Quote:
Originally Posted by goom
I was on vacation in San Francisco a few days ago. I stayed at a Marriott near union square. After exploring that neighborhood, I realized how much downtown LA could learn from it. Many of the older buildings house upscale stores and even a multi-story shopping mall. I would like to see the old buildings in the historic core and on broadway get cleaned up and house upscale stores, instead of swap meets and flea markets. These buildings are beautiful and are being used in the wrong way. I would also like to see Pershing square redone. They should open it up more with small cafes and outdoor patios. I would like to see the historic core to be similar to fifth avenue in new york and market st in san francisco.
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I guess everybody wants some version of this. But the difference is that the Union Sq. area is the established high-end shopping area for the SF area (including Oakland and San Mateo); only when you get to Palo Alto and Santana Row/Valley Fair do you get any real rivals.
In LA, upscale shopping is centered on the Westside (BH, SM, Century City, Beverly Center) and some suburbs. Downtown LA is right at the bottom of LA in per capita income, so there is no obvious need for putting in new upscale shopping, especially in light of the internet shopping boom.
Tourism, on the other hand, makes a lot of sense. There is a growing number of reasons to visit DT or to live there. But this is not a Neiman crowd. A better hope is a revitalized Macy's and smaller trendy boutiques.
btw, I was in Istanbul a couple of times recently and you see the same pattern there. Taksim is filled with upscale shopping and restaurants. Sultanahmet, several miles away, gets the masses of tourists and is full of small and medium-sized hotels, small restaurants and cafes. A small trendy boutique shopping area is opening on the fringes.