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REGULAR MEETING SEPTEMBER 11, 2006 <br />COMMENTS BY MR. THOMAS KLEPACH CONCERNING THE EDDIE STREET <br />COMMONS PROJECT <br />Mr. Thomas Klepach, 320 Howard, Street, South Bend, Indiana, stated that he is <br />concerned with the proposed residential/retail development, the Eddy Street Commons, <br />that is planned by Notre Dame and the Kite Realty Group for the land that is currently a <br />small forest along Angela Boulevard. The apparent motivation to create a combined <br />housing and shopping center located within a short walk to campus seems well- <br />intentioned at first; a pedestrian “college town” for Notre Dame further integrating the <br />South Bend and campus communities, a market-driven attempt at new urbanism in which <br />students and faculty might easily travel through a full-service retail center between <br />campus and home. I argue that this goal is flawed in it’s application and represents a <br />profound failure of the imagination. The scant woods that he refers to, which have <br />managed to withstand the ravaging trample of more than 150 years of unqualified <br />“development,” is nonetheless charming. The rolling slopes are home to stately trees, <br />many of which wee surely quite large by the time that Father Sorin first dug his stake into <br />the ground in 1842. These trees are the fragile habitat for many now partially displaced <br />animals such as red fox, owl, hawks, deer, opossum, raccoons and skunks. Was the <br />complete ensemble of campus voices relevant to urban design and the impact of the <br />development considered? Besides the commercially lucrative concept of mixed-use <br />zoning, new urbanism also stresses infilling and brownfield remediation, principles easily <br />applied to already cleared land such as the “five corners” intersection. These concepts <br />are ignored in favor of deforestation. Did the Dome consult the expert opinions from the <br />ranks of their own Ecology faculty concerning the effects of the proposed development? <br />Although no Environmental Impact Statement is required by law, does the reality of the <br />situation rationally warrant one? In light of the fact that people will be living on this land <br />was there an appropriate assessment of the toxicity and heavy metal content of the power <br />plant coal ash dump site in the center of the woods? If the fledgling maples lined up on <br />old Angela in burlap soil balls ready for deployment into sidewalk planters along the <br />proposed shopping center cost more than $2,000 per tree, what is the monetary worth of <br />the 150+ year old trees which will be razed to build the development? For the self- <br />proclaimed environmentalists among us I encourage you to remember that it is not just <br />about saving tropical rainforests. It is also, perhaps more crucially, about saving the <br />frayed and tattered threads of the frail natural space around you. Furthermore, a <br />philosophical discontinuity exists between the Christian spiritual teachings of a modest <br />and humble stewardship over the planet of God’s creation and a market-based approach t <br />catholic solvency where land use manipulation is a tool to gain equity. Yet many agrue <br />that a weakness of Notre Dame is the “lack of a college town feel.” This is a reference to <br />the lack of a pedestrian shopping and recreative center near campus that is a common <br />trait of so many other college towns. If one looks at some classic examples of such <br />American college towns such as Ithaca, New York, Olympia, Washington or Madison, <br />Wisconsin, these places tool all struggle with the blight of overdevelopment; however the <br />most appealing aspects of their character developed organically over a long period of <br />time. Business district with the most character have evolved slowly, allowing <br />distinctiveness and heterogeneity unknown to the architectural monoculture of the Kinko- <br />copied strip mall or the cookie cutter gated community. Other college towns put a <br />premium on green space. For an excellent example of the ambient effect of green space <br />on the feel of a town visit the Arboretum in Ann Arbor on the gentle banks of the Huron <br />River. In a statement released by a city official, it was noted that Notre Dame had <br />“…expressed a willingness to be a developer in the community and participate further in <br />the economic vitality of the area…” Is further sequestering campus by closing Juniper <br />and creating a nationally franchised strip mall buffer between campus and the <br />surrounding neighborhoods the best way to develop an integrated community and spur <br />local economic vitality, or is it an attempt to ape the grotesque cash cow on Grape Road <br />in Mishawaka? For an excellent example of a successful integration of local community <br />and local business, visit the South Bend farmers’ market on any Saturday. Earlier <br />described the proposed development of the Angela forest as a “failure of the <br />imagination,” although I have offered no imaginative alternative. If woodlands for <br />woodlands’ own sake is unacceptable to the productivity-oriented, how about a small <br />rugged biking trail, or a refuge for reflection in the form of a gazebo treehouse <br />overlooking the woods, campus and downtown nestled among the eaves of the taller <br />trees, or a public ropes course and outdoor exercise area among the trees, a small number <br />of modest homes worked in around the existing trees, working with the already beautiful <br />25 <br /> <br />