Slipek: Connecting the dots downtown (Guest Commentary)

by Edwin Slipek

Valentine Mickael Broth

Mickael Broth’s “The Hole Truth” offers a reflection along Clay Street in front of The Valentine.

On June 6, a late afternoon tempest drenched downtown, but skies cleared as if on cue as twin doors of the Valentine history center were swung open onto East Clay Street. About 60 folks left the bar and canape station to descend steep granite steps to the brick city sidewalk. There they confronted the city’s newest public art installation, “The Hole Truth,” a human-scale abstract sculpture by Mickael Broth. Its sleek mirrored and cherry red metal surfaces were as bright as the smiles on the faces of the Virginia artist, his family, admirers and Valentine patrons who gathered around the piece. After brief dedicatory remarks, including shout outs to the Common Wealth Public Art Fund of the Community Foundation, and the city’s public art commission and public works department, the snapping of selfies and group shots ensued.

“It doesn’t hit you over the head,” Bill Martin, the Valentine director, told those assembled. “It is engaging if you sit, look at it, think, and then go into the museum. Finding truth is a challenge and museums help us do that.”bill

“Hole” is proof that shiny things that enhance our cityscapes needn’t be tall buildings or require acres of real estate like the proposed-but-nixed $325 million VCU Health office tower (for which the university is contesting a $73 million bill), or a new minor league ballpark-anchored development.

As attendees schmoozed, Martin drew a fellow staff member across Tenth Street where demolition of the ruinous, city-owned public health and safety building is nearly done. He pointed excitedly at a new urban vista that’s been created with the removal of the blockade-like eyesore. “Look, you can see the convention center from here.” He extolled how future conventioneers will be able to stroll directly down East Clay Street via a new street connector between Ninth and Tenth streets, to the Valentine’s Court End neighborhood. Once there, they could explore its considerable historical and architectural treasures. In addition to the museum, these include the John Marshall House, the Museum of the Confederacy, Monumental Church and VCU’s Egyptian Building – all National Historic Monuments. The university campus also boasts such architecturally distinctive landmarks as Hunton Hall (a student activities building that was formerly First Baptist Church) and the commanding West Hospital, a red brick art deco beacon on the downtown skyline. Once East Clay Street is reconnected (although capital funding has apparently not been budgeted), Martin said the Valentine is positioned to serve as a visitor center. “The Hole Truth” will greet those arriving along Clay from the convention center.

But, ah, the Greater Richmond Convention Center.

GRCC2

The Greater Richmond Convention Center.

A Richmond Times-Dispatch front page headline on May 26 wasn’t encouraging: “Convention center often lies empty,” it read. “Leaders say the fix is adding a big hotel.” Hmm. Another big shiny object to prop up another once shiny new object. And by the way, back in the day, wasn’t development of the drab convention center, whose construction chewed up numerous blocks of historic Jackson Ward residential fabric, rationalized partly as a panacea for augmenting the Richmond Coliseum?

The Times-Dispatch article also reported that the convention center stood empty for 19 days this past March; a new 500-room hotel is needed. If downtown’s hotels – the Berkeley, Commonwealth Suites, Delta, Graduate, Hampton Inn, Hilton, Holiday Inn Express, Jefferson, Linden Row, Marriott, Marriott Courtyard, Omni and Quirk – don’t collectively have enough rooms, maybe the center’s sales staff needs to pump up its efforts.

But there’s something more critical. The immediate environs of the convention center need major attention and sprucing up. When prospective convention advance teams and planners visit downtown, one can only imagine the tortured pathways local officials must guide them to avoid the decay and visual pollution of the immediate surroundings.

Currently, upon exiting the convention center, there’s no attractive path to Court End. After crossing North Fifth Street from the main entrance, East Marshall Street is a glorified service road lined with parking decks. A bright spot is the historic Blues Armory, which could provide a picturesque passageway. However, it’s in deplorable shape with a chain-link fence blocking access to the arcade – the implied message is don’t relieve yourself or camp out here. Graffiti scrawled on the adjacent former Sixth Street Marketplace food court is literal. Charming.

Another route to Court End is passing the Coliseum via Nina Abady Park (the park’s name should be removed to better honor the legacy of this storied civic leader). And the Coliseum, a once-vaunted venue for conventions, sports and entertainment has long been shuttered. Why? Norfolk, Hampton, Salem/Roanoke are still getting excellent mileage from their mid-century modern arenas. Why have we forsaken our downtown destination?

OK. Suppose conventiongoers head west to Jackson Ward and Second Street. “The Harlem of the South,” we’re told. But despite some destination restaurants and renovation successes around the Hippodrome, it is a rag-tag affair. The corridor needs a thorough makeover like Shockoe Slip received a generation ago.

6th St Marketplace graffitti

The Blues Armory (right) and former 6th Street Marketplace buildings sit idle and graffiti-covered.

Finally, can we rely on East Broad Street, downtown’s main thoroughfare to charm, well, not offend visitors? Hardly. The busy crossroads of Broad and Fifth is populated with more vehicles than the combined service stations at Zion’s Crossroads (without the gasoline). The Marriott and Hilton hotels are set, suburban-like, behind surface parking lots. Public lots also fill entire half blocks between Fourth and Fifth and Sixth and Seventh. The new General Assembly parking deck at Ninth and Eighth is a slap-in-the face to the city.

But surely the median strip down the center of Broad can mitigate the situation. Landscaping and trees are forgiving. But the planter boxes stingily plopped atop mostly mulch are underwhelming and pathetic.

So, what to do? Let’s get cracking on the Clay Street connector between the convention center and Court End with its architectural and historic treasures from neoclassical to art deco. If not, can we provide visitors a pair of blinders in their welcome packets? They’ll understand. Americans got used to face masks during the pandemic.

The post Slipek: Connecting the dots downtown (Guest Commentary) appeared first on Richmond BizSense.

GET MORE INFORMATION

agent
Michael Grider

Agent | License ID: 0225209440

+1(804) 731-9057

1765 Greensboro Station Pl, McLean, VA, 22102, USA

Name
Phone*
Message