Here’s a quick and non-specific glimpse of what’ll be recommended in 2020 Plan for Charlotte’s center city. Details will be fleshed out at a 5:30 p.m. public workshop today at the Charlotte Convention Center. All is part of the updating of Charlotte’s uptown plan – the last big update was the 2010 Plan, so it’s clearly time. Charlotte Center City Partners and the City of Charlotte planning department are shepherding the Center City 2020 Vision Plan.
With the help of some sources I’ve gotten some sense of what’s to be unveiled tonight. Examples:
1. More higher education presence uptown. The consultants previously had talked about better links among UNC Charlotte, which has a new uptown building under construction; Johnson C. Smith University; Johnson & Wales University; Central Piedmont Community College; and various other higher ed institutions with operations in or near the center of the city. Blue-sky ideas mentioned previously: Maybe a joint student union for all the students? Beefed-up education opportunities in center city?
2. Solve the shopping problem. Just about everyone in the workshops wanted more shopping downtown. This is tricky for many, many reasons. I look forward to hearing more specifics from the consultants, because if this were easily solved it would have been solved by now.
3. A network of parks and green spaces. This was another popular item in public workshops. And it isn’t just as easy as buying up an old parking lot somewhere, ripping out the concrete, planting grass and waiting (and waiting and waiting) for people to use it. Finding the public money, civic will and – crucial – the good design and strategic locations to create well-designed and sited green spaces will be harder than it sounds. And don’t forget the “network” part. Again, I’ll be eager to hear details.
Look for other strategies on cultural venues, the nexus of research-jobs-innovation, and closer attention to building neighborhood centers.
Disclosure: Observer publisher Ann Caulkins is a co-chair of the CCCP uptown plan effort. She doesn’t know I’m writing this and hasn’t told me what I should or shouldn’t write, or even whether to write anything. You’re getting my own thoughts on this topic.