Quote:
Originally Posted by alki
Could it be that progress on Broadway has been slower because Broadway still had some economic life to it? Its harder to make the transition to something different when there are some businesses still going strong. I know Broadway is not as thriving as when I lived in LA but I get the impression it is still doing pretty well.
Ultimately I think the improvement on Spring and around Pershing Sq will push Broadway into a higher economic level.......but it will take time.
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I guess what I mean is that it Huizar's vision for Broadway seems to be very rigid. It revolves around the theaters, and exists in a vacuum independent of Spring or any other street downtown. He put a stop to the plans for a grocery store on Spring Street because it would have blocked rear access to the Cameo, Roxie, and Arcade theaters...which may or may not even be renovated in the future. Even if they are, chances are they won't be used as performance spaces that would require rear loading, as they are very small and were never used as performance spaces to begin with- they were movie houses.
So what are we left with now? Scrapped grocery store plans, and 3 theaters that will continue to be used for swap meets for the foreseeable future. It seems to me that being flexible would have benefited the neighborhood much more. Sure, the grocery store was planned for Spring and not Broadway, but it undoubtedly would have benefited the whole neighborhood, including broadway, and probably hastened the renovation of those 3 theaters, even if they couldn't be used as performance spaces as the BBB vision outlines.
The phrase "beggers can't be choosers" comes to mind. So does the phrase "don't let the perfect be the enemy of the good".