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Parking Garage Project Sparks Hope For Downtown Rebirth In Springfield

In Clark County, work is underway on a project some in the city see as critical to the long-hoped-for revival of downtown Springfield. It鈥檚 a nearly $7 million parking garage.

The garage is attracting a lot of buzz, but as WYSO Clark County reporter Tom Stafford, who also writes for the Springfield News-Sun, reports, in order for the project to succeed in promoting development, three critical elements need to be in place.

Stafford spoke with WYSO Managing Editor Jess Mador.

When it opens in April, the new city parking garage at Fountain Ave. and Main Street will accommodate 307 vehicles. But the $6.8 million public investment is being made in hopes that the garage itself will be a vehicle to revitalize Springfield鈥檚 downtown, making it a place where people will work live, work and play.

With contributions of $3 million from the city, $2.55 million from the state of Ohio and $1 million from the county government, the three-story structure is rising at a time of rising hopes and expectations among many in the city.

Like many so-called Rust Belt communities, Springfield saw its once vital downtown empty out in the 1970s and 1980s, when a mall opened outside of town and the downtown鈥檚 retail and commercial block was leveled in the era of urban renewal. The former retail heart of the city gave way to a cityscape of banks and governmental institutions with little retail traffic. 

In recent years people have begun to return, drawn by coffee shops, restaurants, a craft brewery and a variety of community events 鈥 including a farmer鈥檚 market -- designed to plant the seeds for redevelopment.

Although the downtown already has plenty of scattered ground-level parking, a coalition of city leaders contend that to attract the scale of business that can help reestablish the downtown's vibrancy and bolster the economy the city needs to provide a safe, central location for their employees and customers to park.

鈥淚f we can鈥檛 point to a structure that鈥檚 safe, affordable and convenient,鈥 attracting such businesses is, 鈥漚 difficult proposition,鈥 said Horton Hobbes IV, vice president for economic development at the Chamber of Greater Springfield.

John Landess, head of the Springfield-based Turner Foundation, is pithier:

鈥淲hen you鈥檙e dealing with a company of that size, they鈥檙e not used to parking their employees on a gravel pit,鈥 he said.  

Such businesses are important both for the economy and the city鈥檚 tax revenues, which provide basic city services.

A study done more than a decade ago recommended the lot be placed at Fountain Ave. and Columbia St., in part because the garage is on the same block as two buildings with excess office space: The Bushnell Building and Hull Plaza, the former First National Bank building.

鈥淲e have buildings we need to put money into,鈥 said Landess, whose officers are in the Hull Building. Without adequate parking, 鈥淚t鈥檚 a chicken-and-egg thing,鈥 he said.

While the new parking project is aimed at getting more people to work in  downtown, the garage also includes some attributes designed to encourage people to do the two other things planners say are required for a healthy downtown: live and play.

The garage will have a pocket park for those who visit retail shops on the east side of Fountain Ave., and the garage鈥檚 first floor will add three spaces for retail on the street鈥檚 west side.

That鈥檚 crucial, said Maureen Fagans, executive director of United Senior Services, which recently renovated its downtown facility.

Fagans, who has a degree in city planning, said Fountain Avenue represents, 鈥渙ur one opportunity [downtown] to create retail on both sides of the street, which will be a boom to every business that locates there. It will. I believe it strongly.鈥

A mural on the garage鈥檚 west side will add to others painted downtown in the past year, and will face the beginnings of what could become 35 residential town homes two blocks to the west. The units, which will start at $200,000 represent the first significant residential project in the downtown in decades.

The development is located across the street from Mother Stewart鈥檚 Brewery and the Hatch Artist Studios, often the busy center of activities on First Friday gatherings.

Some critics say the garage should have had more parking spaces to help  spur development. Others counter that caution about public investment in cities the size of Springfield is appropriate, because if the garage is not filled, the city government is at risk for being behind the financial eight ball.

Ultimately, the garage鈥檚 size was decided by available funding, and while he says he's comfortable with the number of spaces in the facility, city manager Bryan Heck said, 鈥渢he partnership that has formed around the garage,鈥 has established a community leadership infrastructure can easily be reassembled for additional development projects in the future.

Landess said that the garage project is also important because it shows the community鈥檚 commitment to the downtown, something he hopes will prompt local investors who have been watching from the sidelines into the development picture.

Said Landess, 鈥淲e have plenty of people of financial means that could invest and make things happen down here.鈥

Mike McDorman, Chamber CEO and president, said the stakes involved for the city are huge.

鈥淚f we do not build a vibrant community, starting with the downtown, we are not going to attract the talent of the future,鈥 required for the city to thrive.

The Chamber鈥檚 Hobbes said that going forward, it will be important to fill in gaps in the downtown to connect the 鈥渉ot spots鈥 like the Fountain Ave. Shops.

Fagans said the ultimate goal is to create a continuous cityscape that creates 鈥渁 sense of place鈥 in which 鈥減eople feel safe and comfortable.鈥

鈥淵ou have to have wide enough sidewalks and on-street parking and streetlights that provide enough lighting for evening walks. You also have to create two-way streets [to] slow traffic down,鈥 she said.

But while there remains much to be done to develop the downtown, she said, 鈥減eople are interested again. There was a time when nobody would even consider a project in our downtown. So, we鈥檙e starting to come around the bend.鈥

鈥淲e do have the promise of a revitalized, vibrant downtown again.鈥

Copyright 2021 WYSO. To see more, visit .

Attracting people to live downtown is a key part of the Springfield downtown redevelopment plan. These ownership units, called Townes, are two blocks west or the new garage and start at about $200,000.
Tom Stafford / WYSO
/
WYSO
Attracting people to live downtown is a key part of the Springfield downtown redevelopment plan. These ownership units, called Townes, are two blocks west or the new garage and start at about $200,000.
In addition to providing 307 new parking spaces, the new Springfield parking garage will add retail space fronting Fountain Ave.
Tom Stafford / WYSO
/
WYSO
In addition to providing 307 new parking spaces, the new Springfield parking garage will add retail space fronting Fountain Ave.
Restaurants and shops have taken hold on Fountain Ave. across the street from the site of the new city parking garage.
Tom Stafford / WYSO
/
WYSO
Restaurants and shops have taken hold on Fountain Ave. across the street from the site of the new city parking garage.
Construction is already underway on the garage.
Tom Stafford / WYSO
/
WYSO
Construction is already underway on the garage.

Tom Stafford
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