woods once out of South Jacksonville. Despite being in Duval County, a place like Mandarin was its own city and not economically reliant on Jacksonville. Given the era and technology of the time, I believe its safe a former farming community like Antioch in Davidson County would have had its own separate economy that wasn't reliant on Nashville before WWII as well.
QuoteI guess my ultimate point is that Jacksonville was dense and thriving for the relatively small size it was, and that was due to its waterfront, its location as a winter destination in FL, and its utilization of the economies of its day.
I agree. Looking back, about a decade ago, I started making it a point to visit nearly every city in this list that had a population of 100k or above before 1920:
http://www.census.gov/population/www/documentation/twps0027/tab16.txt
The majority had decently developed dense urban cores because that's simply how communities were developed during the era before the interstate highway system and suburban zoning regulations came to dominate our society. For me, it's been pretty cool to discover what each community has done with their urban core in the last half century. Unfortunately, it appears that Jax was one of the leaders in detonating a significant chunk of ours in a relatively short time period.
Quote from: simms3 on March 21, 2012, 07:18:37 AM
Supposedly Jacksonville's rallying point to prevent further demolition was in 1982 with the Union Terminal, but I think it had to be lukewarm at best, and where was everybody in the 50s, 60, and 70s when literally 90% of the city was paved over for surface lots?
I think we're still waiting for that true rallying point or it may be occurring right before our eyes with the Laura Trio and the mothballing efforts in Springfield. Historically, we've tended to stand up for specific buildings or neighborhoods from time to time but we've never really embraced preservation in a manner that sibling communities like Savannah and New Orleans have. When the rally came to save the old terminal half of Railroad Row was still standing. However, a good chunk of it was taken out by the horrible plan to "clean up" LaVilla and buildings are still coming down around the courthouse site.
Quote from: stephendare on March 21, 2012, 07:37:57 AM
Ennis, congratulations on the scope invoked by this article. We have been discussing the importance of this district to the growth and economy of the city for the past year---ever since we discovered this economic reactor of the past while researching the bordellos so long ago with Beth Slater.
I hadnt seen this piece before today, and its hard to project to our readers how much research you had to do in order to get this information compiled. magnificent job!
Our history has been so destroyed, and falsified that you had to go back to original sources and references in the old papers of the time to determine what the buildings were used for.
But to be able to invoke even this partial view of what this all was like and what it could have been used for?
just genius.
Thanks.
Thanks. As you know, we've been interested in the history of this district for years and this brief article doesn't highlight 99.5% of it's rich history and stories behind the people and buildings that once stood there (and even the few still standing). Two of the sites in the soon to be released Reclaiming Jacksonville book (Jax Terminal Tunnels & WP Sumner Company) were once a part of this district. Researching their past revealed additional stories, people, and companies from this district that all deserve to be topics of their own.
(http://fpc.dos.state.fl.us/spottswood/sp02092.jpg)
From an economic standpoint, there's no telling how many thousands of people were employed in the railroad industry by itself. The train station alone employed 2,000. That's equal to downtown attracting Everbank except Everbank won't bring as many spin off support jobs as the railroad and maritime industries did during that era. While we can't recreate what was lost, learning and understanding downtown's economic history does help one to come to the realization why many of the redevelopment plans over the last half century have failed.
(http://fpc.dos.state.fl.us/spottswood/sp00357.jpg)
Inside the Railway Express Agency's terminal in 1948.(http://fpc.dos.state.fl.us/rfisher/RF01197.jpg)
Caribbean Fruit and Steamship Company providing bananas for produce trucks in 1948.In short, we've focused too much on expensive gimmicks without attempting to lay the ground work for a natural self organizing sustainable urban environment. Jacksonville's position of being a logistics community created the vibrant place that downtown once was. While it doesn't necessarily hurt, throwing money at downtown isn't the most pressing concern. How we over regulate the core, which stymies the natural market, should be the focus. Perhaps its time to better take advantage of the river and railroad related assets that still remain in addition to modifying public policy?
This was an excellent piece Ennis!
Keeping the old waterfront is a major theme of many of our articles, and while it would indeed be cool to have a 'working waterfront' today, it's just not possible, at least not in any historic sense.
The changes that have occurred in the transportation of freight were already moving full force by the end of WWII. General merchandise boxcars were 'super sized,' and as distribution centers and warehousing moved away from the railroads in many locations, those cars morphed into semi-trailers. In the 60's and 70's the hottest ticket on the railroad was a solid block of 'piggyback TOFC semi-trailers' rolling non-stop between major metro centers. How much parking space would we have needed for a 100 car train of 200 vans, 5x each day?
Where there were once literally thousands of men loading and unloading individual boxes and crates, and bulk cargo by the net full, they were quickly replaced by large cranes, and fork lift trucks. Small steamships became much larger and started taking on a scale of truck-load lot proportions.
Some of this traffic could still have been loaded in a downtown waterfront such as ours, but as the train lengths grew, and the industry looked for economies, the container was born. Today maritime shipping is all about the 'TEU' or 20' foot container (larger containers are measured in 20' TEU's, so a 40' is 2 X TEU). With the containerized cargo came even larger cargo vessels, and today we are looking at truly aircraft carrier sized 'Post Panamax' ships.
These ships of 8,000 or more containers CAN be completely unloaded and set in a container yard, truck, or rail car, WITHOUT a human element.
No matter how hard we might have tried to keep a working waterfront, it wouldn't have happened and today we'd probably be complaining as the city was in roughly 1960 that the whole dock, warehouse, waterfront complex is rotting and falling into the St. Johns River.
I agree that this was a much more 'human' time, and the downtown was blessed by it's location. However today it is simply impractical to think anyone would want this labor intensive method of shipping for nostalgia's sake. As we struggle with hundreds of empty lots stupidly left in the wake of hopeful investors or irresponsible owners, imagine how much more we would struggle had that shipping industry stayed downtown. Safe to say the whole area south of Union and north of the River would be a massive container lot. Downtown Jacksonville would be straddling the Trout River.
Keeping a few of the old docks in place would have been wise, provided there would have been a way to maintain them through those transition years. Today, interesting little 'import' shops, food vendors and perhaps our local crab boat industry could call them home. But in a downtown where fishing in OUR river is illegal, and roller skates are a capital crime, I wouldn't hold out much hope.
So today we have a downtown created for automobiles, where we could have had one created for the container... Somewhere in all of this the HUMAN ELEMENT got left waiting for the next streetcar.
What affect did the attempt to transform Jacksonville into "The Bold New City of the South" impact the destruction of this area? By that I mean the desire to transition the city from a blue collar industrial (rail and shipping) economy to a white collar financial center type economy... of the Atlanta model for example.
great article....can't wait for the book!
QuoteKeeping the old waterfront is a major theme of many of our articles, and while it would indeed be cool to have a 'working waterfront' today, it's just not possible, at least not in any historic sense.
Ock, I believe a working waterfront is possible but you can't get caught up on the ground level details of what the specific uses should be at this point. I base that belief upon the successful transformation of similar districts in American cities all across the country (San Francisco, San Diego, etc. are good examples).
While the waterfront of the past was port related and the area may not be suitable for container terminals, there's no reason a waterfront of the future can't offer more pleasure craft opportunities (think St. Petersburg or Miracle Mile) and be an environment that offers the possibility of small scale fishing, crabbing, charters, river cruises, etc.
As for Commodore's Point, perhaps we should be trying to grow the remaining heavy maritime industries there instead of dreaming of ways to relocate them? Perhaps some of the surface tailgate lots west of the Talleyrand should be repurposed for addition maritime related industry? The river, rail, and expressway are already in place. On the railroad front, while railyards won't be coming back, the terminal becoming an intermodal transportation hub would be a huge economic benefit.
Great article. And good points in the comment section about the nature of the shipping business. Yeah it sucks what we've lost, but a huge part of that is simple changing of the industry. We have a shallow, curvy river. The shipping had to move toward the ocean as the ships went to mammoth size. But can't we bring the rail depot back to downtown? That is something we can control.
Quote from: stephendare on March 21, 2012, 10:08:47 AM
Quote from: BridgeTroll on March 21, 2012, 09:56:56 AM
What affect did the attempt to transform Jacksonville into "The Bold New City of the South" impact the destruction of this area? By that I mean the desire to transition the city from a blue collar industrial (rail and shipping) economy to a white collar financial center type economy... of the Atlanta model for example.
By itself, the idea wasnt a bad one.
It was spurred by the fact that Haydon Burns had an intuition about how a new florida exemption for the insurance and banking industry statute could be used. Ed Ball and the porkchop gang had passed through the changes in order to give themselves fat tax loopholes in their various businesses, but in the process opened up florida to tax free, heavily subsidized insurance and bank relocations.
Burns was the first to recognize that the rest of the industry would be able to play under the same rules that Florida National Bank and Florida East Coast Rail insurers did.
He began marketing the city to those big industries.
Unfortunately then, as now, there was a small group of people who believed that you had to get rid of the 'blight' first. which meant (as it does now) demolishing every structure that was being visibly used by 'the wrong set'---and utilizing the available land for parking.
While the idea may not have been a bad one it seems they put the cart before the horse. Destroying rows of buildings in anticipation of shiny high rise office buildings filled with white collar office workers. Of course getting rid of the blight used by the "wrong set" was a side "benefit".
Quote from: BridgeTroll on March 21, 2012, 09:56:56 AM
What affect did the attempt to transform Jacksonville into "The Bold New City of the South" impact the destruction of this area? By that I mean the desire to transition the city from a blue collar industrial (rail and shipping) economy to a white collar financial center type economy... of the Atlanta model for example.
The difference is in how the cities went about transforming their economic bases. If you fly into Hartsfield and ride the train into the city, you will see old industrial communities and warehouses from an earlier era still standing for the whole 15 miles up. Castleberry Hill is by no means the only remaining warehouse district and it is by far not the most successful. There are brick stacks still remaining all over the city, and this holds true for Chattanooga, Nashville and Birmingham.
These cities did not view complete demolition and destruction as the way to transform their economies. Sure they abandoned these older areas and their downtowns and developed the burbs, but compared to Jacksonville they largely left their inner areas intact. Now, especially in Atlanta's and Nashville's case these inner areas are seeing a rebirth - and they aren't reverting back to their industrial uses. They are becoming upscale office, residential and shopping districts catering to 21st century industries (tech, media, engineering, etc) and appealing to the creative classes, the wealthy and the educated. Facebook has located their southeastern office to an old warehouse complex on the Westside called the Brickworks, and it is convenient to Georgia Tech and has other offices and plenty of restaurants and bars. An old meatpacking plant that is rather large (120,000 SF and 4 floors) is something I get to work on, and now features upscale shopping and office tenants from Room & Board to Free People to Billy Reid to Calypso St. Barth and a 4 star restaurant, among others (as well as the most popular GT college bar - Ormsby's which is in the basement and has indoor Bocci Ball).
It will be next to impossible for Jacksonville to create these sort of atmospheres that attract and fuel young professional communities, universities, tech firms, etc etc. It will be next to impossible for Jacksonville to get a good tourism industry going outside of the beach (and even the beaches aren't handled well imo).
Nashville is really an impressive city - moreso than Charlotte in my opinion, and it shows really well. It has lofts and condos and density all over the place, much of it adaptive reuse. It has all of its bars on 2 streets downtown (like Bay St times 25 at least). It has tourism. It has a cultural identity. It has warehouses converted for 21st century uses. It also has Vanderbilt which functions much like Georgia Tech and Emory do in terms of attracting top talent and top firms to the city. The synergy going on results from many things, but one of the cornerstones is the infrastructure that has been preserved there and can now serve important uses.
Unfortunately Jacksonville went about its 20th century transformation a bit differently and will now have a more difficult time competing as a 21st century city where the past is a large part of the key to the future.
And might I mention especially considering that Atlanta has the second largest and seventh largest datacenters in the world - these are in prewar buildings. One is downtown behind the old Macy's and just traded hands in one of the most publicized deals (the front/Macy's portion is now converted retail and event space, with bars fronting Peachtree). One is on the Westside and is about 1 million sf.
Datacenters are taking over these old buildings. They go to where there is a demand for datacenters, and where there is infrastructure for datacenters. Jacksonville could have potentially capitalized on this had it kept its stock.
QuoteThese cities did not view complete demolition and destruction as the way to transform their economies. Sure they abandoned these older areas and their downtowns and developed the burbs, but compared to Jacksonville they largely left their inner areas intact.
I guess my question is why... Why did Jax decide to demolish a section of town rather than waiting for it's reuse possibilities? My hypothesis is that they were in a hurry. (and the whole undesirable thing...) Demolish now... ie... pave the way for future new construction. Of course with hind sight we are witness to the fact that the desired redevelopment never occurred and we are left with open space...
Quote from: stephendare on March 21, 2012, 10:13:35 AM
Quote from: Ocklawaha on March 21, 2012, 09:42:51 AM
No matter how hard we might have tried to keep a working waterfront, it wouldn't have happened and today we'd probably be complaining as the city was in roughly 1960 that the whole dock, warehouse, waterfront complex is rotting and falling into the St. Johns River.
I agree that this was a much more 'human' time, and the downtown was blessed by it's location. However today it is simply impractical to think anyone would want this labor intensive method of shipping for nostalgia's sake. As we struggle with hundreds of empty lots stupidly left in the wake of hopeful investors or irresponsible owners, imagine how much more we would struggle had that shipping industry stayed downtown. Safe to say the whole area south of Union and north of the River would be a massive container lot. Downtown Jacksonville would be straddling the Trout River.
Keeping a few of the old docks in place would have been wise, provided there would have been a way to maintain them through those transition years. Today, interesting little 'import' shops, food vendors and perhaps our local crab boat industry could call them home. But in a downtown where fishing in OUR river is illegal, and roller skates are a capital crime, I wouldn't hold out much hope.
Ock, you raise great points about the state of the industry had we kept the industry downtown.
But what would have happened if we had kept the passenger industry connection between rail and sea downtown?
What would you extrapolate would have happened?
How can we create the same kind of economic connetion and vibrancy using waterfront to rail connection today?
Quote from: thelakelander on March 21, 2012, 10:24:03 AM
QuoteKeeping the old waterfront is a major theme of many of our articles, and while it would indeed be cool to have a 'working waterfront' today, it's just not possible, at least not in any historic sense.
Ock, I believe a working waterfront is possible but you can't get caught up on the ground level details of what the specific uses should be at this point. I base that belief upon the successful transformation of similar districts in American cities all across the country (San Francisco, San Diego, etc. are good examples).
While the waterfront of the past was port related and the area may not be suitable for container terminals, there's no reason a waterfront of the future can't offer more pleasure craft opportunities (think St. Petersburg or Miracle Mile) and be an environment that offers the possibility of small scale fishing, crabbing, charters, river cruises, etc.
As for Commodore's Point, perhaps we should be trying to grow the remaining heavy maritime industries there instead of dreaming of ways to relocate them? Perhaps some of the surface tailgate lots west of the Talleyrand should be repurposed for addition maritime related industry? The river, rail, and expressway are already in place. On the railroad front, while railyards won't be coming back, the terminal becoming an intermodal transportation hub would be a huge economic benefit.
BINGO! I believe both Stephendare and Lakelander have hit on the crux of the situation as it might have/could have/should develop.
Today a working waterfront is the Inner Harbor in Baltimore, the cruise terminal in Norfolk, or the reinvented 'Pike' in Long Beach (though I'll always miss the old seedy one there too!)
Had we preserved just a few of those buildings for the sake of future water related recreation, and small retail, fishing, charter business, it would be a magnet throughout the south today. The fact remains however that it couldn't be done for myriad reasons. One of the prime reasons was the 'new' Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Building in the late 1950's cut off the rail lines to anything east of that point (current CSX tower). Nobody could afford to sit on those sites until we moved from a production/industrial society, to a barren information age city. Having seen the waterfront in both era's the old one would never had made it to 1970 without massive infusions of cash and little hope for a ROI.
The 'Bold New City' concept was flawed in that it removed human space for automobile space. Tearing down the waterfront as bad as it was and replacing the most valuable land in Florida (at that time) with a massive parking lot speaks volumes to a lack of vision. Sure we snagged a few big dog banks and insurance companies, and perhaps hung on to some retail for a bit longer, but the age of the consolidation of industry blew right past us. Meanwhile we jealously guarded our riverfront parking lots!
Godbold's Jacksonville Landing concept I believe was largely based on recovering some of what we once had, but the scale of the place, lack of a fixed transit connection, broken parking replacement promises, horrible maintenance, and very limited river or street interaction have given us another 'tumbling wharf on the waterfront'. Albeit one that COULD be fixed.
I think Stephen is on to a cutting edge idea that we could explore further and push toward reality. There would be some major obstacles to overcome and timing of each element as it came on line would be critical.
Getting Amtrak and the intercity bus companies back into a single downtown station building would help.
A streetcar connection between that historic station, punching all the way through the historic downtown core, to the Hyatt, Newnan, Beaver, Stadium, Gateway, would also kick start the movement of people through the core again.
Lakelander's concept of turning the landing and Wells Fargo building's retail inside-out to face the street would work. The addition of a historic element missing from most such remakes is the broad awnings which once protected downtown's citizens from the blazing summer heat or rain.
A vigorous recruitment of small cruise lines:
http://blountsmallshipadventures.com/where-we-go/2012-atlantic-coastal-waterways?view=itinerary
http://www.americancruiselines.com/Search?r=Southeast%20US&d=By%20Departure%20Date&s=By%20Ship
http://www.pearlseascruises.com/ (Under Development to our area)
http://www.smallshipcruises.com/cruisereport/cruisereportradissonsevenseas.shtml (Currently serving Tampa-Gulf area)
Roundtable discussions between Jaxport Cruise Executives - Disney - Amtrak - Port of Sanford - Greyhound Charters - JIA and the small ship operators could create a thriving market with a connectivity unlike any in the country. It could also revive the St. Johns River as a regular cruise route.
Development of a multipurpose Florida Marine Welcome Center - Visit Jacksonville - Small Cruise Terminal - with more retail along the waterfront could be the dynamo that gives it the needed attractiveness to the various private carriers and theme parks.
Using Stephens premise, there is no reason why Amtrak couldn't run into downtown with regularly scheduled trains carrying cruise passengers. No reason why we can't market the southeast, Disney and all the rest, right from our waterfront.
We need more interaction between the water and the city, even at the landing it is very restricted. We also need to lighten up on our social laws that prevent an executive from seeing a fisherman or skater while enjoying a lunch on the bulkhead. How many muggers wear skates?
Quote from: BridgeTroll on March 21, 2012, 09:56:56 AM
What affect did the attempt to transform Jacksonville into "The Bold New City of the South" impact the destruction of this area? By that I mean the desire to transition the city from a blue collar industrial (rail and shipping) economy to a white collar financial center type economy... of the Atlanta model for example.
I think the sell out that this city started in 1932-36 to the automobile industry and completed by replacing entire districts of human activity with more space for automobiles is at the heart if not THE heart of the matter. A little wisdom from south of the border, quoting the mayor of Bogota, "roads move automobiles - fixed transit moves people."
Ock, I know your post regarding preservation focuses moreso on the waterfront but I don't see why Railroad Row (specifically the area bounded by Water/Bay, I-95, Adams, and Clay) absolutely "had" to be leveled. Also, in regards to working waterfronts, I believe the Shipyards and JEA sites offer a ton of opportunity for a variety of uses.
Well to be frank the City Hall Annex and the "old" courthouse replaced buildings that really could have benefited us now and are frankly irreplaceable. In my opinion, to me the Annex and Courthouse are replaceable by anything. They offer no architectural redemption, and they can't be retrofitted to benefit street level activity. Office users aren't going to want those buildings - they are class C at best without much window space. There is literally no other use for them. In fact, I would rather see surface parking on those sites than what we have now. The comparison of the attitude of demolishing truly irreplaceable structures/infrastructure to demolishing precisely what we are revolving this whole discussion around (i.e. 60s transformative modernism) is moot. One demolition (the demolition to make way for the hulking ugly structures we have now) was a bad decision. One demolition would only be a bad decision financially if we have no better use replacement, but would not impact the city in any which way.
To demolish the "old" courthouse for a convention center that will benefit the city and the surrounding environ is not the same as demolishing an entire city's industrial base, half of its neighborhoods, its cultural heart, and much of its basic infrastructure. No comparison - bad comparison.
Quote from: thelakelander on March 21, 2012, 12:05:54 PM
Ock, I know your post regarding preservation focuses moreso on the waterfront but I don't see why Railroad Row (specifically the area bounded by Water/Bay, I-95, Adams, and Clay) absolutely "had" to be leveled. Also, in regards to working waterfronts, I believe the Shipyards and JEA sites offer a ton of opportunity for a variety of uses.
Perhaps our greatest loss was the Atlantic and East Coast Terminal Building, it was ugly, weird, and freaking huge! Whoever came up with the idea to knock this down should be flogged and tossed in a pasture in front of a raging armadillo stampede.
You and I are in complete agreement on all of the above points, and yes, I was pretty much limiting myself to the water-rail interaction and why it HAD to change. But there is not a reason in the world why the entire district along with LaVilla and Fairfield had to be leveled.
Missing from all of our posts is the loss of the BEAUTIFUL Lee Street Viaduct, which in spite of 'valid' reasons that were found to rip it down, was actually the victim of the Convention Center boys wanting a view into downtown from the front door straight down Water Street.
I would disagree with Simms on the point that we have surrendered our city to 'better places'. We took a different approach, for better or worse, but as Lakelander pointed out, there is plenty of room to fix the errs.
Absolutely fan-damn-tastic article!
Great Article!
Fantastic work, Jerry Spinks would have been in awe, as much as I am!
Quote from: thelakelander on March 21, 2012, 12:05:54 PM
Ock, I know your post regarding preservation focuses moreso on the waterfront but I don't see why Railroad Row (specifically the area bounded by Water/Bay, I-95, Adams, and Clay) absolutely "had" to be leveled. Also, in regards to working waterfronts, I believe the Shipyards and JEA sites offer a ton of opportunity for a variety of uses.
Neither do I lake, the leveling of LaVilla, Brooklyn and Fairfield were complete shocks to me when I got back from Colombia. The wholesale butchery of these districts plus most of Davis and 'Florida Avenue' aka: A.P. Randolph, borders on criminal negligence. Actually West Bay Street was not only historical, it was also quite interesting through the 1980's. It might have gone artistic, and trendy, the bones of those streets were an excellent collection of decorative brick, early hotel, bordello and industrial architecture. Many a railroader paid for their women by the hour over on Houston Street.
Wasn't this more of Jack Dynamite's handiwork?
Quote from: Garden guy on March 21, 2012, 08:35:29 AM
Good ole southern conservative leadership...dontcha just love it?
You know Garden Guy, I don't know how smart we are, but I've never seen a Southron pay $25 dollars to see some damn fool wrestle an alligator.
Absolutely a magnificent article. And excellent comments too, I might add.
However, as a former Jax resident (1960 - 1981) I feel depressed when I see these pictures and read the commentary. May dad and grandfather worked for the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad and I spent a lot of my early years in and around Union Station. We frequently ate in the old hotel coffee shops, had breakfast or lunch in the dinners in and around this area. On Saturdays you could get a haircut on East Bay Street, at Crowd's Barber Shop, plunder through The Army Surplus Shop next door, walk west stopping at a juice stand and watch a guy smash coconuts and get fresh coconut milk.
Sometimes we would have lunch at this Chinese Restaurant over on Hogan Street and my dad would take me to this little curio shop, which you got to by walking down some steps slightly below street level. In 1963, I bought a little magnetic mummy in a coffin magic trick which I still have. Occasionally he would drop me off at the Florida theater and I would watch a matinee. Looking back, I now realize I was not experiencing Jacksonville in its heyday but I was passing through a time that was about to end. As I have said before, it is sort of like visiting your elderly grandparents and you suddenly realize that they will only be around for a short while longer.
In 1968, at age 15, I rode the train by myself from Grand Central Station, NY, the day after Christmas, to Union Station. I walked all the way from Union Station to Hemming Park with one tattered suitcase and caught a bus, 21C to Arlington. (.25 cents) It took me directly to my front door. So, maybe I was living in Jacksonville in its prime. You certainly can't move around the city and the suburbs like that today. Thanks for the memories!
hi there , im so happy to find this site , brings back so much to me now. i remember mr. ashton the barber there in the terminal and the watch shop too but not the nice mans name. my mother worked for mrs. cubie glover at the sundries store across from the station. my father john l. hall jr. had a business on bay st. called needham and hall plumbing plus he had some if not all interest in the st. charles hotel. i do also remember that it did burn down sometime in the 60's and the fire dept. used water from mccoys creek to put out the fire. that was about the time we moved from post st. out to collins rd. (west side) and opened the halls poultry farm. the last time i saw the union terminal was back in the 80's when ramses the king exibit was touring and set up there. i hung the banners out front on the massive colums of the terminal. jacksonville screwed itself is exactly how i feel too. i do thank you for the memories though.
i do miss those old buildings because i was in and out of many of them during the day while my mother and father worked on bay st. she paid a railroad hobo ervin brown to watch me. mom would have hurt him if she knew where all we went during the day. i remember being really close to both steam and diesel train engines and even inside one on a few occasions. im very sure its why im a rail fan to this day.
i had a strokeback in dec. 2011 and forgot a bunch of this until finding this site. so thank you webmaster and contributors. most sincerely johnny hall