Quote:
Originally Posted by alki
You keep pointing out parking lots as dead spaces but bldgs can be dead spaces as well.
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I don't disagree, alki. however, when it comes to deadness or badness, I think it's a matter of degrees. so as unfriendly as is the part of dt you describe, I suspect more ppl will be more turned off by areas that are outright rundown, vacant----including big gap parking lots----& fugly.
Plus everyone has different reactions to some place or area. for instance, notice how forumers like trojan are more bothered than others by an area with lots of homeless ppl. That too is a matter of degrees, since the homeless tend to stand out more in dtla, not just cuz there's more of them here than elsewhere (the downside to having nice weather), but cuz the sidewalks of LA at the same time often aren't packed with the types of ppl---meaning those with $$----that make up a big part of the best cities in this country & elsewhere.
but since I don't wanna make this thread become too much of a downer again, i'm gonna post this pic of the newly opened Artisan house. All the other photos of it have shown a mostly empty place, so it looks different (& more friendly) when full of ppl....
hollywoodreporter.com
I don't hesitate to say the hood still has lots of gaps & deadzones, so the suggestion that things would be better with more stores & other ppl friendly businesses is a given. But it's a chicken or egg problem. how can more stores open in dtla when there aren't enough customers to support those stores? or how do you make more ppl want to walk throughout more parts of dt when not enough businesses are willing or able to open enough good places to shop or eat in?
But some may say I'm being too skeptical, & they may be right. So I'll leave off with something I've just read in the hollywood reporter. It's left me with a

image going through my mind right now.....
It involves another new business in the hood, but on the opposite side of dt from where the artisan house is located. It's attracting at least a few customers like a woman who is one of the biggies of the british acting community. She won an oscar a few yrs ago for portraying british royalty. the thought of her schlepping to a saloon in a gritty----or "off the beaten path"----part of dtla means anything is possible....
Quote:
Actor Rio Hackford (Toby on HBO’s Treme) -- who appears next with Vince Vaughn and Bruce Willis in Stephen Frears’ Lay The Favorite, which screens at Sundance in January -- may just be the ultimate L.A. barfly. His father, director Taylor Hackford, hung out with Charles Bukowski -- and often so did he. (“My earliest memories, as a kid, were being at the [race]track and the dives downtown with the two of them.”)
Hackford eventually moved to New Orleans, opening nostalgic neo-dives Pal’s Lounge and One Eyed Jack’s, as well as another outpost of a similar sensibility in San Francisco called Homestead. Now he’s returned to L.A., backed by downtown bar baron Cedd Moses (Seven Grand, the Golden Gopher), and has recently completely renovated what he describes as a former "down-and-dirty pool hall” known as Monty west of the 110 freeway into a grand old-timey saloon where the soundtrack runs from Merle Haggard to Curtis Mayfield and the most appropriate drink order is simply a whiskey—straight up.
THR: Well, (Monty is) not that off-the-beaten path. Los Angeles Center Studios is just a few blocks to the northeast.
Hackford: Yeah, a lot of the Mad Men guys have been coming in when they get off of work. It’s a safe haven. Nobody bugs them.
THR: Who else has been in?
Hackford: Vince. My dad and step-mom. He and Helen [Mirren] were just in last weekend.
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