Quote:
Originally Posted by TMoneySLC
I live downtown exactly because I like that life. Your vision of downtown isn't the only vision of downtown.
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Yes. Everyone's opinion is different on what a city should be. But if you think we should preserve tons of single family houses that are (lets be honest) almost all identical copies of the tens of thousands of other single family houses throughout the city of Salt Lake just because they were here first, your mentality belongs in the suburbs.
Preserving a type of housing stock isn't just the most common type (single-family) but the overwhelming majority isn't creating "diversity in housing stock" it is
preventing diversity in housing stock.
I have always been bothered by what can arguably be seen as radical historical preservation. If the same types of preservationist mentality existed in the 19th century, downtown Salt Lake City wouldn't exist whatsoever.
Remember, our 10 acre blocks were designed that way because they were always intended to be large self-sufficient farms and communities. So technically, that is the origins of this valley's (non-native) culture. Where is all the people screaming that every farm and farm house 'ShOuLD hAvE bEeN pReSeRvEd' because they were old, here before any big developers, and likely didn't want the encroachment of business and urban development?
If they had opted for the same preservationist mentalities, then basically everything everyone on this site loves about Salt Lake City would not exist. Progress and development, by and large, IS A GOOD THING. If you go back into old newspapers, many of the buildings people on this forum love, not just here but everywhere in the US, were called 'travisties', 'attacks on 'community, 'eyesores,' etc. Stuff that today, you'd think people would find ridiculous. Except that is exactly how people still sound every time a standard sigle-family house gets demo'd so that the working class and young professional class in our growing population actually has a small studio apartment to sleep in.
I'm honestly growing tired of it.