Lakewood's Glass, Half Full? Half Empty?
Posted: Mon Oct 08, 2012 8:52 am
In another discussion on the Deck, Gary Rice poised the question if I thought Lakewood's
Glass was half empty of half full, him seeing it as half full.
Me, I am a total Lakewood Homer, I have never seen it that drastic. Lakewood seems like
a wonderful community (Best Community 3 years in a row) and a great place to start a
family, or a business, or a family and a business or a family business. Near the Lake, the
Emerald Canyon, the airport, Downtown (The real one), with not just great schools, but
great new schools and one of the best libraries in the country. Parks in abundance, and a
great selection of shops and restaurants to keep the city interesting.
Could it be better?
Everything could be better, but what does it need?
Way finding that points direction to the lake, for those from out of town? Or actually being
able to walk down to the lake for residents?
A public park open late so that parents can teach their children the joy of sledding,
baseball, gardening, play or just sitting looking at the night sky? Or a boutique hotel
for the 10s that come in for our depth of dollars stores and burger joints?
Should I worry about the number of empty storefronts? Or should I understand that many
landlords like Bert Stratten are just exercising their right to be selective. That is not that
the city is not attractive for stores it is just, they do no meet the high standard asked for
by the landlord.
That we have a bunch of great 100 year-old structures that can be gutted and rebuilt, as
they have real plaster, real wood, and real construction. Or that we can rebuild with
particle board homes, constructed by people not in the trades, but certainly loving the
fact they can buy with sweat equity and little more?
So, let me go on record as mostly full
Let's work together, to keep it that way.
.
Glass was half empty of half full, him seeing it as half full.
Me, I am a total Lakewood Homer, I have never seen it that drastic. Lakewood seems like
a wonderful community (Best Community 3 years in a row) and a great place to start a
family, or a business, or a family and a business or a family business. Near the Lake, the
Emerald Canyon, the airport, Downtown (The real one), with not just great schools, but
great new schools and one of the best libraries in the country. Parks in abundance, and a
great selection of shops and restaurants to keep the city interesting.
Could it be better?
Everything could be better, but what does it need?
Way finding that points direction to the lake, for those from out of town? Or actually being
able to walk down to the lake for residents?
A public park open late so that parents can teach their children the joy of sledding,
baseball, gardening, play or just sitting looking at the night sky? Or a boutique hotel
for the 10s that come in for our depth of dollars stores and burger joints?
Should I worry about the number of empty storefronts? Or should I understand that many
landlords like Bert Stratten are just exercising their right to be selective. That is not that
the city is not attractive for stores it is just, they do no meet the high standard asked for
by the landlord.
That we have a bunch of great 100 year-old structures that can be gutted and rebuilt, as
they have real plaster, real wood, and real construction. Or that we can rebuild with
particle board homes, constructed by people not in the trades, but certainly loving the
fact they can buy with sweat equity and little more?
So, let me go on record as mostly full
Let's work together, to keep it that way.
.