Thursday, 17, 2004
By Dave Alexander
CHRONICLE BUSINESS EDITOR
Former Milwaukee mayor John Norquist
never saw the old Muskegon Mall and hasn't been around to watch
its demolition over the past six months.
But as the president of the Congress
for New Urbanism, Norquist has the perfect term for what was done
to Muskegon's historic downtown shopping area.
It was "scraped."
"What's the best thing do to
with a dead mall?" Norquist said during a recent visit to
West Michigan. "Scrape it."
The fact that Norquist's term fits Muskegon's downtown situation
so well shows that Muskegon is not alone. Communities all across
the upper Midwest and throughout the country are faced with removing
defunct or outdated malls.
What comes after "scraped malls" is what the Chicago-based
Congress for New Urbanism is all about.
"New urbanism" is a development philosophy that aims
to keep downtown neighborhoods and shopping districts to "human
scale," making them walkable and livable.
"At the Congress for New Urbanism, we think sprawl is a communist
plot," Norquist said. But the former Democratic big-city
mayor shuns government handouts in favor of economic development
through private enterprise.
"You can't build a city on pity," he says of a theme
in his 1998 book "The Wealth of Cities."
Norquist was at the center of reviving cross-lake ferry service
between his city and Muskegon. He now preaches a brand of urban
renewal that seems to fit Muskegon's current situation.
Many of the new urbanism ideas are found in the philosophies of
the mall property owners Downtown Muskegon Development Corp. and
in the community-inspired Imagine Muskegon downtown concept.
Mayor of Milwaukee for nearly 16 years, Norquist spoke of downtown
redevelopment last week at a Grand Rapids Metro Council conference
at Frederik Meijer Gardens.
"You've got to create main street
because that's what is selling right now in retail," Norquist
told the Grand Rapids group. "It is all they talked about
at the last retail conference ... how to create the urban form.
In retail and commercial development, the new urban forms are
called "lifestyle centers."
The changing retail climate has introduced mass merchandise retailers
like Wal-Mart and Target to urban communities such as the Midtown
Crossing on the northwest side of Milwaukee. The new "urban
form" is for multi-story, multi-entrance retailer centers
in a main street-style shopping district, Norquist said.
In the old days, they were called "department stores,"
he said
.
Parking is behind the building, in parking structures or below
surface. Gone are the seas of parking pavement found in suburban
settings, Norquist said.
Wal-Mart has found success in a predominately
African-American urban Milwaukee neighborhood. The development
has many elements found in a suburban mall but is built to the
scale of a historic main street.
"It has a Starbucks," Norquist said Midtown Crossing.
Norquist believes the trend toward suburban malls like Muskegon's
The Lakes Mall has ended.
"They've built the last of the
300,000 square-foot, inner-facing malls last year," Norquist
said. "It doesn't work anymore with what people want."
What people want are downtown street
grids, two-way streets with on-street parking, sidewalks and retail
on the first levels of three- or four-story buildings with residences
above.
Muskegon Area First President Jim
Edmonson was at the Metro Council conference and has heard Norquist
speak on several occasions.
"What he presents to us in Muskegon
is a tremendous opportunity," said Edmonson, who is working
with Downtown Muskegon Development and the city in redeveloping
the mall site. "We've 'scraped' the 23 acres. Now we need
to engage (new urbanism ideas) more."
City governments must be "new
urbanism friendly" for the new downtown developments to become
realities, Norquist said. The most critical elements are the city's
codes and ordinances.
"Zoning laws in some cities make
'main street' illegal," Norquist said. "Having retail
on the first floor and living space above -- such mixed uses are
a code violation in many cities."
Norquist never saw Muskegon Mall but
he has a feel for Muskegon's situation.
During the 1980s as a Wisconsin state
senator, Norquist worked closely with Muskegon state Rep. Mickey
Knight on the cross-lake ferry issue. And in 1972, the former
Milwaukee mayor spent two months living in Muskegon as the chairman
of the West Michigan McGovern for President primary campaign.
Norquist suggests that cities like
Muskegon play off their strengths.
"Parts of cities like Muskegon are drop-dead gorgeous,"
Norquist told The Chronicle. "People are just starting to
get it. To convert your downtown into a suburban strip mall just
doesn't work."
The former Milwaukee mayor said he
is not surprised that Muskegon Mall failed. He said many urban
retail centers of the late 1960s and early 1970s have closed.
The Congress for New Urbanism calls these dead and dying malls
"greyfields."
"Put the streets back in and
talk to some creative lifestyle center developers," Norquist
suggested for Muskegon. "They'll build in Muskegon. They
will create a genuine product for your downtown. It won't be fake."
© 2004 Muskegon Chronicle. Used with
permission
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