|
|
SALEM'S
VISION 2020 |
|
Imagine Salem’s historic downtown and city
center enhanced - into a revitalized, welcoming, and vibrant
community gathering place, a magnet for visitors, where
unique, distinctive establishments are
waiting to be discovered.
Imagine a city center that bustles from morning to night with
a diverse array of special places to shop, live, work, and
enjoy entertainment. Now, that vision may be just around the
corner!
Vision 2020 is a community-wide process that will help shape
the future of Salem’s city center.
Beginning in the summer of 2007, Mayor Taylor brought together a group of Salem's large City
Center employers began discussing the future of the heart of
the City - downtown, north downtown and the Edgewater/Wallace
area of West Salem.
Together, the group considered the diversity of uses in the
core area, employment centers, housing, recreation
opportunities, transit, vehicular and pedestrian circulation,
and parking. The group also heard from more than 3,500 Salem
residents, employees and visitors who offered ideas to help
create a new vision for Salem's City Center.
The Vision 2020 Team is a growing collaboration that now
includes the State of Oregon, Marion County, Willamette
University, Go Downtown Salem!, Salem-Keizer School District,
the Chamber of Commerce, Salem Convention and Visitors
Association, Chemeketa Community College, Salem-Keizer
Transit, the Salem Hospital and General Growth Properties.
Councilors Rogers and Tesler serve with the Mayor - who chairs
the Team. A website for the project is on the city’s home page |
|
|
THE
PROJECT |
|
Twenty four leading ideas have emerged from the community
discussion under five broad themes. People are asking that the
City Center:
 |
Provide places for people to
live and gather- This theme includes projects like a
plaza or a town square, expanding the diversity of places
and activities for youth, developing new downtown housing,
and coordinating access to services for people in need.
|
 |
Create a vibrant destination- This theme includes actions like more restaurants and
shopping, later hours, performing arts venues and live
music, more public art and promotion of local artists.
|
 |
Preserve and enhance the look
and feel of the historic City Center- In addition to
highlighting the historic character and protecting the
character of the adjoining residential neighborhoods, this
theme includes popular ideas like creating welcoming
entrances for the City Center and making the sidewalks and
streetscape pedestrian friendly, clean and attractive with way-finding signage.
|
 |
Expand options to get about
the City Center- The focus of this theme is creating
better connections between east and West Salem, improving
bicycle and pedestrian access, the trolley idea, and
managing parking resources. |
 |
Improve connections to parks
and rivers- Two project ideas: creating more riverfront
and creek corridors and trails, as well as providing more
activities and facilities in Riverfront Park - really
taking advantage of the waterways moving through the City
Center. |
|
|
|
THE
NEXT STEPS |
|
From here, the Team is gearing up to make the vision a
reality. Following an upcoming Team meeting to review feedback
from the March 11 Open House and a design workshop with the
Salem AIA, the Team will begin developing the projects with
supporting organizations in the community. Organizations like
Go Downtown Salem will take the lead in delivering more
restaurants with outdoor seating and securing later opening
hours for businesses and restaurants in the downtown core.
Salem Keizer Transit will take the lead in developing a
frequent reliable shuttle service around the City Center. And,
the City will likely take the lead, with the support of all
the partners, in piloting a town square. A Council Work
Session is scheduled for April 7. In June, the Team will hold
its first quarterly progress briefing.
Want to get involved?
You can visit the Vision2020 website:
www.cityofsalem.net/vision2020.html or contact
503-588-6178 and speak with Annie Gorski or Courtney Knox. |
|
|