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March 2018
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March 2018
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South Bend HPC
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Minutes
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Indeed, after national economic recessions in 1980, 1991 and 2000, there was nowhere near the private investment downtown <br />that the city has seen over the past two years. Ed Bradley, principal with Cressy Commercial Real Estate and lead developer of an <br />$8 million renovation of the One Michiana Square office building at 100 E. Wayne St., has been a commercial real estate broker in <br />South Bend for 30 years. <br />0 <br />"There's been more that's happened in the last 36 to 48 months in downtown South Bend than has happened probably in the <br />two decades prior to," Bradley said. "When you and I go down Main Street that's going one way, five lanes, and you're blasting <br />through town as fast as you can, and you can time those lights perfectly, you're never having to stop. You don't see what's on the <br />street. You don't care because you're trying to get to the end of it. That's real. I really do think it's had a significant impact on <br />people's desire to be downtown." <br />Buriyadi said downtown revitalization requires more than just complete streets. Cities must incentivize private investment to <br />create housing, restaurants and retail downtown. They must retain public amenities such as courthouses, museums and <br />libraries. They must create and maintain public plazas and gathering places, and preserve historic structures "to help you tell <br />your story. Every community is unique and the uniqueness of every community is in its downtown, not in the suburbs." <br />Lynn Fitzpatrick, chair of the St. Joseph County Republican Party, said she doesn't agree with the Democratic mayor on some <br />issues, but she prefers two-way streets downtown and she likes all of the new investment. <br />Still, she said all the new private investment cannot be attributed to a single factor. <br />P` more complicated than that," she said. "I don't know what percentage of the investment is attributable to Smart Streets, but <br />if�Ge continue to get that kind of investment, then that's a good thing for everybody. Apparently certain developments did hinge <br />on the two-way traffic, and that's good." <br />Fitzpatrick said she hears criticism of Smart Streets from South Bend natives who return to the area, but they may just be <br />objecting to such dramatic change. She said some people also think the city spent too much on the project, which is being paid <br />for with about $21 million of tax incremental financing district money — property tax growth collected within a confined <br />geographical area. <br />"He took a big risk doing this," Fitzpatrick said. "Anytime you do an initiative with a significant cost, that's a risk because you're <br />not going to make everyone happy. We have to take risks. It benefits all of us if investment in South Bend continues." <br />Bradley said his investor group bought One Michiana Square at the end of 2015 from an out-of-state firm that had neglected <br />maintenance, causing occupancy to dip to 40 percent. Afterthe renovation, the building is 95 -percent occupied. <br />Bradley was asked whether he thought his project and the others downtown would have happened without Smart Streets. <br />"It's really hard to say if this would have happened anyway," Bradley said. "Not as many (new investments), I can tell you that. <br />•it the single factor? Probably not. But was it a contributing factor? Yes. And does that contributing factor create momentum <br />for the next decision that's made? Yes." <br />Jeff Parrott <br />
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