Ithaca Commons

The Ithaca Commons is a three-block pedestrian mall in downtown Ithaca, New York that serves as the city's cultural and economic center. The Commons is a popular regional destination, and is filled with upscale restaurants and shops, public art, and frequent community festivals.

About

The Commons is shaped like an inverted T. It consists of a two-block segment of State Street between Cayuga and Aurora Streets lined with shops, galleries, restaurants, and bars, and a smaller one-block segment, "Bank Alley," extending north up Tioga Street to Seneca Street, that is home to several banks and financial institutions. Many of the buildings are mixed-use, with apartments or offices on the upper floors. Tompkins Cortland Community College has a small satellite campus on the Commons.

During the summer, local musicians and other entertainers put on free concerts and performances, including at the Bernie Milton Pavilion. The Commons is also used for many politically protests, rallies, and speeches.

The Commons hosts several festivals throughout the year, including Ithaca's main annual festival, the Ithaca Festival in early June.

A scale model of the solar system, the Sagan Planet Walk, begins in the Commons. The Planet Walk is named after famed Cornell University astronomer Carl Sagan, and stretches 3/4 mile from to the Sciencenter. The inner ring planets all fit on a short section of Bank Alley.

The two main hubs of Tompkins Consolidated Area Transit (TCAT)'s bus network are located adjacent to the Commons.

History

By the 1960s, the rise of car culture, suburbs, and urban renewal had severely hurt downtown Ithaca. Many storefronts were empty, and many historic buildings had been torn down and replaced with vacant lots. In 1971, newly elected Mayor Ed Conley, "pulling on a 1950s-era suggestion from a Cornell city planning student",[1] proposed converting several blocks of State Street into a pedestrian mall. At the time, many small towns in the United States were experimenting with using pedestrian malls to revive downtowns. Formal design began in 1972, under the direction of local architect Anton J. Egner. Construction began in 1974, and the Commons opened in 1975. It cost $1.13 million[1] The name "The Commons" was the winning entry in a community-wide “name the mall” contest, and a prize of $1,000 in cash and gift certificates went to Ithaca High School senior Bill Ryan who had entered the name after a visit to the Boston Common.

It faced immediate competition, with the Ithaca area's first mall opening the next year in Lansing. In 1981, several vacant lots created by urban renewal were filled by the construction of Center Ithaca, a large mixed-use building with first-floor retail, an indoor food court connected to the Commons, and upper-floor offices and apartments.

Together with the rest of Upstate New York, the Commons suffered through the 1990s with many empty storefronts. A Rothschilds (a local department store) closed in the early 1980s and its successor, a McCurdy's store, closed in the mid-1990s. A McDonalds and a CVS also closed on the Commons in the mid-90s, and a block away, a Woolworths store closed in 1998. Then-Mayor Alan Cohen (owner of a restaurant located on the Commons) proposed removing the Commons and opening up the two-block portion of State Street to automobile traffic.

Panorama of the Commons before its reconstruction. The Sun from the Carl Sagan Planet Walk can be seen on both sides.

In the early 2000s, the Commons's fortune began to turn around, due to increased investment and the rise of New Urbanism. The Downtown Ithaca Alliance, a business improvement district, was created in 1997 to revitalize the Commons and its surroundings. The vacant former Woolworths was renovated into the new home of the Tompkins County Public Library in 2000. In 2005, Seneca Place, a large mixed-use building incorporating retail, a Hilton Garden Inn, office space for Cornell University and Morgan Stanley, and the Ithaca area's first Starbucks opened adjacent to the Commons. Between 2003 and 2015, the Cayuga Green project replaced several lots of surface parking adjacent to the Commons with a new home for independent movie theatre Cinemapolis, an Urban Outfitters, two buildings of luxury apartments, and a new multi-level parking garage with first-floor retail.[2] Another luxury apartment building, Gateway Commons, was completed nearby in 2007.

But aging infrastructure started to cause problems:

In April 1999, the City of Ithaca released "Renewing the Design of the Ithaca Commons: The Report of The Commons Design Review Committee," which led to a $76,000 capital project that largely financed maintenance work, including the removal of a fountain that, according to 2001 article in the Cornell Daily Sun, was considered a liability issue because children were playing on it. Temporary repairs were made to the crumbling surfaces of the Commons in 2008, but that smaller capital project was little more than a stop-gap measure.[3]

In 2009, the city commissioned landscape architecture firm Sasaki Associates to do a complete redesign,[4] with a more open central lane, "patterned pavement, varied and movable seating, improved performance spaces, energy-efficient lighting, an outdoor reading area and a small playground."[5]

The old Commons was demolished in April 2013. The reconstruction was originally planned to take 18 months and cost $9.5 million. But a series of problems, including a poorly-documented existing conditions, poorly-drawn plans, poor coordination with NYSEG, and mayhem caused by a runaway truck, caused the project to go long over schedule and budget. Many business owners reported dramatically decreased sales and foot traffic.[6] In August 2015, the Commons re-opened, at a total cost of $15 million.

In late 2015, construction began on a new, ten-story Marriott hotel on a vacant triangular lot at the eastern end of the Commons.[5]

Features

Annual Events

References

  1. 1 2 Reynolds, Nick (2015-08-21). "Essay: The evolution of the Commons". Ithaca Journal. Retrieved 2016-04-20.
  2. Crandall, Bryan (2014-09-13). "The Past and Future of Mixed-Use". Ithacating in Cornell Heights. Retrieved 2016-04-20.
  3. Chaisson, Bill (2011-07-13). "Second phase of Ithaca Commons design process due to begin in fall". Ithaca Times. Retrieved 2016-04-20.
  4. "Ithaca Commons Redesign". Sasaki Associates. Retrieved 2016-04-20.
  5. 1 2 Prevost, Lisa (2015-09-02). "Building for Future, Ithaca Remakes Town Square". New York Times. Retrieved 2016-04-20.
  6. Hill, David (2014-12-12). "WATCHDOG REPORT: The mess that is the Commons". Ithaca Journal. Retrieved 2016-04-20.

Coordinates: 42°26′22″N 76°29′50″W / 42.43945°N 76.4972°W / 42.43945; -76.4972

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/1/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.