Skywalkers, Luke or otherwise, and the problems they cause for cities

People fill a plaza at the Mint Museum in Uptown Charlotte. In many cities overstreet skywalks are blamed for taking too many people off the sidewalks.  Photo: John Chesser

Uptown Charlotte is not alone in having a series of overstreet walkways that keep pedestrians off the streets and in so doing, damage (by splitting up) the potential customer base for uptown retail.

As pointed out in this Associated Press article in Salon, “Cities face new urban problem: their own skywalks,” points out, “a debate is growing over what to do with the cozy corridors, bridges and tunnels that have helped create urban ghost towns.”

Cincinnati dismantled half of its system. Baltimore took down seven bridges. Other cities are questioning them.

Charlotte imported its idea from Minneapolis in the 1960s, when suburban expansion and white flight were in full flower. In the 1960s and ’70s the city bus stops were along uptown sidewalks, so the sidewalks were crowded with bus riders, many of them people of color.  The overstreet walkways went from white-collar office to white-collar office. Hence an informal segregation took root.

Today of course you see people of all races both on the sidewalks and in the overstreet walkways. The Transportation Center is where people wait for the buses, in a covered facility with seating. And I must disclose that I, too, sometimes take the overstreet walkways when the weather is particularly nasty.

Many urban planners don’t like the skywalks, but … too bad! The city of Charlotte gave away the air rights over its public streets to the corporations building the office towers, which wanted to connect them to other towers or to parking decks. In general they have 99-year leases. For a brief time in the 1990s the city planning department tried to discourage new skywalks. But planners were no match for the pressure from the banks formerly known as First Union and NationsBank and others who were building tall towers.

So it appears we’ll be skywalking in Charlotte for at least another half-century.

Chamber: Don’t blame us for Overstreet

Charlotte Chamber president Bob Morgan, on the eve of the Chamber’s annual intercity trip (this year to – ta da! – Charlotte) called to report that an oft-repeated story that uptown’s overstreet walkways emerged from a Chamber inter-visit to Minneapolis is, well, wrong.

Morgan said he, too, had repeated that story. But (because of a question from yours truly seeking other examples of Chamber-trip-inspired developments) he hauled out the entire list of Chamber intercity visits dating to 1956. The only Minneapolis trip was in 1993, two decades after the first overstreet walkway went up.

Photo: Skywalk under construction in 2001 photo

Why “blame” in that headline I wrote? (It’s my word, not the Chamber’s.) I’m among many who criticize the walkways for hurting the possiblities for uptown retail. They make it hard to find the stores, unless you know they’re in there. And they make the street-level experience blander, because you can’t window-shop because the stores are hidden. I’ll be fair, now, and note that in cold, rainy weather they’re very popular. Yes, I use them too, upon occasion, typically the “ice storm” occasion.

I dug into our electronic archives which date to 1985 and found a painful number of references – some written by me, others by esteemed Observer reporters such as Doug Smith, Jeff Elder and M.S. Van Hecke – to this mythological, walkway-inspiring Chamber trip to Minneapolis.

Morgan speculated that the walkways were inspired by Minneapolis, but not on an official Chamber inter-city visit.

He may well be right. Here’s the earliest mention of them I found. (No, I didn’t take time to visit our newsprint clips, fun though such visits can be.) This was written in a 1986 news article by Ted Mellnik who, then as well as now, is noted in our newsroom for his reportorial precision: “The Overstreet Mall was proposed in a 1971 center-city development plan by Vincent Ponte, who said it would create ‘a city within a city.’ Development was spurred in the mid-1970s when a group of Charlotte business and civic leaders visited Minneapolis, which has a walkway system.”

Update: 6:45 p.m.: Got an e-mail from Carl Johnson who offers this info: “Mary, my recollection is the Gibson L. Smith, real estate man and civic leader (on council, I think, and ran for mayor but lost) deserves a lot of credit as a promoter (I say that in the neutral sense) for the overstreet walkways. Carl Johnson”

(I’ll be going on as much of this week’s Chamber “visit” as I can manage away from the job. So blog postings may be sparse. I’ll try to Tweet @marynewsom or @nakedcityblog. The Chamber is asking all Twitter-users to use this hashtag: #icv09.)