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J Magazine Spring 2018

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THE MAGAZINE OF THE REBIRTH OF JACKSONVILLE’S DOWNTOWN<br />

OUTDOORS<br />

I S S U E<br />

PLACEMAKING<br />

CONNECTING THE<br />

HUMAN EXPERIENCE<br />

TO REVITALIZATION<br />

P32<br />

GOING GREEN<br />

CREATING A PLACE<br />

FOR THE SENSES WITH<br />

MORE GREEN SPACE<br />

P40<br />

RIVERFRONT<br />

WHERE HAVE<br />

ALL THE BOATS<br />

AND BOATERS<br />

GONE?<br />

P56<br />

PLAY STATIONS<br />

ATTRACTING PEOPLE<br />

DOWNTOWN WITH<br />

URBAN PLAYGROUNDS<br />

P48<br />

PRESERVATION<br />

A PASSION FOR<br />

resuscitatING<br />

OUR HISTORIC<br />

BUILDINGS<br />

P72<br />

TURF WARS<br />

A FOOD TRUCK<br />

AND BRICK &<br />

MORTAR EATERY<br />

BATTLE BREWS<br />

P80<br />

DISPLAY THROUGH MAY <strong>2018</strong><br />

$4.95<br />

LA<br />

CRASH<br />

NDING<br />

WHEN WILL WE FIX THE MOST CONTENTIOUS<br />

(AND EMBARRASSING) PIECE OF PROPERTY<br />

IN DOWNTOWN JACKSONVILLE?<br />

P18<br />

SPRING <strong>2018</strong>


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23+15+5+6+10+15+6+9 23+15+5+6+10+15+6+9<br />

contents<br />

Issue 1 // Volume 2 // SPRING <strong>2018</strong><br />

ZINE SURVEY // THE JACKSONVILLE LANDING<br />

ROUGH LANDING<br />

IONS ON<br />

LANDING<br />

THAN<br />

WING<br />

CLARK<br />

Y JEFF DAVIS<br />

E<br />

MORE/BETTER<br />

RESTAURANTS<br />

least once during evry<br />

big football game<br />

t EverBank Field,<br />

he blimp camera<br />

ill scan our city’s<br />

WHAT<br />

22.9%<br />

pectacular vistas,<br />

WOULD NEED<br />

OTHER<br />

long the beach<br />

TO CHANGE<br />

nd up the St.<br />

AT THE<br />

hns River, but<br />

LANDING FOR<br />

ill pause over<br />

ange structure<br />

YOU TO VISIT<br />

r in the heart of<br />

THERE?<br />

. 15%<br />

onest, Jacksonville DON’T KNOW/<br />

ks a lot better to<br />

NO ANSWER<br />

udiences from afar than<br />

close to people who live<br />

4.9% 6.2%<br />

26<br />

ding is iconic because of<br />

, right in the center of the<br />

riverfront. There is a spotts<br />

on the Landing, which<br />

TOO FAR WOULD<br />

AWAY NEVER GO<br />

y the TV networks for the<br />

r Bowl in Jacksonville.<br />

CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE<br />

ZINE | SPRING <strong>2018</strong><br />

18<br />

MORE/BETTER<br />

ACTIVITIES<br />

& EVENTS<br />

11+<br />

10.4%<br />

9.5%<br />

6%<br />

10%<br />

15.1%<br />

MORE<br />

PARKING<br />

MORE/<br />

BETTER<br />

STORES<br />

THERE<br />

J MAG SURVEY:<br />

THE LANDING<br />

BY MIKE CLARK<br />

CONVENIENCE<br />

CRASH LANDING<br />

BY MARILYN YOUNG<br />

AMENITIES<br />

QUALITY OF LIFE<br />

MORE<br />

SAFETY<br />

32 40 48<br />

DOWNTOWN<br />

PLACEMAKING<br />

BY FRANK DENTON<br />

TURNING THE<br />

CORE GREEN<br />

BY LILLA ROSS<br />

CREATING A<br />

PLACE TO PLAY<br />

BY PAULA HORVATH<br />

56 72 80 90<br />

THE VANISHING<br />

BOATING SCENE<br />

BY RON LITTLEPAGE<br />

PRESERVING OUR<br />

ARCHITECTURE<br />

BY LILLA ROSS<br />

A FIGHT FOR THE<br />

LUNCH CROWD<br />

BY ROGER BROWN<br />

WAITING ON A<br />

RESURRECTION<br />

BY CAROLE HAWKINS<br />

FLORIDA TIMES-UNION<br />

6<br />

J MAGAZINE | SPRING <strong>2018</strong>


J MAGAZINE<br />

PARTNERS<br />

DEPARTMENTS<br />

9 FEEDBACK<br />

11 FROM THE EDITOR<br />

13 BRIEFING<br />

14 PROGRESS REPORT<br />

16 RATING DOWNTOWN<br />

64 CORE EYESORE<br />

65 12 HOURS DOWNTOWN<br />

95 QUESTIONS & ANSWERS<br />

98 THE FINAL WORD<br />

THE MAGAZINE OF THE REBIRTH OF JACKSONVILLE’S DOWNTOWN<br />

OUTDOORS<br />

I S S U E<br />

PLACEMAKING<br />

CONNECTING THE<br />

HUMAN EXPERIENCE<br />

TO REVITALIZATION<br />

P32<br />

GOING GREEN<br />

CREATING A PLACE<br />

FOR THE SENSES WITH<br />

MORE GREEN SPACE<br />

P40<br />

PLAY STATIONS<br />

ATTRACTING PEOPLE<br />

DOWNTOWN WITH<br />

URBAN PLAYGROUNDS<br />

P48<br />

RIVERFRONT<br />

WHERE HAVE<br />

ALL THE BOATS<br />

AND BOATERS<br />

GONE?<br />

P56<br />

PRESERVATION<br />

A PASSION FOR<br />

RESUSCITATING<br />

OUR HISTORIC<br />

BUILDINGS<br />

P72<br />

TURF WARS<br />

A FOOD TRUCK<br />

AND BRICK &<br />

MORTAR EATERY<br />

BATTLE BREWS<br />

P80<br />

DISPLAY THROUGH MAY <strong>2018</strong><br />

$4.95<br />

LA<br />

CRASH<br />

NDING<br />

WHEN WILL WE FIX THE MOST CONTENTIOUS<br />

(AND EMBARRASSING) PIECE OF PROPERTY<br />

IN DOWNTOWN JACKSONVILLE?<br />

P18<br />

SPRING <strong>2018</strong><br />

ON THE COVER<br />

If there is one issue Downtown<br />

that virtually everyone seems<br />

to have an opinion on, it is the<br />

Jacksonville Landing. What<br />

should become of the “festival<br />

marketplace” that has failed to live<br />

up to its potential? // SEE PAGE 18<br />

ILLUSTRATION BY<br />

JEFF DAVIS // J MAGAZINE<br />

PHOTOGRAPH BY JAX CHAMBER<br />

DOWNTOWN COUNCIL


GREATER<br />

TOGETHER<br />

H<br />

THE MAGAZINE OF<br />

THE REBIRTH OF<br />

JACKSONVILLE’S<br />

DOWNTOWN<br />

H<br />

PUBLISHER<br />

Mark Nusbaum<br />

GENERAL MANAGER/<br />

CREATIVE DIRECTOR<br />

Jeff Davis<br />

EDITOR<br />

Frank Denton<br />

VP OF SALES<br />

Lana Champion<br />

VP OF CIRCULATION<br />

Amy McSwain<br />

WRITERS<br />

Michael P. Clark<br />

Roger Brown<br />

Paula Horvath<br />

Ron Littlepage<br />

MAILING ADDRESS<br />

J <strong>Magazine</strong>, 1 Riverside Ave., Jacksonville, FL 32202<br />

CONTACT US<br />

EDITORIAL:<br />

(904) 359-4197, frank.denton@jacksonville.com<br />

ADVERTISING:<br />

(904) 359-4471, lana.champion@jacksonville.com<br />

DISTRIBUTION/REPRINTS:<br />

(904) 359-4459, amy.mcswain@jacksonville.com<br />

WE WELCOME SUGGESTIONS FOR STORIES.<br />

PLEASE SEND IDEAS OR INQUIRIES TO:<br />

frank.denton@jacksonville.com<br />

No part of this publication and/or website may be reproduced,<br />

stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form without<br />

prior written permission of the Publisher. Permission is only deemed<br />

valid if approval is in writing. J <strong>Magazine</strong> and Times-Union Media buy<br />

all rights to contributions, text and images, unless previously agreed<br />

to in writing. While every effort has been made to ensure that<br />

information is correct at the time of going to print, Times-Union<br />

Media cannot be held responsible for the outcome of any action or<br />

decision based on the information contained in this publication.<br />

© <strong>2018</strong> Times-Union Media.<br />

All rights reserved.<br />

LOOK FOR J MAGAZINE AT SELECT RETAIL OUTLETS<br />

A PRODUCT OF<br />

EDITORIAL BOARD


DISPLAY THROUGH FEBRUARY <strong>2018</strong><br />

THE MAGAZINE OF THE REBIRTH OF JACKSONVILLE’S DOWNTOWN<br />

HISTORY<br />

I S S U E<br />

FEEDBACK<br />

MUSEUMS<br />

ADDING TO<br />

THE CULTURAL<br />

EXPERIENCES<br />

IN THE CORE<br />

P72<br />

RICH HISTORY<br />

THE ANCESTRY<br />

YOU PROBABLY<br />

DIDN’T KNOW<br />

ABOUT<br />

P80<br />

RED TAPE<br />

CLEARING<br />

THE WAY FOR<br />

DOWNTOWN<br />

DEVELOPMENT<br />

P18<br />

DOWN & OUT<br />

TEN DECAYING<br />

BUILDINGS IN<br />

NEED OF OUR<br />

ATTENTION<br />

P84<br />

SALLY CORP<br />

GO INSIDE THE<br />

URBAN CORE’S<br />

MOST UNUSUAL<br />

COMPANY<br />

P32<br />

UNDAUNTED<br />

MOST GAVE UP ON THE LAURA STREET TRIO<br />

$4.95<br />

& BARNETT BANK BUILDINGS YEARS AGO.<br />

STEVE ATKINS DIDN’T.<br />

P40<br />

THE HISTORY ISSUE<br />

FOR YEARS, STEVE ATKINS WAS TOLD<br />

to stop wasting his time and money trying to<br />

save the Laura Street Trio and Barnett Bank<br />

buildings in Downtown Jacksonville. Days after<br />

our winter issue hit the streets, crews began<br />

installing construction barricades around the<br />

Barnett Bank building as Atkins’ project to<br />

transform the historic building into retail, office<br />

space and apartments got under way.<br />

RE: UNDAUNTED: Most gave up on<br />

the Laura Street Trio and Barnett Bank<br />

buildings years ago. Steve Atkins didn’t.<br />

“This is what can happen<br />

[when] we do not give up<br />

and we press on!! LET’S GO<br />

JAX!!! I cannot tell you how<br />

freaking excited I am about<br />

the growth and preservation<br />

of this city!! ... I have never<br />

doubted one second my<br />

decision to move here from<br />

Miami 2.5 years ago and now<br />

to move to the Urban Core.<br />

This is where it’s AT!!!”<br />

Janie Coffey<br />

WINTER 2017-18<br />

RE: RISE OF THE GONDOLAS: Could a network of<br />

gondolas gliding above the St. Johns River attract visitors?<br />

“We already have a skyway!<br />

Let’s just extend it so<br />

it goes to more useful<br />

places. Connect Riverside<br />

to downtown, connect<br />

Avondale to Riverside.”<br />

Cate Dobbins<br />

“Enough with the small ideas<br />

... Go visit San Jose, CA,<br />

Houston, TX & Minneapolis,<br />

MN. See how well their light<br />

rail works & takes riders<br />

more than just a few miles.<br />

If Jax is going to do anything,<br />

do it right or don’t spend<br />

the money on it at all.”<br />

Craig Sauls<br />

“I remember taking field<br />

trips here back in the day,<br />

but I had no idea how this<br />

had gotten started.”<br />

Katie Flowers<br />

“The water taxi in<br />

Baltimore has been around<br />

for decades and works well.<br />

It started small and has<br />

expanded over the years.<br />

Your waterfront is beautiful<br />

from the ground too, and I<br />

think gondolas would not<br />

be attractive over<br />

the waterfront.”<br />

Kathy Booth Pace<br />

“If downtown was in<br />

Blount Island then the<br />

(gondola) idea might not<br />

be bad.”<br />

James Stewart<br />

RE: The fantasy fabricators: Inside Sally Corp.,<br />

one of the most fascinating businesses in the world<br />

“It takes a great team to do<br />

what Sally Corp. does, and<br />

we have the GREATEST<br />

team!”<br />

Drew Edward Hunter<br />

RE: DOWN &<br />

ALMOST OUT:<br />

Something needs<br />

to be done about<br />

these 10 decaying<br />

Downtown buildings<br />

“Demolition is the<br />

wrong way to go.”<br />

Kay Ehas<br />

RE: ONE WAY,<br />

WRONG WAY: Is it<br />

past time to convert<br />

the core’s one-way<br />

streets to two-way?<br />

“They are a pain and<br />

I’m used to them.<br />

Can’t imagine how<br />

frustrating it is for<br />

visitors.”<br />

Brian Woodall<br />

“It is long past time<br />

to return the streets<br />

to two-way. Cities<br />

all over the country<br />

have realized their<br />

mistake and have<br />

reintroduced two-way<br />

streets.”<br />

Kerry Decker<br />

SPRING <strong>2018</strong> | J MAGAZINE 9


Formed to revitalize and preserve downtown property values<br />

and prevent deterioration in the downtown business district.<br />

The Downtown Investment Authority was created to revitalize<br />

Downtown Jacksonville by utilizing Community Redevelopment<br />

Area resources to spur economic development. The Downtown<br />

Investment Authority is the governing body for the Downtown<br />

Community Redevelopment Areas established by the City<br />

Council of Jacksonville. The DIA offers a variety of incentives for<br />

businesses to locate Downtown, including expedited permitting<br />

and economic development incentives.


FROM THE EDITOR<br />

Despite naysayers,<br />

Downtown growth<br />

gaining momentum<br />

FRANK<br />

DENTON<br />

PHONE<br />

(904) 359-4197<br />

EMAIL<br />

frank.denton@<br />

jacksonville.com<br />

his Downtown revitalization business,<br />

it may be a little more com-<br />

T<br />

plicated than we thought. We knew<br />

it’d be tough politically and financially, but<br />

we didn’t think so much about the psychology<br />

of committing to a new Downtown.<br />

We probably should have anticipated that, as the<br />

Downtown champions are getting some real traction (see<br />

Progress Report on page 14), we might start hearing the<br />

pitter-patter of cold feet, the chill of caution.<br />

They are eager to remind us of our stumbles — the<br />

first Shipyards plan, the Prime Osborn, Jacksonville<br />

Landing — projects that were ill conceived, if only because<br />

Downtown wasn’t ready for them. And they point<br />

out the billions of dollars spent on big projects like the<br />

Better Jacksonville Plan and EverBank Field upgrades —<br />

initiatives that were aimed at specific needs, not at the<br />

rebirth of Downtown.<br />

We as a community now need to lock arms and stay<br />

focused and committed to recreating a Downtown worthy<br />

of our city.<br />

In a letter to the editor, Mayor Lenny Curry made<br />

that point clearly when he called for us to maintain the<br />

momentum we’ve already created: “This cannot be a resolution<br />

of the administration alone. We must resolve as<br />

a city to create the Downtown Jacksonville we have long<br />

aspired to build.” You have to admit we have a tendency<br />

toward a lack of civic self-confidence, perhaps related<br />

to the inferiority complex you sometimes see in other<br />

letters-to-the-editor and hear in conversations about<br />

Downtown.<br />

There’s always a question about whether we have our<br />

act together.<br />

In his letter to the editor, G.T. Harrell of Fleming Island<br />

wrote, “The current Downtown revitalization of Jacksonville<br />

has no consolidated, coordinated plan.<br />

“What we need is a central venue — preferably on<br />

the river Downtown — that can attract visitors … who<br />

currently drive through the city center.<br />

“And we also need a comprehensive revitalization<br />

plan that is developed and implemented by many<br />

business leaders with the feedback and inclusion of the<br />

citizenry.”<br />

Two things, Mr. Harrell. For one, that “central venue”<br />

has been a priority for years. That’s why the city is aggressively<br />

working, in court, to resolve the dispute about the<br />

future of Jacksonville Landing (see story page 18).<br />

Even more important, we have a comprehensive<br />

master plan, and we’re working it.<br />

In 2010, after 40 years of paralysis by analysis,<br />

then-Mayor John Peyton and the private Civic Council<br />

of business leaders agreed that Downtown deterioration<br />

was “a matter of urgent civic priority” and created a task<br />

force that made the case for “a successful, central Downtown”<br />

as “everyone’s neighborhood.”<br />

Its most important recommendation was for creation<br />

of “a strong, independent, well-funded but transparent<br />

and accountable implementation agency ... for exclusive<br />

focus upon Downtown development.”<br />

That led to the Downtown Investment Authority,<br />

now with Aundra Wallace as CEO. The DIA’s top priority<br />

was leading the development of a true master plan, built<br />

on a set of consultants, “several hundred community<br />

stakeholders” and 43 public meetings over 2014. The City<br />

Council approved it in February 2015, appropriating a<br />

modest $2.5 million for the first year.<br />

That is our democratically developed and purposeful<br />

master plan, all 381 pages of it. Want to read it, Mr. Harrell?<br />

Go to: http://jaxne.ws/DIA<br />

When I first met with Wallace, he handed me a<br />

copy of the plan and opened it to page 263 and started<br />

checking off projects that had been completed at that<br />

point, many of them as modest as the budget: lighting<br />

improvements, free Wi-Fi, urban art and streetscape, bike<br />

racks, Hemming Park redesign and programming and a<br />

“retail enhancement program.”<br />

But there also is the Bostwick Building, now the Cowford<br />

Chophouse, and the Laura Street Trio and Barnett<br />

Bank, now under renovation.<br />

The 30-year plan warns that it “requires consistent<br />

support by the city’s administrations, legislative bodies<br />

and business leaders as it transcends time.”<br />

And it requires, and deserves, consistent support by<br />

the people.<br />

There will be fits and starts, constructive disagreements<br />

and tough City Council votes, especially over<br />

money. There will be a need to trust smart public-private<br />

partnerships.<br />

Getting beyond those, for the sake of the heart of<br />

the city, will call for our community commitment and<br />

courage.<br />

Frank Denton, editor of The Florida Times-Union from<br />

2008-2016, is editor of J. He lives in Riverside.<br />

SPRING <strong>2018</strong> | J MAGAZINE 11


««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««<br />

»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»<br />

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»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»<br />

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»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»<br />

««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««<br />

»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»<br />

««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««<br />

»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»<br />

««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««<br />

»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»<br />

$37,500,000<br />

««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««<br />

»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»<br />

««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««<br />

DIGITS<br />

The cost to build<br />

the Jacksonville<br />

Landing in 1987.<br />

The 126,000<br />

square foot<br />

structure was<br />

built by the<br />

Rouse Company,<br />

who pioneered<br />

the development<br />

of festival<br />

marketplaces<br />

in the U.S.<br />

BRIEFING<br />

By The Florida Times-Union Editorial Board<br />

Thumbs up to the<br />

JACKSONVILLE<br />

Jaguars, who had<br />

our Downtown and<br />

whole city rocking<br />

during their journey<br />

from underestimated<br />

contender to three<br />

minutes from the Super<br />

Bowl!<br />

Thumbs down to the<br />

fact that while our St.<br />

Johns River remains<br />

majestic, there are<br />

80 non-native<br />

species inhabiting<br />

it — up from 56 from a<br />

decade ago.<br />

Thumbs down to<br />

the poor retail<br />

traffic in 220<br />

Riverside Ave. The<br />

popular residential<br />

complex is a great<br />

symbol of Brooklyn’s<br />

rise, but it needs a solid<br />

retail element.<br />

Thumbs up to the<br />

love Downtown<br />

Jacksonville has<br />

been getting from travel<br />

websites like Lonely<br />

Planet, ThisisInsider.com<br />

and others raving about<br />

our city.<br />

HITS & MISSES<br />

Thumbs up to the<br />

Jacksonville<br />

Symphony for<br />

signing music director<br />

Courtney Lewis to<br />

a new contract. The<br />

charismatic Lewis is the<br />

perfect conductor for<br />

this Downtown cultural<br />

pillar.<br />

Thumbs down to the<br />

Duval County<br />

School Board’s<br />

reluctance to sell<br />

its building on the<br />

Southbank, a hot<br />

spot for Downtown<br />

development. Why not<br />

cash in now?<br />

Thumbs up to<br />

businessman Jack<br />

Hanania for<br />

purchasing the Dyal-<br />

Upchurch building<br />

on Bay Street. Hanania<br />

has great plans for the<br />

historic site.<br />

Thumbs up to<br />

a proposed<br />

parking garage<br />

design Downtown<br />

that will actually fit<br />

with historic buildings<br />

nearby. Now add a little<br />

shade on the sidewalk!<br />

FIRST PERSON<br />

««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««<br />

»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»<br />

««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««««<br />

»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»<br />

Thumbs down to<br />

those who assume<br />

that because the<br />

Elbow district is so<br />

packed with activity,<br />

they will get away<br />

with parking<br />

illegally on nearby<br />

streets. No, you won’t.<br />

Thumbs up for<br />

plans to develop a<br />

bike sharing<br />

program<br />

Downtown. But<br />

Thumbs down for<br />

taking so long to start<br />

bike sharing. Can’t<br />

Jacksonville be a leader<br />

for once in Downtown<br />

development? Other<br />

cities have long had<br />

these programs.<br />

Thumbs up for the<br />

bold proposal<br />

to Amazon to<br />

locate its second<br />

headquarters in the<br />

Shipyards property.<br />

Jacksonville didn’t<br />

make the finalists, but<br />

it was amusing that<br />

Amazon is adding<br />

geodesic domes<br />

in Seattle with<br />

tropical plants. That’s<br />

Jacksonville weather.<br />

“You know how you walk into some people’s<br />

living rooms, and you just want to sink into a chair<br />

and nurse your glass of wine? It just feels good. ...<br />

That’s my definition of placemaking.”<br />

PETER RUMMELL, DEVELOPER AND DOWNTOWN ADVOCATE (PAGE 32)<br />

SPRING <strong>2018</strong> | J MAGAZINE 13


J MAGAZINE’S<br />

PROGRESS REPORT<br />

DUVAL<br />

MONROE<br />

Monroe Lofts<br />

A 108-unit affordable-apartment<br />

project, approved by<br />

the DIA and Downtown<br />

Development Review Board.<br />

STATUS: May be completed by late<br />

Fall <strong>2018</strong>.<br />

Houston<br />

StREET<br />

Manor<br />

A senior<br />

affordable housing complex<br />

near the Courthouse.<br />

STATUS: Scheduled to be<br />

completed in late Summer<br />

<strong>2018</strong>.<br />

HEMMING<br />

PARK<br />

BEAVER<br />

ASHLEY<br />

CHURCH<br />

BROOKLYN<br />

PARK<br />

FOREST<br />

OAK<br />

N<br />

LAVILLA<br />

PRIME OSBORN<br />

CONVENTION<br />

CENTER<br />

BROOKLYN<br />

PARK<br />

FORSYTH<br />

MAY<br />

OAK<br />

HOUSTON<br />

MAGNOLIA<br />

UNITY<br />

PLAZA<br />

JACKSON<br />

RIVERSIDE<br />

ADAMS<br />

RIVERSIDE AVE.<br />

MAY<br />

BAY<br />

WATER<br />

MADISON<br />

JEFFERSON<br />

BROAD<br />

FLORIDA<br />

The TIMES-UNION LaVilla I complex is poised<br />

to open with full occupancy and<br />

a waiting list. There is also a second planned<br />

phase called Jefferson Station.<br />

STATUS: Lofts at LaVilla is open. Jefferson<br />

Station is seeking state funding.<br />

Burlock & Barrel Distillery<br />

A planned whiskey distillery and tasting room<br />

near Unity Plaza.<br />

STATUS: The developer is securing financing for<br />

the project. Construction date TBD.<br />

FULLER WARREN BRIDGE<br />

CLAY<br />

REGIONAL<br />

TRANSPORTATION<br />

CENTER<br />

The $57 million multi-modal<br />

hub across from Prime Osborn will<br />

centralize and coordinate local, regional<br />

and intercity transportation.<br />

STATUS: Phase I of the project — the<br />

Greyhound Bus terminal — is just about<br />

complete.<br />

Lofts at LaVilla &<br />

JEFFERSON STATION<br />

Vista Brooklyn<br />

A 10-story, 300-unit apartment<br />

tower in the growing Brooklyn<br />

neighborhood.<br />

STATUS: The developer is securing financing<br />

for the project. Construction date TBD.<br />

PEARL<br />

JULIA<br />

TIMES-UNION<br />

CENTER<br />

ACOSTA BRIDGE<br />

HOGAN<br />

LAURA<br />

JACKSONVILLE<br />

LANDING<br />

BOUTIQUE<br />

hOTEL<br />

Main Street LLC,<br />

developer of<br />

the parking building at Hogan<br />

and Independent Drive, is<br />

exercising an option to acquire<br />

an adjacent parcel and build a<br />

hotel with 100-150 rooms.<br />

STATUS: Seeking approval<br />

from City Council for the<br />

option agreement.<br />

MAIN<br />

MAIN STREET<br />

BRIDGE<br />

FRIENDSHIP<br />

FOUNTAIN<br />

RIVERPLACE<br />

SAN MARCO BLVD.<br />

MARY<br />

OCEAN


SPRINGFIELD<br />

Laura Street Trio &<br />

Barnett Bank Building<br />

A planned $79 million renovation of the<br />

iconic buildings into residences, offices,<br />

a hotel and commercial/retail uses..<br />

STATUS: Barnett Bank Building is under renovation.<br />

The Laura Street Trio is in the design stage.<br />

THE DORO<br />

DISTRICT<br />

Plans include a<br />

restaurant, bar<br />

and bowling and possibly a<br />

hotel or multifamily residential.<br />

STATUS: The developers<br />

are seeking funding for the<br />

project.<br />

The Shipyards<br />

Shad Khan’s plan for<br />

mixed-use redevelopment<br />

of the old Shipyards<br />

and Metropolitan Park has been<br />

backed by the Downtown Investment<br />

Authority.<br />

STATUS: The city and Khan are still<br />

working out specific details. The Lot<br />

J entertainment district will integrate<br />

into a larger project.<br />

NEWMAN<br />

MARKET<br />

LIBERTY<br />

WASHINGTON<br />

CATHERINE<br />

FSCJ student housing<br />

The project will have 20 apartments for<br />

58 students, and a café named 20West (as<br />

part of the school’s culinary program).<br />

STATUS: The retail space should be completed by<br />

early summer <strong>2018</strong>; the residential units should be<br />

completed by late summer <strong>2018</strong>.<br />

BAY<br />

PALMETTO<br />

MEMORIAL<br />

ARENA<br />

ADAMS<br />

A. PHILIP RANDOLPH<br />

BASEBALL<br />

GROUNDS<br />

GEORGIA<br />

FRANKLIN<br />

SPORTS COMPLEX<br />

EVERBANK<br />

FIELD<br />

DAILY’S<br />

PLACE<br />

NORTHBANK<br />

USS ADAMS<br />

The USS Charles F.<br />

Adams, a retired U. S.<br />

Navy guided-missile<br />

destroyer, will soon be anchored as<br />

a museum ship in the St. Johns.<br />

STATUS: The museum backers<br />

are waiting for the Navy to<br />

officially release the ship to them<br />

so it can begin to make its trek<br />

to Jacksonville from its current<br />

pierside location in Philadelphia.<br />

GATOR BOWL BLVD.<br />

METROPOLITAN<br />

PARK<br />

THE ENTERTAINMENT DISTRICT<br />

A potential Downtown entertainment complex<br />

in close proximity to EverBank Field, Veterans<br />

Memorial Arena, the Baseball Grounds and the<br />

Daily’s Place amphitheater.<br />

STATUS: Mayor Lenny Curry, Jaguars owner Shad Khan and<br />

Khan’s executive team have had preliminary talks. It would<br />

originate from Lot J, west of EverBank Field.<br />

FLAGLER<br />

JACKSONVILLE<br />

LANDING<br />

The city owns the<br />

Laura Street site,<br />

but it has leased it long-term to<br />

Sleiman Enterprises. The two sides<br />

have long sparred over its future.<br />

STATUS: The two sides are now<br />

in court over the property. Expect<br />

leadership from the mayor.<br />

PRUDENTIAL DR.<br />

KIPP<br />

HENDRICKS<br />

SAN MARCO<br />

KINGS<br />

S T . J O H N S R I V E R<br />

SOUTHBANK<br />

ONYX<br />

The San Marco apartments<br />

A $25 million development featuring a four—story building<br />

and 143 units of workforce housing.<br />

STATUS: Construction should begin by late <strong>Spring</strong>. <strong>2018</strong>.<br />

MONTANA<br />

BROADSTONE<br />

RIVER HOUSE<br />

This five- to-sixstory<br />

structure will<br />

have 263 apartments.<br />

STATUS: Scheduled to be<br />

completed by the end of Summer<br />

<strong>2018</strong>.<br />

The District<br />

Peter Rummell’s community<br />

concept will have up to 1,170<br />

residences, 200 hotel rooms,<br />

285,500 square feet of commercial/retail<br />

and 200,000 square feet of office space,<br />

with a marina.<br />

STATUS: The city is negotiating a redevelopment<br />

agreement for the project. Rummell<br />

and partners must come up with the<br />

$18 million to buy the property from JEA.<br />

DOWNTOWN<br />

JACKSONVILLE<br />

TRACKING DEVELOPMENT IN THE URBAN CORE<br />

SPRING <strong>2018</strong> | J MAGAZINE 15


POWER<br />

RATING DOWNTOWN<br />

By The Florida Times-Union Editorial Board<br />

Lofts and apartments popping up<br />

from LaVilla to the southbank<br />

5 5<br />

8<br />

4<br />

MIN<br />

MAX<br />

MIN<br />

MAX<br />

MIN<br />

MAX<br />

MIN<br />

MAX<br />

PUBLIC SAFETY<br />

LEADERSHIP<br />

HOUSING<br />

INVESTMENT<br />

Overall crime numbers are<br />

down from a year ago, but<br />

still too many auto burglaries.<br />

The “Downtown isn’t safe”<br />

perception is inaccurate,<br />

but it lingers.<br />

PREVIOUS: 5<br />

City leaders have shown a<br />

greater sense of urgency to<br />

make headway on projects<br />

like The District and get<br />

dormant properties like the<br />

courthouse/City Hall annex<br />

site on the market.<br />

PREVIOUS: 8<br />

The Lofts at LaVilla is open<br />

and others (including Houston<br />

Street Manor, Broadstone River<br />

House and Monroe Lofts) are<br />

in progress.<br />

PREVIOUS: 4<br />

More investors are showing<br />

interest in Downtown<br />

renovations and other projects.<br />

Businessman Jack Hanania, for<br />

example, has spent more than<br />

$2 million to purchase the<br />

Dyal-Upchurch building.<br />

PREVIOUS: 3<br />

3<br />

5<br />

3<br />

2<br />

MIN<br />

MAX<br />

MIN<br />

MAX<br />

MIN<br />

MAX<br />

MIN<br />

MAX<br />

DEVELOPMENT<br />

EVENTS & CULTURE<br />

TRANSPORTATION<br />

CONVENTION CENTER<br />

Still too little movement<br />

on too many vacant<br />

Downtown buildings.<br />

Why isn’t there action on the<br />

vacant JEA building at<br />

233 W. Duval St.?<br />

PREVIOUS: 3<br />

Downtown is holding its own<br />

as a popular draw for concerts,<br />

musicals and other shows. In the<br />

next few months you can see<br />

everything from James Taylor at<br />

Veterans Memorial Arena to the<br />

Foo Fighters at Metropolitan Park.<br />

PREVIOUS: 5<br />

JTA has finished Phase One<br />

of its $58 million regional<br />

transportation center project<br />

— and it has a test track in<br />

place to study the feasibility<br />

of driverless vehicles in<br />

the future.<br />

PREVIOUS: 3<br />

DIA got the go-ahead to request<br />

proposals from private investors<br />

for a possible convention center<br />

on the old courthouse/City Hall<br />

Annex riverfront parcel. If there’s<br />

no workable proposal, we need<br />

to tear down these eyesores.<br />

PREVIOUS: 2<br />

OVERALL RATING<br />

Lots of work has been done,<br />

and lots more has been planned. But<br />

we need a lot more work to get<br />

across the finish line.<br />

PREVIOUS: 4<br />

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10<br />

JEFF DAVIS<br />

16<br />

J MAGAZINE | SPRING <strong>2018</strong>


SITTING on six<br />

ACRES OF prime<br />

WATERFRONT<br />

property, THE<br />

JACKSONVILLE<br />

LANDING<br />

ARGUABLY<br />

SHOULD BE<br />

DOWNTOWN’S<br />

FOCAL POINT.<br />

a SHADOW<br />

OF WHAT WAS<br />

ENVISIONED<br />

WHEN IT WAS<br />

BUILT three<br />

decades AGO,<br />

WHEN WILL THE<br />

LANDING BE<br />

TRANSFORMED<br />

INTO THE<br />

CROWN JEWEL<br />

OF THE CORE?<br />

JAX CHAMBER DOWNTOWN COUNCIL<br />

CRASH


LANDING<br />

BY MARILYN YOUNG // FOR J MAGAZINE


In what was planned to be a thriving festival marketplace along the St. Johns River, the Jacksonville Landing has struggled to keep tenants since opening in 1987.<br />

Yes, the Jacksonville<br />

Landing is failing.<br />

That’s been obvious<br />

for years, even<br />

decades.<br />

The much-ballyhooed festival marketplace began to lose its luster<br />

just a few years after it opened in 1987, as stores moved out when their<br />

first leases expired, instead of renewing them.<br />

One-by-one, the big names like Sharper Image and Brookstone left.<br />

For many years, the Landing was able to lift up the rest of the urban<br />

core, said Oliver Barakat, who has been a member of the Downtown<br />

Investment Authority board since its 2013 inception. Now, a resurging<br />

Downtown is lifting up and leaving the Landing behind.<br />

“We need the Landing to at least keep up and not become the drag,”<br />

said Barakat, a senior vice president of CBRE, a commercial real estate<br />

services and investment firm.<br />

He said the Landing has become a negative not just for Downtown,<br />

but for the entire city. So much so that Barakat typically avoids showing<br />

his clients the mall, which is adjacent to the tower where CBRE is located.<br />

“I try to walk on to Bay Street and to the Cowford Chophouse or up<br />

Laura Street,” he said. “We don’t bring them to the Landing anymore.”<br />

The development on such a critical piece of Jacksonville’s riverfront<br />

is a mess that needs to be fixed. Letting it play out in court for years<br />

through dueling lawsuits between the city and Sleiman Enterprises may<br />

only benefit the lawyers being paid by taxpayers and the company.<br />

Even worse, it adds another delay in the redevelopment of the Landing<br />

property, as progress is being made all around it. From the Sports<br />

Complex to the Barnett Bank Building to LaVilla and Brooklyn — and<br />

many places in between.<br />

Plus, the DIA is seeking a developer for a convention center and hotel<br />

on the sites of the old courthouse and City Hall on Bay Street. A rejuvenated<br />

Landing could be a critical partner to that project.<br />

BOB SELF<br />

20<br />

J MAGAZINE | SPRING <strong>2018</strong>


‘‘<br />

‘‘<br />

“We need the Landing to at least keep up and not become the drag.”<br />

Oliver Barakat, Downtown Investment Authority board member<br />

FLORIDA TIMES-UNION<br />

Both sides in the Landing dispute — Sleiman and Mayor Lenny<br />

Curry — are passionate, committed and strong-willed, but the<br />

pressures from all directions are suggesting that now is the time for<br />

clenched-teeth mediation and compromise.<br />

FINGER POINTING<br />

It’s easy to try to blame Sleiman Enterprises and the city for the<br />

Landing’s deterioration over the years. But the failure was likely inevitable.<br />

The early desertion by stores and restaurants is an indication<br />

the concept was flawed from the beginning. The festival marketplace<br />

was built in an area with a sparse residential population,<br />

leaving only the Monday through Friday work crowd as its base.<br />

Retailers and restaurants can’t survive that way.<br />

City Council member John Crescimbeni agrees that the absence<br />

of a nearby residential base was a detriment to the Landing’s<br />

success. A lack of parking, he said, may have been a secondary<br />

contributor to its failure.<br />

Parking shouldn’t be a big problem based on the lack of visitors<br />

the Landing gets, outside of special events. A University of<br />

North Florida public opinion survey commissioned by J magazine<br />

showed 44 percent of local residents said they hadn’t been<br />

to the Landing in the past year, while 45 percent had been there<br />

only a couple of times. (See related story on page 26.)<br />

Count many of those interviewed for this story among those<br />

two categories. Council member Lori Boyer said she fits in the<br />

category of visiting a couple of times a year.<br />

“And the times were not to go to dinner there or go shopping<br />

there, which is the purpose really of the venue,” she said.<br />

Crescimbeni said he felt confident he hadn’t been this year<br />

and probably didn’t go there in 2017.<br />

Brian Hughes, chief of staff for Curry, said since 2012, the<br />

mayor has gone there only to attend one political event and<br />

several other times to see his daughters perform.<br />

Barakat said ideally the average Downtown worker should<br />

be going there twice a week and the average Jacksonville resident<br />

once or twice a month. His office is a stone’s throw away<br />

from the Landing, and he admits, “I might go once every<br />

three months.”<br />

Some of the festival marketplaces built elsewhere, like<br />

in Baltimore and Miami, are thriving. But they’ve been bolstered<br />

by extensive public investment or the nearby construction<br />

of facilities like AmericanAirlines Arena in Miami.<br />

But for years, as the Landing issue has languished, its<br />

operators have been alone in trying to attract visitors to a<br />

Downtown that basically closes up after work.<br />

FINDING SOLUTIONS<br />

Instead of focusing on the past, it’s more productive to<br />

concentrate on what the new Landing should be. Many<br />

concepts and visions have been shared since Sleiman<br />

bought it.<br />

The most recent came in 2015, when the DIA hired a<br />

consultant that proposed creating an opening from Laura<br />

Street through the middle of the building to the river — a concept that<br />

is still popular today.<br />

The mixed-use plan called for the construction of 300 apartments<br />

to help boost the stagnant residential population. But since then,<br />

the apartment dearth has been rectified by major developments<br />

in Brooklyn and LaVilla, with more planned Downtown and on the<br />

Southbank.<br />

CONTINUED ON PAGE 24<br />

During the week-long grand opening of the Jacksonville Landing in 1987, crowds packed the<br />

courtyard. When it opened, the Landing boasted dozens of retail stores and 18 restaurants.<br />

SPRING <strong>2018</strong> | J MAGAZINE 21


. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

. . . The . Sleiman . family’s . .<br />

One<br />

. .<br />

step<br />

. . . .<br />

forward,<br />

. . . . . . .<br />

ownership of the Jacksonville<br />

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

Landing since 2003 hasn’t<br />

. been . easy . for . them or . the city. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

. They’ve . . encountered . . mixed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

.<br />

support<br />

. .<br />

though<br />

.<br />

three<br />

.<br />

mayoral<br />

. .<br />

two<br />

. . .<br />

steps<br />

. . . .<br />

back<br />

. . . . . .<br />

administrations, which has<br />

.<br />

escalated<br />

. .<br />

over<br />

.<br />

an inability<br />

.<br />

to<br />

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

. . make . the riverfront . . mall . an . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

. iconic . Downtown . . landmark. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

. . . RESEARCH . . BY . MARILYN . . YOUNG . //. GRAPHIC . . BY JEFF . DAVIS . // . J MAgAZINE . . . . .<br />

. . . .<br />

Aug.<br />

.<br />

9,<br />

.<br />

2003. . . . . . . . . . Aug. . 15, 2003 . . .<br />

. . . . .“It’s . definitely . a risk. . I . am buying . it .(the Jacksonville . . . Landing) . . “You. know . how . .<br />

aggressive we are.<br />

. . . . and . it is . not even . making . . money. . But . with the . help . of my . . . I’m going . to go . sit in . .<br />

. . . . . brothers . and . mother, . we . are . going . to make . it happen.” . . . . their . headquarters, . . .<br />

Toney Sleiman<br />

and I have a mayor<br />

. . . . President . . of Sleiman . Enterprises . . . . . . . . .(John Peyton)<br />

.<br />

who’s<br />

. . .<br />

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . going to . go with . me.”<br />

Toney Sleiman<br />

. .<br />

. . 2003<br />

[About trying to recruit<br />

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

The Cheesecake Factory<br />

to the Landing]<br />

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

. . . . Nov. . 23, . 2003 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

. . . . “I don’t . think . there’s . any<br />

Aug. 16, 2003<br />

stomach here to jump from,<br />

‘Well, Rouse wasn’t doing a good<br />

. . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

. . . . . . . . “It’s . slowly . dying . down . here.<br />

. . . . . . . .<br />

. . . . job’ to . ‘Well, . the Sleimans . can.’” Business, I know, can be a<br />

whole lot better.”<br />

Susie Wiles<br />

. . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

Spokeswoman for<br />

Sonjii Peters<br />

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

Mayor John Peyton<br />

Manager of the Body<br />

Shop<br />

. . . . . . . . . and . accessories women’s clothing<br />

. store<br />

. . . . . Aug. . 23, . 2003. .<br />

May 17, 2004<br />

“We as a city have<br />

. “I’m. going to . keep pounding . . . . . . . . . . . . . done some . things . . .<br />

. . until I get . it done. . I promise . . . . . . . . . . . . that . did it (the . . .<br />

you, I’m going to get the<br />

Landing) a disservice.<br />

. Landing . done.” . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

Feb. 9, 2006<br />

We took the parking<br />

. . Toney . Sleiman . . . .“We’ve . had 17 . drafts . of this . redevelopment . . agreement . and . . . . . .<br />

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . away and . never<br />

have spent hundreds of thousands of dollars pursuing a path replaced it. We have<br />

. . .<br />

that we thought was acceptable to the administration. We got to be part of the<br />

. . Jan. . 28, 2006 . . . . had no . conversations . . prior to . Friday . which led . us to . believe ....<br />

. solution.” . . . .<br />

“It’s time to get this right.<br />

. . . . . . there . was . a change . in the . process.” . . . . . . Suzanne . Jenkins<br />

This is turning advocacy into<br />

. . .<br />

JACKSONVILLE CITY<br />

. . action and . getting . the private<br />

Mitchell Legler<br />

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

COUNCIL MEMBER<br />

Attorney for Jacksonville Landing Investments<br />

market to solve the problem<br />

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

[About Mayor John Peyton rescinding an offer to sell the land the Landing sits on]<br />

without public incentives.”<br />

. . Trip Stanly . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

Blackwater Capital<br />

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

. . managing . member<br />

[On the company’s offer to<br />

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

. buy . the Landing . from Sleiman]<br />

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

22 J MAGAZINE | SPRING <strong>2018</strong><br />

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .


. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

June 22, 2017<br />

June 25, 2017<br />

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

“I’m prepared to take the Landing ... I’m<br />

“We want this to work. The Sleimans are<br />

. . . . . . . . . . . willing . to compromise . . and work . with<br />

prepared for the city to have it and to begin in<br />

. . . . .<br />

other people, maybe somebody the mayor<br />

. . a very . public . way . determining . . what . its . best . .<br />

would<br />

.<br />

like<br />

.<br />

to see<br />

.<br />

in there.<br />

.<br />

The strong<br />

. . . . .<br />

. . and highest . . use is. . We’ve . got a . plan . internally . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

. . . . . . . . . . . preference . . is not . to walk . away from . what<br />

to put the screws and keep pushing this.”<br />

they’ve worked so hard to make work.”<br />

. . . .<br />

Lenny Curry<br />

MitchELL Legler<br />

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . <strong>2018</strong><br />

Nov. 1, 2016<br />

. . . .<br />

“The battles of the<br />

. . past . have . gotten . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

. .<br />

this city<br />

.<br />

stuck.<br />

.<br />

Do<br />

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

we have to do things<br />

July 24, 2015<br />

. . with . the . Jacksonville . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

“I will always encourage the most cost-effective plan<br />

. . Landing? . Absolutely . . . . . . with . the best . return . on investment . . for the . taxpayer, . and . . . .<br />

that’s an issue. But<br />

. . . . . . . . . .<br />

in the<br />

.<br />

case of<br />

.<br />

the Landing,<br />

.<br />

all<br />

.<br />

options<br />

.<br />

are on<br />

.<br />

the table.”<br />

I’m not going to get<br />

. . . .<br />

Lenny Curry<br />

. . stuck . in the . battle.” . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

. . . . . . . . . . JACKSONVILLE . . MAYOR<br />

Lenny Curry<br />

[After a Downtown Investment Authority workshop on the Landing]<br />

[Making it clear his vision for<br />

. . . . . . . .<br />

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

Downtown is not centered<br />

on the Landing]<br />

March 9, 2011<br />

. . . . . . . .<br />

“I am<br />

.<br />

struck<br />

.<br />

... that<br />

.<br />

the<br />

.<br />

City<br />

.<br />

Council<br />

.<br />

has<br />

.<br />

approved<br />

.<br />

the<br />

.<br />

expenditure<br />

. . .<br />

. . . . . . . of . more . funds . to acquire . . a surface . lot . than . Mr. Sleiman . . spent . in . .<br />

. . . . . . . . purchasing . . the entire . Jacksonville . . Landing . . just . eight years . ago.” . . .<br />

. . . . . . .<br />

John<br />

.<br />

Peyton<br />

. . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

[About his veto of the City Council’s decision to offer Sleiman $3.5 million toward<br />

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

a $5 million parking lot and $1.9 million to subsidize short-term parking operations]<br />

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

JAn. 16, 2014<br />

. .“Our goal . should . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

.<br />

be<br />

.<br />

to make<br />

.<br />

it<br />

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

iconic, to make<br />

Dec. 8, 2013<br />

. . sure it . becomes . a . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

. . . . . “When . I went . to see . the mayor . (Alvin . Brown), . the<br />

destination, to make response was unreal. I’ve never had that before.”<br />

. . . . . . . . .<br />

Toney Sleiman<br />

April 9, 2010<br />

sure it’s user-friendly.<br />

. . I want . people . to be . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

. . . . . [On his . meeting with . Mayor Alvin . Brown]<br />

. . . . . . . . “They’re . talking<br />

using the Landing<br />

semantics. The<br />

goal isn’t a parking<br />

. . .<br />

not just from 9 to<br />

. . . . . . . . March . 24, . 2006<br />

5, but seven days a<br />

. . . . . . garage. . The . goal isn’t . .<br />

“I could not be more pleased with the<br />

a floating barge with<br />

. week.” . . . . . .<br />

agreement.<br />

. .<br />

It’s been<br />

.<br />

challenging,<br />

. .<br />

but the<br />

. . . .<br />

cars on<br />

.<br />

it. The<br />

.<br />

goal<br />

. .<br />

Alvin Brown<br />

. .<br />

JACKSONVILLE<br />

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

. . . . . . . time . it took . delivered . a . better project.”<br />

John Peyton<br />

. . . . . is dedicated . parking<br />

for the Landing.”<br />

. . .<br />

MAYOR<br />

JACKSONVILLE MAYOR<br />

Richard Clark<br />

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br />

[About the agreement on parking for the Landing]<br />

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . JACKSONVILLE . . CITY<br />

COUNCIL MEMBER<br />

. .<br />

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . [About . Mayor . Peyton’s office]<br />

SOURCE: . .<br />

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Florida . Times-Union . archives<br />

. .<br />

SPRING <strong>2018</strong> | J MAGAZINE 23<br />

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .


In 2015, renderings of a reimagined Jacksonville Landing were shared with the public by the Downtown Investment Authority. Met with luke-warm reaction from the<br />

public, DIA said the design effort was aimed at creating an economically successful development as well as a night-and-day gathering spot for Downtown.<br />

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 21<br />

The UNF poll showed only 1.3 percent of those questioned believe<br />

apartments are the best use for the Landing site, compared to 24<br />

percent who supported restaurants and bars and 6 percent for retail<br />

stores. Oddly enough, 16 percent said to leave the site the way it is.<br />

There is strong support among Downtown stakeholders and officials<br />

for more public space on the site and more access to the St. Johns<br />

River.<br />

Boyer said the 2015 proposal’s public space plans “just didn’t get<br />

us there in terms of being special and iconic.” The plan also didn’t<br />

offer adequate setback from the river and an expanded Riverwalk.<br />

“I felt that while it was acceptable, acceptable is different than<br />

something that has energy<br />

and enthusiasm and support.<br />

Acceptable is different<br />

from something you become<br />

an advocate for,” Boyer<br />

said.<br />

Barakat said the project<br />

needs a mix of uses so it can<br />

become a 24-hour site. He<br />

believes the city would be<br />

challenged in filling up tens<br />

of thousands or hundreds<br />

of thousands of square feet<br />

of retail or office space and<br />

hundreds more residential<br />

units.<br />

Sleiman, who would not<br />

be interviewed for this story, sent a statement reiterating he has been<br />

waiting to redevelop the Landing since he bought it.<br />

He pointed out the company has spent $1.5 million for redevelopment<br />

plans to help get it there. The statement also touted that<br />

overall his company has developed more than $1.5 billion in commercial<br />

real estate.<br />

Perhaps the reason an agreement hasn’t been reached is as simple<br />

as something Boyer said: There’s no doubt Sleiman has been<br />

successful in building strip malls. But maybe that’s not what the city<br />

wants or needs at the Landing.<br />

“I think there is a certain hesitation as to whether, if we did enter<br />

into a partnership, are we going to get the kind of retail tenants,<br />

restaurant tenants that we really want to see there for our Downtown?”<br />

she said.<br />

Barakat said Sleiman<br />

could perhaps partner with<br />

a team or hire a consultant<br />

with experience in urban<br />

developments to build a<br />

unique offering that can’t be<br />

found anywhere in Jacksonville.<br />

He said if Sleiman is going<br />

to hold on to the Landing<br />

long-term, it would be nice<br />

to see some type of interim<br />

improvement there.<br />

“There are some relatively<br />

inexpensive retail concepts<br />

you can do that might<br />

Wakefield, Beasley and Associates and Urban Design Associates (2)<br />

24<br />

J MAGAZINE | SPRING <strong>2018</strong>


‘‘<br />

‘‘<br />

“If we did enter into a partnership, are we going to get the kind of retail tenants,<br />

restaurant tenants that we really want to see there for our Downtown?”<br />

LORI BOYER, JACKSONVILLE CITY COUNCIL MEMBER<br />

DON BURK<br />

justify a five-year concept while you negotiate and navigate the political<br />

lens in designing a larger, long-term project,” he said.<br />

Barakat said he would hate to see the status quo prevail, particularly<br />

during the current real estate cycle.<br />

“And then if we hit a downturn and it’s very difficult to justify any<br />

construction or any projects, then you’re waiting for the next economic<br />

recovery,” he said. “And then what you have across the<br />

street (at the Landing), you’ve got for another five to seven years.<br />

That would be really disappointing,”<br />

WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE?<br />

For now, though, the Landing remains as it is. A site that<br />

hasn’t been relevant for years and one that will likely stay that<br />

way for a long time if the disagreements are left to be decided in<br />

the court system.<br />

The city sued Jacksonville Landing Investments in 2015 over<br />

a parking garage issue and late last year, the company sued the<br />

city, accusing officials of abusing their power and undermining<br />

the mall.<br />

Dan Bean, a partner at Holland & Knight, said virtually every<br />

case goes to mediation. “It’s just a matter of when,” said<br />

Bean, who is not associated with the case.<br />

While the process isn’t binding, he said, it is valuable to<br />

hear a licensed mediator “poke holes in your case so you appreciate<br />

the risks you have.”<br />

It also gives clients the chance to hear from a voice other<br />

than their attorney.<br />

“Sometimes people don’t listen to their lawyers, or their<br />

lawyers are hesitant to tell them all the bad points because<br />

clients may think they don’t believe in the case,” Bean said.<br />

A mediator can speak directly to the client and describe<br />

best- and worst-case scenarios. He said 90 percent of cases<br />

are resolved through mediation.<br />

Bean said it typically takes a year for a case to make it to<br />

trial, depending on the types and number of pleadings filed,<br />

the level of discovery exchanged and the court docket, itself.<br />

The 2015 case was not typical, with a jury trial first being<br />

set for Feb. 12 of this year. It is now set for a non-jury trial on<br />

June 27. Bean believes, based on the docket, that the 2015<br />

case has gone through the confidential mediation process.<br />

A jury trial has been requested, but not scheduled in<br />

the 2017 case.<br />

Bean said litigation involving public agencies takes<br />

longer because the government automatically gets more<br />

time to respond to requests than non-government parties.<br />

Another way to delay a resolution on the Landing.<br />

That’s the last thing that’s needed after decades of failure<br />

and intransigence.<br />

The best way to resolve this is for the city to make a<br />

reasonable offer to buy out the Sleimans. The family then<br />

needs to accept it.<br />

Let’s do what’s best for the citizens of Jacksonville and turn this<br />

eyesore into the waterfront showplace the city deserves.<br />

Marilyn Young was an editor at The Florida Times-Union in<br />

1998-2013 and was editor of the Financial News & Daily Record<br />

in 2013-2017. She lives in northern St. Johns County.<br />

In 2005, the Jacksonville Landing was packed with boats as pre-game activities were<br />

under way before the kickoff of the annual Florida/Georgia football game.<br />

SPRING <strong>2018</strong> | J MAGAZINE 25


23+15+5+6+10+15+6+9 23+15+5+6+10+15+6+9<br />

J MAGAZINE SURVEY // THE JACKSONVILLE LANDING<br />

A ROUGH Landing<br />

OPINIONS ON<br />

THE LANDING<br />

LESS THAN<br />

GLOWING<br />

ABY MIKE CLARK<br />

GRAPHIC BY JEFF DAVIS<br />

J MAGAZINE<br />

t least once during every<br />

big football game<br />

at EverBank Field,<br />

the blimp camera<br />

will scan our city’s<br />

spectacular vistas,<br />

along the beach<br />

and up the St.<br />

Johns River, but inevitably<br />

will pause over that big, orange<br />

structure on the river<br />

in the heart of Downtown.<br />

To be honest, Jacksonville<br />

Landing looks a lot better to<br />

those TV audiences from afar<br />

than it does up close to people who<br />

live here.<br />

The Landing is iconic because of<br />

its location, right in the center of the<br />

Downtown riverfront. There is a spotlight<br />

of sorts on the Landing, which<br />

was used by the TV networks for the<br />

2005 Super Bowl in Jacksonville.<br />

CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE<br />

22.9%<br />

OTHER<br />

15%<br />

11+<br />

DON’T KNOW/<br />

NO ANSWER<br />

More/Better<br />

Restaurants<br />

10.4%<br />

WHAT<br />

WOULD NEED<br />

TO CHANGE<br />

at THE<br />

LANDING FOR<br />

YOU TO VISIT<br />

THERE?<br />

4.9% 6.2%<br />

TOO FAR<br />

AWAY<br />

WOULD<br />

NEVER GO<br />

THERE<br />

convenience<br />

AMENITIES<br />

More/Better<br />

ACTIVITIES<br />

& EVENTS<br />

9.5%<br />

6%<br />

10%<br />

15.1%<br />

More<br />

PARKING<br />

More/<br />

Better<br />

STORES<br />

QUALITY OF LIFE<br />

More<br />

SAFETY<br />

26<br />

J MAGAZINE | SPRING <strong>2018</strong>


J MAGAZINE SURVEY // THE JACKSONVILLE LANDING<br />

How satisfied are you<br />

with The Landing being<br />

a symbol of Downtown?<br />

VERY SATISFIED<br />

17.8%<br />

What is the best use<br />

for The LANDING SITE?<br />

29.5%<br />

24.4%<br />

16.3%<br />

6.9%<br />

6.6%<br />

6.4%<br />

4.8%<br />

3.8%<br />

1.3%<br />

SOMEWHAT<br />

SATISFIED<br />

33.1%<br />

SOMEWHAT<br />

DISSATISFIED<br />

22.7%<br />

VERY DISSATISFIED<br />

21.7%<br />

NO ANSWER<br />

4.8%<br />

Mixed Use<br />

RESTAURANTS<br />

& BARS<br />

LEAVE IT<br />

AS IT IS<br />

SOMETHING<br />

ELSE<br />

PARK<br />

RETAIL<br />

STORES<br />

DON’T KNOW/<br />

NO ANSWER<br />

MARINA<br />

APARTMENTS<br />

THE MOST COMMON WORD(S) USED TO<br />

DESCRIBE THE JACKSONVILLE LANDING:<br />

BORING/USELESS<br />

66.7%<br />

OF PEOPLE WHO LIVE<br />

DOWNTOWN AND<br />

HAVE VISITED THE<br />

LANDING FOUND<br />

IT TO BE “VERY<br />

UNENJOYABLE”<br />

HOW OFTEN In the PAST<br />

YEAR DID YOU VISIT THE<br />

JACKSONVILLE LANDING?<br />

7.1%<br />

ABOUT<br />

ONCE A<br />

MONTH<br />

2.1%<br />

WEEKLY<br />

1%<br />

DAILY<br />

42.6%<br />

OF PEOPLE BETWEEN<br />

35-46 BELIEVE THAT<br />

RESTAURANTS &<br />

BARS WOULD BE<br />

THE BEST USE FOR<br />

THE LANDING<br />

44%<br />

NEVER<br />

46%<br />

Of PEOPLE aged<br />

45-54 SAID THAT<br />

“safety” would<br />

need to improve<br />

if they were to<br />

visit The Landing<br />

45%<br />

A COUPLE<br />

OF TIMES<br />

A YEAR<br />

.8%<br />

NO ANSWER<br />

ABOUT THIS SURVEY:<br />

411 people in Duval County were<br />

surveyed in January <strong>2018</strong>. The<br />

survey was sponsored and funded<br />

by J <strong>Magazine</strong> & The Florida Times-<br />

Union and was conducted by the<br />

Public Opinion Research Lab at the<br />

University of North Florida.<br />

SPRING <strong>2018</strong> | J MAGAZINE 27


J MAGAZINE SURVEY // THE JACKSONVILLE LANDING<br />

Toney Sleiman says correctly that photos<br />

of the Landing often are used to illustrate<br />

Jacksonville. For those of us who know the<br />

real story, that has become a sad reality.<br />

It’s as if the front of a house on a Hollywood<br />

set, propped up by 2-by-4s.<br />

For most people in Jacksonville, our<br />

iconic riverfront feature is out of sight, out<br />

of mind.<br />

A new scientific poll conducted<br />

by the University of North<br />

Florida Public Opinion Research<br />

Laboratory for J <strong>Magazine</strong> and<br />

the Times-Union found that<br />

Jacksonville Landing is anything<br />

but an iconic spot for the vast<br />

majority of local people:<br />

• 44 percent of respondents<br />

never visited in the last year.<br />

• 45 percent visited just a couple<br />

times.<br />

That’s 9 of 10 Jacksonville residents<br />

who consider the Landing an afterthought,<br />

justifiably so.<br />

In fact, when asked to describe the Landing,<br />

the top phrases were these:<br />

• “Boring/Useless.”<br />

• “Old/Outdated.”<br />

The people who ought to be<br />

visiting the Landing, those who<br />

live Downtown, don’t even visit.<br />

Seventy-five percent of Downtown<br />

residents drop in just a few times a<br />

year and 25 percent of them never visit.<br />

Ouch. And to make it clear, these were<br />

answers to open-ended questions. The<br />

pollsters were not suggesting adjectives to<br />

the citizens.<br />

Of all the age groups, those 65 and older<br />

are most likely to say they never visit the<br />

Landing (67 percent of them). Yet, they probably<br />

visit the nearby Jacksonville Symphony<br />

Orchestra, other events at the T-U Center<br />

for Performing Arts or performances at the<br />

Florida Theatre.<br />

The age group most likely to view the<br />

Landing positively are those 18 to 24 (69<br />

percent).<br />

People living at the Beaches are most likely<br />

to never visit the Landing (64.1 percent).<br />

That’s no surprise, since old-timers remember<br />

the “blighted area” at Jacksonville Beach.<br />

Visitors tend to skew to the low end of the<br />

income spectrum. Respondents with annual<br />

incomes from $25,000 to $50,000 are most<br />

likely to have a “very enjoyable” visit at the<br />

Landing.<br />

For people who do visit, the experience<br />

rates as OK. The vast majority say their experience<br />

there was “somewhat enjoyable”<br />

or better. That is probably due to the fact<br />

that the Landing still hosts a great variety of<br />

FUN/COOL<br />

7.4%<br />

WHAT WORD WOULD<br />

YOU USE TO DESCRIBE<br />

THE LANDING?<br />

BORING/<br />

USELESS<br />

13.4%<br />

BARS/FOOD<br />

SHOPPING<br />

6%<br />

VIEW/RIVER<br />

8.2%<br />

OTHER WORDS<br />

MENTIONED: Downtown/<br />

Jacksonville/Landmark;<br />

Needs Improvement;<br />

Crowded/Traffic/<br />

Parking; Unsafe;<br />

Just Bad; Nice-looking/<br />

Aesthetic; Peaceful/<br />

Relaxing; Central/<br />

Convenient<br />

OLD/<br />

OUTDATED<br />

11.6%<br />

SOCIAL<br />

DIRTY<br />

4.6%<br />

5.6%<br />

free events, which attract people predisposed<br />

to enjoy them.<br />

In fairness to the Landing, there are<br />

plenty of events taking place there. In February<br />

alone, for instance, there were local<br />

bands every Sunday, Art Walk, bike night and<br />

EVENTS/<br />

ACTIVITIES<br />

9.2%<br />

National Dance Week Celebration.<br />

But as a destination itself? Jacksonville<br />

citizens confirm that it is well past its prime.<br />

When asked what they would like at<br />

the Landing, respondents don’t mention<br />

anything especially unusual. Restaurants and<br />

bars lead the list, and mixed uses come in<br />

next.<br />

People living Downtown are unanimous<br />

in saying that better activities are needed to<br />

bring them to the Landing, and 71 percent<br />

of nearby Riverside residents say the same.<br />

When the Landing was in its prime, it<br />

offered then cool national chain stores<br />

like the Sharper Image. Now that national<br />

chains are under pressure or going to the<br />

St. Johns Town Center, the shops there need<br />

to be unique, locally based. Think of the kind<br />

of shops inspired by One Spark.<br />

But the Landing still has<br />

a negative perception to<br />

overcome, like much of<br />

Downtown. Of those who<br />

never visit, the top issue<br />

listed is “more safety.”<br />

Better restaurants and more<br />

parking also are prominently<br />

mentioned.<br />

The current issue with the Landing<br />

is that the Sleimans, who have the lease<br />

to the city property, say they need to add<br />

apartments to make the property financially<br />

viable.<br />

But only 1.3 percent of respondents say<br />

that apartments represent the best use of<br />

the property. And that’s why the city and the<br />

Sleimans are at a standstill.<br />

About half of respondents are “somewhat<br />

satisfied” with the Landing being a<br />

symbol of Jacksonville’s Downtown. That’s<br />

probably because it looks fine from a<br />

blimp view. But residents know the icon<br />

is tired.<br />

Bottom line is that Jacksonville people<br />

expect to find a mixture of attractions at<br />

the Landing. It should be a place where<br />

people can visit, enjoy the sunshine and the<br />

river and have a good time, like the Riverside<br />

Arts Market on Saturdays. There ought<br />

to be special activities, too.<br />

Right now, it’s like a black eye. But it<br />

could be so much more.<br />

MIKE CLARK has been reporting and editing for<br />

The Florida Times-Union and Jacksonville Journal since<br />

1973. He has been editorial page editor for the last<br />

12 years following 15 years as reader advocate.<br />

28<br />

J MAGAZINE | SPRING <strong>2018</strong>


J PARTNER PROFILE<br />

By Barbara Gavan<br />

Eric Mann, CEO of the<br />

YMCA of Florida’s First Coast<br />

YMCA of Florida’s<br />

First Coast<br />

CEO sees Downtown on the cusp of great things<br />

hile living in Pittsburgh, Cincinnati and Charlotte,<br />

Eric Mann, president and CEO of the<br />

W<br />

YMCA of Florida’s First Coast, saw the major<br />

improvements those cities made to their Downtown<br />

cores. As a seven-year resident of Jacksonville,<br />

he now sees the same spirit and<br />

dedication here.<br />

“Jacksonville is on the cusp,” he said.<br />

“Mayor Curry has brought enthusiasm<br />

and excitement to Downtown revitalization,<br />

so the oars are rowing in the right<br />

direction. And we’re seeing proof that<br />

it’s on the right track. With our Winston Y, the DuPont<br />

Center, Brooklyn redevelopment, FSCJ’s housing, the<br />

Barnett Building and Laura Trio, people are beginning<br />

to believe in Downtown as the place to be.”<br />

Mann says that we now need more residences,<br />

more jobs and amenities to attract people Downtown.<br />

“But, we shouldn’t focus just on new things, but also<br />

on things that have been with us all along, like working<br />

with the homeless,” he said. “LaVilla improvement, the<br />

Clara White Mission, Sulzbacher Center — they’re all<br />

part of a strong Downtown and they illustrate that more<br />

support is needed. You can’t leave out<br />

one whole segment of the population; you<br />

have to work to ensure that all segments<br />

are part of a vibrant Downtown.”<br />

This year, the YMCA celebrates 110<br />

years in Jacksonville. Mann points out that<br />

the first Y was on Laura Street and has<br />

never left Downtown.<br />

“The new Winston Y has become a destination; 30<br />

percent of its 14,000 members live outside the Downtown<br />

community,” he said. “It brings them Downtown,<br />

where they see the new restaurants, entertainment<br />

venues, new FSCJ residences. They see how strong<br />

Downtown is becoming, and it encourages the entire<br />

community to be a part of it.”<br />

QUICK<br />

TAKES<br />

WORKING<br />

TOGETHER<br />

“I’ve been in<br />

Jacksonville nearly<br />

seven years<br />

and have seen<br />

Downtown change<br />

for the better. It<br />

is getting more<br />

positive attention<br />

from civic leaders,<br />

the business<br />

community and<br />

the municipality.<br />

There is definitely<br />

more and better<br />

coordination of<br />

effort.”<br />

YMCA IS A<br />

MICROCOSM<br />

“The new Winston<br />

Y is our most<br />

diverse branch in<br />

socio-economic<br />

status, ethnicity<br />

and age. At 10<br />

a.m., you can see<br />

people from all<br />

walks of life. This is<br />

what Jacksonville<br />

should be. The Y is<br />

a welcoming place<br />

for all.”<br />

FIRE IS LIT<br />

“I’ve lived in<br />

three cities that<br />

have seen their<br />

Downtowns<br />

revitalized. So, I<br />

know that we’ve<br />

got the fire going.<br />

The fire just needs<br />

a little more<br />

kindling to burn<br />

brighter right<br />

now.”<br />

BOB SELF<br />

30<br />

J MAGAZINE | SPRING <strong>2018</strong>


A rendering of what retail and residential<br />

activity at The District may look like when the<br />

“community living” development is completed<br />

along Downtown’s Southbank.


A SENSE OF<br />

PLACE<br />

AS DOWNTOWN REVITALIZATION GAINS TRACTION,<br />

INFUSING THE HUMAN EXPERIENCE INTO THE CORE<br />

COULD BE VITAL IN CREATING LONG-TERM SUCCESS<br />

BY FRANK DENTON // J MAGAZINE<br />

ILLUSTRATION BY ELKUS MANFREDI ARCHITECTS


Colorful lights illuminate Downtown Jacksonville near Monroe and Laura Streets during a recent First Wednesday Art Walk.<br />

ou can find your way<br />

to Downtown by looking for our striking skyline of tall,<br />

grand buildings, even from miles away over the St. Johns<br />

or from the interstate. But once you’re there, on the ground,<br />

about all you see are the bottoms of those tall, grand buildings<br />

and their parking lots. What people are there hustle from car to office<br />

and back to car, coming and going on those efficient one-way streets.<br />

It’s not really a concrete jungle, more a concrete mausoleum for the<br />

rich urban life that existed there for a century until sprawling suburbs<br />

sucked away the people and soulless malls seduced the stores.<br />

The current campaign to revitalize Downtown includes more grand<br />

buildings within a master plan and public-private partnerships and the<br />

politics of city subsidies and all that, but this time, the builders also need<br />

to think about the essential ingredient: people.<br />

J MAGAZINE | SPRING <strong>2018</strong><br />

DOWNTOWN VISION, INC.Y34


“[Placemaking is] a spectrum. On<br />

one end, just throw a chair out, and<br />

on the other end, a multi-faceted<br />

experience cluster of retail, outdoor<br />

dining, etc. ”<br />

Tony Allegretti, executive director of<br />

the Cultural Council of Greater Jacksonville<br />

After all, the “vital” in revitalization<br />

refers to life, having good energy, liveliness<br />

or force of personality. So revitalizing<br />

Downtown means repeopling it.<br />

Much of that will be residents, as apartments<br />

and condos are sprouting or being<br />

planned all around Downtown, toward<br />

the goal of a critical mass of 10,000 people.<br />

But it also must include people who<br />

come Downtown because it’s fun, interesting<br />

or comfortable, just to hang out,<br />

maybe lingering after their workday before<br />

beginning the trudge back out to the<br />

suburbs or the beach.<br />

There must be opportunity — and encouragement!<br />

— for people to take their<br />

kids to play in a riverfront park, watch the<br />

boats go by, marvel at the dramatic headon<br />

merger of the Atlantic Ocean and the<br />

St. Johns River and hope to see manatees<br />

or even dolphins.<br />

Everyone focused on revitalization<br />

must understand that what we are after is<br />

a Downtown that, rather than just being<br />

building-defined, is people-fueled.<br />

Placemaking is a relatively new concept<br />

that is the artful blending of physical,<br />

social, cultural and artistic forces to create<br />

a place, small or large, that is or becomes<br />

naturally vital for people.<br />

Without the benefit of new knowledge<br />

and thinking, Jacksonville over the years<br />

has inadvertently developed or allowed<br />

largely lifeless, and even negative, public<br />

spaces — but now it faces inspiring opportunities<br />

to create vital spaces in a new<br />

Downtown.<br />

“Public places are a stage for our public<br />

lives,” says the Project for Public Spaces, a<br />

non-profit that helps cities create and sustain<br />

such spaces to build community.<br />

“They are the parks where celebrations<br />

are held, where marathons end, where<br />

children learn the skills of a sport, where<br />

the seasons are marked and where cultures<br />

mix. They are the streets and sidewalks<br />

in front of homes and businesses<br />

where friends run into each other and<br />

where exchanges both social and economic<br />

take place.<br />

“They are the ‘front porches’ of our<br />

public institutions — city halls, libraries<br />

and post offices — where we interact with<br />

each other and with government.<br />

“When cities and neighborhoods have<br />

thriving public spaces, residents have a<br />

strong sense of community; conversely,<br />

when they are lacking, they may feel less<br />

connected to each other.”<br />

Placemaking can be happenstance<br />

or a sort of human engineering that can<br />

be used for an entire community or for a<br />

piece of a city block. “It’s a spectrum,” said<br />

Tony Allegretti, executive director of the<br />

Cultural Council of Greater Jacksonville.<br />

“On one end, just throw a chair out, and<br />

on the other end, a multi-faceted experience<br />

cluster of retail, outdoor dining, etc.<br />

I’m more grassroots: It’s not about infrastructure<br />

at all, just something that gets<br />

the community together.”<br />

Jake Gordon, CEO of Downtown Vision,<br />

offers a more structural definition:<br />

“To me, placemaking is a multi-faceted<br />

approach to the planning, design and<br />

management of public spaces. It capitalizes<br />

on a local community’s assets, inspiration<br />

and potential, with the intention of<br />

creating public spaces that promote people’s<br />

health, happiness and well-being.”<br />

When 140 Jacksonville leaders went on<br />

a fact-finding trip to Toronto in November,<br />

they heard Rob Spanier, a partner in<br />

an international real estate firm called<br />

LiveWorkLearnPlay, talk about creating<br />

“iconic and thriving” mixed-use neighborhoods<br />

where “people love visiting and<br />

wish they could live that life,” college and<br />

resort towns, for example.<br />

Spanier’s work, some of it for Tallahassee,<br />

focuses on placemaking for entire<br />

communities, built around strategizing<br />

to attract people and engage community.<br />

One approach is to actually compete with<br />

malls through innovations like “interactive<br />

retail,” pop-up shops and adventure<br />

experiences, “things to do, not just buy<br />

things.”<br />

“It’s happening everywhere,” he said,<br />

and “Jacksonville is perfect.”<br />

The Metropolitan Planning Council of<br />

Chicago issued a report saying that placemaking<br />

“almost always pays economic<br />

dividends back to the community” — attracting<br />

corporate relocations, supporting<br />

local stores and restaurants by building<br />

foot traffic, lifting nearby property values,<br />

encouraging tourism and ultimately generating<br />

tax income greater than the original<br />

investment.<br />

In its work with more than 1,000 public<br />

spaces, the Project for Public Spaces has<br />

identified four key qualities of successful<br />

spaces. They provide a useful way to understand<br />

Jacksonville’s past missteps and<br />

current opportunities:<br />

Access. People have to easily get to<br />

the space and around it, ideally via walking.<br />

Uses and activities. This means<br />

ongoing and unique things to do and buy,<br />

with a homegrown quality.<br />

SPRING <strong>2018</strong> | J MAGAZINE 35


“[Placemaking] capitalizes on a local<br />

community’s assets, inspiration and<br />

potential, with the intention of creating<br />

public spaces that promote people’s<br />

health, happiness and well-being.”<br />

Jake Gordon, CEO of Downtown Vision, Inc.<br />

Comfort and image. The community<br />

knows the space is safe, clean and<br />

“sittable.”<br />

Sociability. People expect to meet<br />

their friends and neighbors there — and<br />

feel comfortable interacting with strangers.<br />

Missed opportunities<br />

Jacksonville’s placemaking stumbles<br />

over the years have transgressed one or<br />

more of those qualities.<br />

When voters approved the $2.25 billion<br />

Better Jacksonville Plan in 2000, it was to<br />

build a number of major public buildings<br />

such as the main library, the Veterans<br />

Memorial Arena and the Courthouse specifically<br />

for their obvious functions — but<br />

without consideration of how they could<br />

become community spaces. Only the library’s<br />

facilities have drawn a community<br />

— and many people go there largely for free<br />

use of restrooms and internet access.<br />

“If you look at the Courthouse,” Gordon<br />

of Downtown Vision said, “no matter how<br />

great that building is inside, the outside<br />

is not interacting with the neighborhood<br />

around it. There’s that giant lawn that is not<br />

used at all — I always try to walk on it.”<br />

Consider the entire Sports Complex:<br />

The Arena, EverBank Field and the Baseball<br />

Grounds were conceived individually,<br />

to serve the obvious functions of containing<br />

large crowds for specific performances,<br />

without regard to the potential communities<br />

of interest and activity that could develop<br />

around and among them.<br />

Unity Plaza was an appealing part of<br />

the 220 Riverside apartment development<br />

in Brooklyn, with some planned activities<br />

and a good image. But it is easily accessible<br />

only to the adjacent apartment residents,<br />

and that has resulted in the failure of two<br />

of the three restaurants and a slow start for<br />

the Plaza.<br />

On the Southbank behind the Museum<br />

of Science and History, Friendship Fountain<br />

is beautiful, in a concrete-park setting,<br />

so the city’s description says: “Whether<br />

you are looking for a peaceful place for a<br />

picnic, or just want to watch the river flow<br />

by, Friendship Fountain provides the ideal<br />

setting for a sunny afternoon or a romantic<br />

evening Downtown.” But then it says:<br />

“Amenities: no. Pets: no. Parking: no. Security:<br />

no.” You ever been there? There are<br />

a few picnic tables under trees nearby, but<br />

mostly concrete.<br />

Then there’s The Jacksonville Landing,<br />

which temporarily provided some energy<br />

and excitement to Downtown when it<br />

opened 30 years ago as a “festival marketplace,”<br />

similar to those in other cities like<br />

Baltimore. But it couldn’t revitalize Downtown<br />

by itself in an era when city leaders<br />

weren’t as committed as they are today. Retailers<br />

began disappearing, and despite a<br />

full calendar of activities, the Landing fails<br />

the other three qualities. It’s the big orange<br />

elephant whose future will be determined<br />

in court or, if we’re lucky, sooner, over the<br />

negotiating table. (See story, page 18)<br />

learning and doing<br />

We have shown we can mount powerful<br />

events that build temporary communities:<br />

Super Bowl XXXIX in 2005 and One Spark<br />

are obvious examples.<br />

And we can do it periodically, as shown<br />

by the weekly Riverside Arts Market and<br />

monthly Art Walk.<br />

What is different now is that our more<br />

enlightened Downtown leadership is<br />

finding ways to humanize and warm up<br />

Downtown continuously and permanently<br />

across a range of ways, starting at the size<br />

of a parking space.<br />

Aundra Wallace, CEO of the Downtown<br />

Investment Authority, said placemaking<br />

as part of Downtown revitalization can be<br />

conscious and deliberate or just happen.<br />

“For us,” he said, “it’s a little bit of both.”<br />

So we’re seeing different types and<br />

scales of placemaking.<br />

One is “spin-off,” Wallace said, for example,<br />

as gathering spots cluster around<br />

the relatively new but established Elbow<br />

entertainment district.<br />

A second could be seen as “fill-in.”<br />

While the huge anchors of the Sports<br />

Complex are unconnected, they are close<br />

together, and now Mayor Lenny Curry and<br />

Jaguars owner Shad Khan are talking about<br />

developing an entertainment district to<br />

create synergy among them. While it might<br />

not fit a formal or rarefied definition of<br />

“placemaking,” it likely would be one heckuva<br />

party.<br />

Another type of placemaking might be<br />

considered evolutionary. Hemming Park<br />

was created in 1857 and has gone through<br />

a long and sometimes painful series of<br />

identities and functions as the city’s central<br />

park. Until the Friends of Hemming Park<br />

took it over three years ago, it had become<br />

a rundown gathering spot for transients<br />

drinking from paper bags and intimidating<br />

passersby.<br />

Using city appropriations and private<br />

grants, and despite some fits and starts,<br />

the Friends have spiffed up the park and<br />

hired private security to enforce park<br />

rules and made the place safe and comfortable.<br />

Take a look at the Friends of<br />

Hemming Park Facebook page to see to-<br />

36<br />

J MAGAZINE | SPRING <strong>2018</strong>


A rendering of the The District, a development proposed along Downtown’s Southbank. The project incorporates the St. Johns River into the living experience.<br />

ELKUS MANFREDI ARCHITECTS<br />

day’s events and food truck menus.<br />

“I think we’ve made tremendous progress,”<br />

said Bill Prescott, CEO of Friends.<br />

“People who use the park are abiding by<br />

the rules and it’s very welcoming to people.<br />

It’s a dramatic change.<br />

People who don’t come Downtown<br />

very often may find that hard to believe.<br />

Jake, when would you invite them to pop<br />

in and see for themselves? “Right now,” he<br />

said. “I would invite anyone today to come<br />

to the park for lunch. We have food trucks<br />

every (week)day. I think they’ll have a great<br />

time.<br />

“It’s a great feeling seeing the park being<br />

used. This is the heart of the city.”<br />

Wayne Wood, historian and a founder<br />

of several Downtown projects, including<br />

the Friends, said Hemming doesn’t just<br />

need people, it needs to create “synergy<br />

that brings people together. You need 10<br />

things around the park for people to do —<br />

music, performances, buy a hot dog, have<br />

a kids area.<br />

“Hemming Park won’t work unless<br />

you have 10 other things to do within a<br />

five-minute walk.”<br />

Downtown Vision, the non-profit funded<br />

by businesses to improve, maintain and<br />

promote Downtown, is trying to create<br />

such “places” in other, less obvious places<br />

through what CEO Gordon calls a “lighter,<br />

quicker, cheaper” approach, or LQC as it’s<br />

called in placemaking, he said.<br />

One is the idea of a parklet, a small,<br />

semi-permanent public park created by<br />

blocking off one or more parallel parking<br />

spaces. It could have tables and chairs, a<br />

bike rack or shade to allow people to relax<br />

and people-watch. The first one is on Adams<br />

Street in front of the Ed Ball building.<br />

Now, Downtown Vision is developing<br />

its LABS Fund, for “lively and beautiful<br />

sidewalks,” to make Downtown more<br />

walkable and enjoyable by adding a wide<br />

variety of amenities, in addition to parklets,<br />

such as sidewalk cafes, holiday decorations,<br />

pop-up events, shade canopies<br />

and landscaping.<br />

“From our standpoint,” Gordon said,<br />

“it’s these little interventions we can do<br />

Downtown that can make it more inviting.<br />

There’s so much it can be.”<br />

Two other approaches for humanizing<br />

Downtown are explored elsewhere in<br />

this issue of J. One is the idea, or perhaps<br />

only realization, that Downtown lacks, and<br />

seriously needs, a place for our youngest<br />

citizens to enjoy, a children’s park or playground.<br />

(See story, page 48.)<br />

Add those nodes together, add playgrounds<br />

and that’s placemaking on a<br />

grand scale.<br />

As you read or hear about the many<br />

projects and ideas proposed for our Downtown<br />

revitalization, look at them through<br />

your personal placemaking filter: Is that a<br />

place where I, and my family, might hang<br />

out, just for fun?<br />

Peter Rummell, the developer and<br />

Downtown advocate, interprets placemaking<br />

intuitively.“You know how you<br />

walk into some people’s living rooms, and<br />

you just want to sink into a chair and nurse<br />

your glass of wine? It just feels good. You<br />

don’t know why, but there is a warmth and<br />

comfort that is all too rare.<br />

“You go to other people’s houses, richer<br />

or poorer, and you can’t wait to move on.<br />

That’s my definition of placemaking ... as<br />

much art as science.<br />

“Buildings a certain height or color or<br />

finish or design might help, but it’s the mix<br />

of all of it that creates that feel. When you<br />

like a place and don’t know why, somebody<br />

succeeded!”<br />

Since Rummell, with Michael Munz, is<br />

SPRING <strong>2018</strong> | J MAGAZINE 37


developing The District, the former Southbank<br />

“Healthy Town,” how does he propose<br />

to create a “place” there?<br />

The District defines itself as “an entirely<br />

new approach in community living. It is a<br />

place where people can get the most out of<br />

life, mind, body and soul. Here, residents<br />

will have everything they need to live the<br />

most healthful of lives — and to feel truly<br />

alive. Healthier lives are, indeed, happier<br />

lives. And The District is designed from the<br />

ground up to provide every essential element<br />

for promoting fitness and for living<br />

the healthiest of lives.”<br />

Most of the riverfront is devoted to a<br />

park (with beach volleyball, bocce and<br />

outdoor billiards), and it’s integrated with<br />

first-floor retail and food and drink. “The<br />

marina is as much for placemaking as it is<br />

for boats,” Rummell said.<br />

“We put a bunch of these things together<br />

on a scale that makes sense, so there’s a<br />

‘there’ there.”<br />

The Times-Union said in an editorial:<br />

“It’s going to be focused on the St. Johns<br />

River, not as a backdrop, but as an invitation<br />

to the public to come on down.”<br />

This concept of placemaking offers the<br />

citizen a different way of evaluating the<br />

plethora of projects, public and private,<br />

that are being proposed or built as part of<br />

the revitalization of Downtown.<br />

Now, some people react to anything<br />

with the first questions being: Who’s paying<br />

for it? Is it tax money? Who’s making<br />

money off it?<br />

A more constructive question might<br />

be: What will this do to make our Downtown<br />

a real place?<br />

Frank Denton, editor of The Florida Times-Union<br />

from 2008-2016, is editor of J. He lives in Riverside.<br />

11 principles of placemaking<br />

TRANSFORMING public spaces into community places<br />

1. The community<br />

is the expert<br />

People who use a public space<br />

regularly provide the most valuable<br />

perspective and insights into how<br />

the area functions.<br />

2. You are<br />

creating a place,<br />

not a design<br />

Providing access and creating active<br />

uses, economic opportunities,<br />

and programming are often more<br />

important than design.<br />

4. They’ll always say,<br />

“It can’t be done”<br />

When an idea stretches beyond<br />

the reach of an organization and<br />

an official says, “It can’t be done,” it<br />

usually means: “We’ve never done<br />

things that way before.”<br />

6. Develop a vision<br />

A vision for a public space addresses<br />

its character, activities, uses and<br />

meaning in the community. It should<br />

be defined by the people who live<br />

or work in or near the space.<br />

8. Triangulate<br />

The concept of triangulation<br />

relates to locating elements next<br />

to each other in a way that fosters<br />

activity.<br />

9. Start with<br />

the petunias<br />

Simple, short-term actions such as<br />

planting flowers can be a way of<br />

testing ideas and encouraging people<br />

their ideas matter.<br />

3. You can’t<br />

do it alone<br />

A good public space requires<br />

partners who contribute innovative<br />

ideas, financial or political support<br />

and help plan activities.<br />

10. Money is<br />

not the issue<br />

Funds for pure public space<br />

improvements often are scarce, so it<br />

is important to remember the value<br />

of the public space itself to potential<br />

partners and search for creative<br />

solutions.<br />

5. You can see a lot<br />

just by observing<br />

People will often go to<br />

extraordinary lengths to adapt a<br />

place to suit their needs. Observing<br />

a space allows you to learn how the<br />

space is used.<br />

7. Form supports<br />

function<br />

Too often, people think about how<br />

they will use a space only after it is<br />

built. Keeping in mind active uses<br />

when designing or rehabilitating a<br />

space can lower costs.<br />

11. You are<br />

never finished<br />

Because the use of good places<br />

changes daily, weekly and seasonally,<br />

about 80 percent of the success of<br />

any public space can be attributed<br />

to its management.<br />

SOURCE: Project for Public Spaces<br />

JEFF DAVIS<br />

38<br />

J MAGAZINE | SPRING <strong>2018</strong>


HOW CREATING MORE GREEN SPACE CAN ATTRACT PEOPLE<br />

TO JACKSONVILLE’S URBAN CORE, BE GOOD FOR BUSINESS<br />

AND BE GREAT FOR THE ENVIRONMENT<br />

TRANSFORMING DOWNTOWN:<br />

GOING GREEN<br />

BY LILLA ROSS // SPECIAL TO J MAGAZINE<br />

ILLUSTRATION BY RETRO ROCKET


ONE<br />

challenge facing the redevelopment of<br />

Downtown Jacksonville is its size — 2.7<br />

square miles. Another is people’s attitudes.<br />

For a variety of reasons, it’s not a<br />

place they want to be.<br />

Could trees and green space be the<br />

tie that pulls the disparate parts of the<br />

urban core together and not only give<br />

Downtown a sense of place but make<br />

it a place for the senses?<br />

“Green space needs to be the centerpiece<br />

of the city,” said landscape architect<br />

Buck Pittman. “It’s what makes<br />

Downtown great. New York City has<br />

Central Park but it also has so many little<br />

parks. They fit in between buildings.<br />

They help make the city livable, attractive,<br />

memorable.<br />

Think of Paris, considered the tree<br />

capital of the world with its boulevards<br />

lined with London plane trees. Or, the<br />

moss-draped oaks of Savannah, planted<br />

to give the city shade in the summer.<br />

The oaks give shade a plenty but also<br />

have shaped the city’s identity.<br />

“It’s the trees that make the space<br />

more than anything else,” Pittman


One of the few places in Downtown where you can enjoy a lush tree canopy — one with towering oak trees providing lots of shade — is in Hemming Park.<br />

said. “It has a lot to do with rhythm and<br />

spacing.”<br />

When trees are in parks, they become a<br />

place of the senses. Think of Central Park in<br />

New York, Golden Gate Park in San Francisco<br />

and Prospect Park in Brooklyn.<br />

But parks don’t have to be big or conventional.<br />

Consider Boston’s Post Office<br />

Square in the financial district. It’s 1.7 acres<br />

of green space on top of an underground<br />

parking garage. The park’s motto: “Park<br />

above, park below.”<br />

Parks work best when they have an<br />

identity, said Erik Aulestia of urban planners<br />

Torti Gallas that developed the Cathedral<br />

District master plan. And, parks can<br />

take on all kinds of identities:<br />

• Playgrounds for children, adults and<br />

dogs<br />

• Activities like ping pong, chess or basketball<br />

• Gardens for native plants, butterflies,<br />

cactus or roses<br />

• Public art and street musicians<br />

• Water features like a splash fountain, a<br />

water wall or a sailboat pond.<br />

Those are the kinds of parks that people<br />

“go to” and where they linger.<br />

The parks of Downtown<br />

Downtown Jacksonville doesn’t really<br />

have any go-to parks.<br />

Hemming Park: The city’s oldest<br />

park long ago was the village green. It was<br />

bricked over in the 1970s when the trees<br />

were removed after an invasion of starlings.<br />

About half the plaza is shaded by<br />

laurel oaks. People use the park — notably<br />

for the monthly Art Walk — but no one<br />

seems very happy with it, except, perhaps<br />

the street people who spend the day there.<br />

Bill Prescott, president of the Friends of<br />

Hemming Park, said they are working to<br />

enhance the greenery in the park, though<br />

it is difficult with the hardscape. Artificial<br />

turf was installed in the Kids’ Zone. And<br />

uplighting has recently been added.<br />

The focus now is making the park “clean<br />

and safe,” that’s code for dealing with the<br />

street people. Downtown Vision is leading<br />

the “clean and safe” campaign with<br />

a corps of orange-shirted ambassadors,<br />

who are tasked with picking up trash,<br />

identifying problems, such as things in<br />

need of repair or suspicious behavior,<br />

and being a friendly, welcoming presence<br />

in Downtown. The new city budget expands<br />

the ambassador corps and adds a<br />

social worker who will help connect street<br />

people with services and optimally move<br />

them out of the public eye.<br />

The Riverwalks: The city is promoting<br />

the walkways on the Northbank<br />

and Southbank as park space, which is a<br />

bit of a stretch. City Councilwoman Lori<br />

Boyer is developing a plan for about a<br />

dozen pocket parks and activity zones at<br />

access points along the Riverwalks. The<br />

goal is to help people connect with transportation,<br />

with the river and the city’s history.<br />

BOB MACK<br />

42<br />

J MAGAZINE | SPRING <strong>2018</strong>


THE ASSOCIATED PRESS (3)<br />

Boyer also would like to incorporate<br />

Friendship Fountain, due to be renovated<br />

in <strong>2018</strong>, the Times-Union Center for<br />

Performing Arts, across the river, and the<br />

Acosta and Main street bridges as the venue<br />

for a light and music show that would<br />

draw people to the riverfront on a regular<br />

basis.<br />

Metropolitan Park: The 32 riverfront<br />

acres near the sports complex are<br />

underutilized as public space. The park<br />

is more an event venue than a place for<br />

a picnic lunch or a game of Frisbee. And<br />

now that the stage is essentially gone and<br />

Daily’s Place is the new hot venue, the future<br />

of the park is in question.<br />

The property is being looked at for<br />

possible redevelopment, maybe by Shad<br />

Khan. But if it is, comparable public park<br />

space would have to be found elsewhere<br />

to satisfy a clause in the federal grant that<br />

was used to develop the park in the 1980s<br />

— the Shipyards has been floated as a possibility.<br />

But there are other parks Downtown<br />

that aren’t on anyone’s radar. Have you<br />

ever heard of Jesse B. Smith Memorial<br />

Plaza, Main Street Park or Cathedral Park?<br />

Jessie B. Smith Plaza is a pocket<br />

park on Forsyth Street across from Florida<br />

Theatre. Main Street Park is a<br />

terraced park behind MOCA. It’s a greenspace<br />

that lacks identity.<br />

And, Cathedral Park, Downtown’s<br />

newest park, is a small arc of green<br />

space in front of St. John’s Cathedral. It is<br />

nicely landscaped and up lit but not big<br />

enough for planned activities.<br />

And then there’s the Emerald Necklace.<br />

Groundwork Jacksonville plans to<br />

develop the 11-mile pedestrian greenway<br />

along Hogans Creek and the S-Line Rail<br />

Trail to link the Northbank Riverwalk,<br />

<strong>Spring</strong>field and Riverside. But it is early<br />

days in the project, which could take a decade<br />

to complete.<br />

Trees as infrastructure<br />

The Emerald Necklace project also<br />

highlights another role that greenspace<br />

plays in an urban environment. Trees are<br />

part of the public works infrastructure.<br />

They are air purifiers and storm water<br />

managers. They also lower the temperature<br />

in heat islands, paved areas like much<br />

of Downtown.<br />

Kay Ehas, executive director of Groundwork<br />

Jacksonville, said she hopes Jacksonville<br />

starts thinking more about its green<br />

infrastructure.<br />

NEW YORK CITY // CENTRAL PARK<br />

BOSTON // POST OFFICE SQUARE<br />

SAN FRANCISCO // Golden Gate Park<br />

SPRING <strong>2018</strong> | J MAGAZINE 43


Opened in July 1996, the Jessie B. Smith Plaza is an often overlooked pocket park on Forsyth Street across from Florida Theatre.<br />

“Hurricane Irma showed us how vulnerable<br />

Downtown is to flooding,” Ehas<br />

said. “We need to think about how we<br />

can mitigate that, especially along the river.<br />

Green infrastructure uses vegetation,<br />

soils, and other elements and practices<br />

to restore some of the natural processes<br />

required to manage water and create<br />

healthier urban environments.”<br />

Things like grassy areas, bio swales<br />

and permeable pavement can capture<br />

and filter storm water, which is especially<br />

important in Downtown Jacksonville<br />

because anything that goes into a street<br />

drain goes straight in the St. Johns River. A<br />

2002 study found that for every dollar the<br />

city spends maintaining its trees, it saves<br />

$4.60 in storm water management.<br />

The time is right<br />

And the timing couldn’t be better because<br />

the city now has some new tools:<br />

a citywide survey of the tree canopy and<br />

$20 million awaiting disbursement in the<br />

city tree mitigation fund.<br />

The tree canopy survey was a project<br />

of Greenscape and Public Trust Environmental<br />

Legal Institute of Florida and<br />

funded with $103,000 from the city Environmental<br />

Protection Board. (To see the<br />

database and planning tools, go to jaxdigstrees.org.)<br />

Plan-It Geo surveyed Duval County’s<br />

tree canopy last summer with geospatial<br />

technology that analyzed data from an<br />

aerial perspective. John November, executive<br />

director of Public Trust, said the<br />

canopy survey gives the city a baseline so<br />

that it can make strategic decisions about<br />

where to plant trees — like Downtown.<br />

The survey shows that trees make up<br />

only 11 percent of Downtown, which includes<br />

the Southbank. But it shows that<br />

there’s space to increase the canopy by 18<br />

percent.<br />

The JaxDigsTrees database also has a<br />

planning tool that allows a user to try out<br />

different size trees, play with placement<br />

and spacing and analyze the potential<br />

economic and environmental benefits.<br />

“You can say, I want six bald cypress<br />

here and six oaks there and draw them<br />

on the map with GPS coordinates so<br />

work crews could go plant them exactly<br />

where you want them,” November said.<br />

“Then send the data to JEA to make sure<br />

it’s consistent with underground utilities.<br />

You not only can plan a project, you now<br />

have an inventory and that will help the<br />

city schedule maintenance.”<br />

One group that will be making a lot of<br />

use of JaxDigsTrees.org is the new Tree<br />

Commission that started work in January.<br />

The seven-member commission will<br />

make recommendations to the city about<br />

the best places to plant trees.<br />

The commission was part of a settlement<br />

of a suit Public Trust filed in 2015<br />

against the way the city’s use of the Tree<br />

Mitigation Trust Fund established in<br />

2000 by charter amendment. Developers<br />

pay into the fund when they cut down<br />

trees and the money is supposed to be<br />

used to mitigate the loss by paying for<br />

new trees to be planted on public property<br />

elsewhere in the county.<br />

The fund has grown to $20 million, and<br />

BOB SELF<br />

44<br />

J MAGAZINE | SPRING <strong>2018</strong>


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that money will be used to replace trees on public property lost<br />

to development, storms and disease, November said.<br />

The funds also can be used to add new trees — Downtown.<br />

Figuring out what to do<br />

So, there’s money and expertise available, but what sorts of<br />

things could be done?<br />

The Late Bloomers Garden Club is advocating for a master plan<br />

for what it calls the Core District, stretching from City Hall to the<br />

river and bounded by Hogan and Laura streets. The vision includes<br />

a revamped Hemming Park and “a landmark public park on the<br />

riverfront central to Downtown.” And with the city contemplating<br />

moving Metropolitan Park, the Late Bloomers’ idea has possibilities.<br />

Erik Aulestia, the Cathedral District master planner, suggests<br />

that some of the countless parking lots scattered across Downtown<br />

could be turned into park space. He also recommended trees<br />

and landscaping along streets, which would give residential areas<br />

Downtown a “homey” feel.<br />

Buck Pittman, the landscape architect, would start with the<br />

streetscape.<br />

“You have to build from outside in,” he said. “There needs to be a<br />

committed effort. That’s what it’s going to take to make spaces green<br />

and attractive to walk through and to attract businesses.<br />

“You need some private incentives, too. That would encourage<br />

private property owners to do more landscaping their own property.”<br />

He likes what Greenville, S.C., did. They converted their streets<br />

to two-way, which slows down traffic and opens up more space to<br />

widen sideways and allow more trees.<br />

Larry Figart, urban forestry agent for Duval County Extension,<br />

would like to see an urban forest master plan.<br />

“Cities that have dynamic urban forestry programs treat trees<br />

as part of the infrastructure, just like sewers and sidewalks. When<br />

something gets redeveloped, trees are part of that, not an afterthought.”<br />

He’s a big advocate of planting the right tree in the right place,<br />

considering factors like how big the tree grows, how long it lives and<br />

how much sun and water it needs.<br />

That hasn’t been happening in Downtown, Figart said, judging<br />

from the live oaks and date palms planted in the street scape.<br />

The date palms, which you’ll see along Riverside and Bay streets,<br />

are meant to be grown in hot, dry climates like Southern California.<br />

They’re pretty trees but palms native to Florida would be a better<br />

choice. But Figart doesn’t think palms are a good choice because<br />

they are expensive, high-maintenance trees.<br />

Live oaks grow into huge trees — like the Treaty Oak — with<br />

sprawling root systems. But in Downtown Jacksonville, they are<br />

planted in curbside pits that don’t allow for proper growth. Savannah’s<br />

streetscape gives their oaks the space they need.<br />

Whatever trees are chosen for Downtown, they must be tough.<br />

Urban cores are inhospitable places for trees — roads, sidewalks<br />

and underground utilities that restrict water, air flow and root<br />

growth. Over time tree roots can do serious damage to underground<br />

pipes.<br />

One way to provide more trees Downtown is with parks, which<br />

allow for groupings of trees, as well as bigger, shade-producing<br />

trees, Figart said.<br />

Chris Daily, horticultural director at the Jacksonville Zoo and<br />

Gardens, said the critical factor to any green space plan is maintenance.<br />

Daily is advising Boyer on the pocket parks along the Riverwalk.<br />

“You can spend thousands of dollars on the plants and the design<br />

but if you don’t take care of it, what’s the point,” he said. “It<br />

takes people with the right mindset. You can’t mow and blow. It’s a<br />

hands-on job and you need a certain level of knowledge.”<br />

The zoo has 14 horticulturists on staff and every garden has a<br />

horticulturist assigned to it who monitors the space daily. In addition<br />

to the needs of the plants, they deal with trash, vandalism and<br />

damage inflicted by throngs of people.<br />

He also recommends spending the money to buy healthy, wellformed<br />

trees. “If they’re cheap, they’re cheap for a reason,” Daily<br />

said. “If they’re poorly grown, root bound or have structural issues,<br />

they’re not going to last.”<br />

Having a plan<br />

Trees and green space are an important part of the redevelopment<br />

of Downtown. They can help shape its identity, improve its<br />

environment and a catalyst for investment.<br />

But the green space needs to be done with forethought. There<br />

needs to be a plan, a big picture of a chain of parks from the riverfront,<br />

through Downtown linking the various Downtown district<br />

from the riverfront to the Emerald Necklace.<br />

It’s a critical piece of making Downtown a welcoming place and<br />

give people another reason to come Downtown to live, work and play.<br />

Lilla Ross is a freelance writer in Jacksonville. She worked for The Florida Times-<br />

Union for more than 30 years as a writer and editor. She lives in San Marco.<br />

SPRING <strong>2018</strong> | J MAGAZINE 47


PLAY STATIONS<br />

BUILDING A DESTINATION playground IN JACKSONVILLE’S URBAN<br />

CORE could make THE AREA MORE APPEALING & FAMILY FRIENDLY


BY PAULA HORVATH // J MAGAZINE<br />

ILLUSTRATION BY Grkatz<br />

Once upon a time<br />

there was a magical kids’ space nestled beneath<br />

the steel girders of the Hart Bridge<br />

ramp. For years, the unique play place attracted<br />

droves of children to zip around the imaginary roads, passing by the rows of small plastic<br />

houses and splashing in the water features that filled 10 acres near the St. Johns River.<br />

Kids Kampus was certainly one of the top destinations in Jacksonville for people with children. Residents<br />

and visitors alike converged on Metropolitan Park on weekends and after-school weekdays and


KIDS KAMPUS AT METROPOLITAN PARK // 2000-10<br />

FLOIRIDA TIMES-UNION (9)<br />

50<br />

J MAGAZINE | SPRING <strong>2018</strong>


schools sent busloads of children there regularly.<br />

The park was touted on both local and tourism<br />

websites as a special place for parents to take<br />

their broods. It not only taught children important<br />

safety lessons, it taught them about the nearby<br />

river with its water-based activities.<br />

“It was centered around education, safety for<br />

children and good old fun,” remembers Elaine<br />

Brown, one of the founders of Kids Kampus in<br />

2000 and now the mayor of Neptune Beach. “On<br />

any given Saturday, there were just crowds and<br />

crowds of people.”<br />

Jeneen Sanders, the assistant to Jacksonville<br />

City Council President Anna Lopez Brosche, says<br />

she took her daughter to the playground for six<br />

years straight to celebrate her birthday.<br />

“Kids Kampus connected to the park and had<br />

a beautiful access to the water. Their eyes were as<br />

big as saucers seeing the water,” Sanders remembers.<br />

“It was like a little city. There was a police<br />

station, a post office and more. I had everything I<br />

needed there for them to enjoy her birthday with<br />

friends.”<br />

But then the playground grew older, maintenance<br />

costs mounted and pressure to use the<br />

land for other purposes forced the playground’s<br />

closure and eventual razing in 2010.<br />

What had been a destination — a unique<br />

gathering spot for kids and their parents — was<br />

suddenly no more. Its “clientele” drifted away to<br />

other parks and playgrounds. There was little in<br />

terms of play to draw them Downtown anymore,<br />

so they simply stayed away.<br />

Sure some smaller playgrounds remained, including<br />

the little one near old City Cemetery, but<br />

it seems there was little thought given to ways<br />

to attract families to the urban core. While the<br />

library was still an attractive reason for families<br />

to travel Downtown, it was in competition with a<br />

host of neighborhood libraries that, while smaller,<br />

were much closer to home. A riverwalk invited<br />

people to walk its length but there was little<br />

special for children.<br />

MOre recently Hemming Park has<br />

mounted programs to attract families Downtown,<br />

but marginally. It does offer a small kids space<br />

where children can play and plans occasional programming<br />

to attract them, but its focus is generally<br />

on an older audience. In addition, the homeless<br />

men and women who congregate there make it<br />

feel less-than-safe for worried parents.<br />

Creating play spaces Downtown hasn’t even<br />

been considered much, says Brosche. There<br />

were discussions once, headed by Councilman<br />

Bill Guilliford, to create a skate park in the urban<br />

core, but those have dissolved. There was also a<br />

passing proposal to erect a carousel somewhere<br />

in Downtown, but that died.<br />

Now? Nothing.<br />

“I don’t think we’ve even talked about it since<br />

“When we<br />

did have a<br />

destination<br />

park for kids<br />

and families<br />

downtown it<br />

worked.<br />

Now, I have<br />

to admit, it<br />

doesn’t even<br />

cross my mind<br />

to bring my<br />

kids to a park<br />

in Downtown.”<br />

Anna Lopez<br />

Brosche<br />

Jacksonville City<br />

Council President<br />

I’ve been here,” Brosche says of her City Council<br />

tenure. But with three children of her own,<br />

the Council president says she remembers the<br />

success of Kids Kampus. “When we did have<br />

a destination park for kids and families downtown<br />

it worked. Now, I have to admit, it doesn’t<br />

even cross my mind to bring my kids to a park in<br />

Downtown.”<br />

That’s because there really isn’t much in Jacksonville’s<br />

urban core — certainly not a destination<br />

the likes of Kids Kampus.<br />

“It is a missing component Downtown,” admits<br />

Christina Parrish Stone, director of programming<br />

at Hemming Park. “I know there are<br />

a lot of kids Downtown who don’t have great access<br />

to parks. There is no city park in Downtown<br />

proper that has children’s activities and children’s<br />

play equipment.”<br />

And that’s precisely the problem faced by<br />

many cities, according to Ethan Kent, senior vice<br />

president of the Project for Public Spaces. Many<br />

cities, especially in their urban cores, have ignored<br />

the needs of their youngest constituents<br />

and families for way too long.<br />

“We find that children and families in many<br />

ways have been designed out of many downtowns,”<br />

he says. “Yet play and activities for children<br />

are core to many great public spaces. And<br />

playgrounds are particularly good ways to bridge<br />

differences and bring people together.”<br />

Not only do they provide safe spaces for kids<br />

and adults from various segments of society to<br />

mix, the incorporation of playgrounds into urban<br />

areas makes those sometimes-imposing concrete<br />

jungles friendlier and more compelling. The<br />

presence of families and children within a city’s<br />

downtown makes it appealing and attractive for<br />

everyone. After all, Kent says, who doesn’t smile<br />

at the sound of a child’s laugh or the endearing<br />

sight of youngsters swinging on monkey bars?<br />

“There’s an idea out there that deals with<br />

spaces being ‘loveable.’ It’s called ‘place attachment,’<br />

Kent says. “When people are attached to a<br />

place it’s because it’s more open, more engaging<br />

and more aesthetic. And having children downtown<br />

makes it more attractive.”<br />

When that occurs, not only do families benefit,<br />

so does the city in general.<br />

“When there’s greater place attachment<br />

there’s greater entrepreneurship,” Kent says.<br />

“Place attachment is tied to economic growth.”<br />

That attachment creates a positive bond that<br />

colors not only how people feel about their work<br />

endeavors, but also how they focus their personal<br />

endeavors. People attached to their communities<br />

are more willing to engage in activities and projects<br />

that will result in improvements. And cities<br />

need people plugged in to their environment to<br />

succeed.<br />

Having urban spaces for child’s play is also<br />

essential for the retention of college-aged mil-<br />

SPRING <strong>2018</strong> | J MAGAZINE 51


lennials who may choose to live in the urban core<br />

before having children, but decide to relocate<br />

to the suburbs as their families grow. That trend<br />

has only been accelerating. The exodus of young<br />

families from city centers saps these areas of their<br />

vibrancy and stability.<br />

Instead, cities — Jacksonville included — must<br />

take a more proactive approach to attracting and<br />

retaining families within their urban cores. That<br />

means, in particular, designing housing that can<br />

accommodate families, not simply studios and<br />

one-bedroom apartments. It also means creating<br />

spaces that families can enjoy together — including<br />

playgrounds.<br />

In downtown Detroit, basketball and sand volleyball<br />

courts fill a street at Campus Martius park.<br />

“In Detroit<br />

they even<br />

closed a street<br />

and put in<br />

basketball<br />

courts, foosball<br />

tables and<br />

things like<br />

that. Toronto<br />

took a road<br />

median and<br />

put swing sets<br />

in the middle<br />

of it.”<br />

ENNIS DAVIS<br />

URBAN PLANNER<br />

+ DEVELOPER<br />

Around the world, cities are actively working<br />

to add play spaces to their urban architecture.<br />

Urban95, for example, a project of the Bernard<br />

van Leer Foundation, is challenging communities<br />

to re-create themselves in ways that<br />

will promote positive child development. The<br />

initiative is funding various innovations in cities<br />

globally, including creating spaces for children<br />

to play and explore nature.<br />

Urban planners and architects are also rethinking<br />

what child-friendly cities should look<br />

like. It’s led to a renewed sense of what an urban<br />

play area should be. What they’ve come up with is<br />

something entirely novel.<br />

“Various cities are going back and just redeveloping<br />

the public spaces they have to be more<br />

interactive,” says Ennis Davis, an urban planner<br />

and developer who lives in the city. “Jacksonville<br />

should be marketing the Downtown area to more<br />

than just millennials and empty-nesters. I’ve always<br />

been surprised that Jacksonville hasn’t figured<br />

that out.”<br />

A statement from the Mayor’s Office noted that<br />

there 14 city parks with playgrounds located less<br />

than two miles away from downtown. But that’s<br />

different than parks located within Downtown.<br />

“To support needs in communities like Downtown<br />

where there may be fewer playgrounds, the<br />

city utilizes Joint Use Agreements in partnership<br />

with the school district that provides community<br />

use of school facilities.”<br />

Elsewhere, the spaces being designed within<br />

downtowns aren’t just the swing-and-slide playgrounds<br />

of old. They’re spaces children of all ages<br />

can explore and utilize from skateboard parks for<br />

teenagers to adventure playgrounds that provide<br />

children with opportunities to explore and experiment.<br />

And, they’re spaces that take into account<br />

everyone who might be taking advantage of them<br />

— from the youngest to the oldest.<br />

“In Detroit they even closed a street and put in<br />

basketball courts, foosball tables and things like<br />

that. Toronto took a road median and put swing<br />

sets in the middle of it,” Davis says. “Lakeland took<br />

a road and made a 50-foot linear park through<br />

their Downtown corridor.”<br />

Some designs are even simpler.<br />

“Some of the best places are just a piece of art<br />

that kids can climb on,” says the Project for Public<br />

Spaces’ Kent. “They include places that have<br />

benches where people can sit and drink coffee. Or<br />

places in the shade where they can drink lemonade<br />

while they’re watching their kids play.”<br />

Philadelphia has attempted to capitalize on<br />

the changing nature of play through its Community<br />

Design Collaborative. In 2015, the collaboration<br />

selected three underused sites within its city,<br />

then called for an international design competition<br />

to design them as play spaces.<br />

“In Philadelphia we have a lot of play spaces<br />

but they needed to be thought about in a different<br />

way, particularly for pre-school children,” says<br />

Linda Dottor, communication manager for the<br />

collaborative. “The end game here is to open people’s<br />

eyes to the possibilities.<br />

The group received 40-some designs from<br />

around the world. And the possibilities were endless,<br />

ranging from more-traditional play spaces to<br />

designs that took great advantage of nature. Now<br />

various partners are working to raise money to<br />

make the designs come to life on the three lots.<br />

A similar approach could certainly work within<br />

Jacksonville’s Downtown. Currently 97 “vacant”<br />

pieces of property are owned by the city<br />

within the boundaries of the Downtown area.<br />

Although some of them contain vacant buildings,<br />

others are simply bare property. Or, owners of<br />

privately owned property within the urban core<br />

might be willing to transfer ownership of their<br />

property to the city or a nonprofit if they received<br />

a tax deduction.<br />

The possibilities are infinite. And so are the<br />

benefits.<br />

Paula Horvath is an editorial writer and<br />

Editorial Board member at The Florida Times-Union<br />

and teaches multimedia journalism at the University<br />

of North Florida. She lives in St. Nicholas.<br />

COME PLAY DETROIT<br />

52<br />

J MAGAZINE | SPRING <strong>2018</strong>


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J PARTNER PROFILE<br />

By Barbara Gavan<br />

BARRY VAUGHN, owner<br />

of Vaughn MotorGroup<br />

Vaughn MotorGroup<br />

Automotive group owner says Downtown<br />

Jacksonville projects are catalysts for change<br />

arry Vaughn, owner of Vaughn MotorGroup, is a<br />

B longtime supporter of Downtown Jacksonville and<br />

proponent of its revitalization. For many years, he saw<br />

the potential for growth as he served the city in two<br />

separate capacities: for 12 years as President and<br />

CEO of The Suddath Companies, which has its headquarters<br />

Downtown, and for five years on the Board<br />

of Downtown Vision with one year as Chairman.<br />

“I’ve always been and always will be a huge<br />

proponent of redevelopment and revitalization,” he<br />

said. “The urban core is critical to the strength of<br />

the city; we need that vibrancy Downtown. A lot has<br />

changed since I first got involved; I’m heartened and pleased at<br />

the new projects slated for Jacksonville like Shad Khan’s Shipyards<br />

and Peter Rummell’s District.”<br />

Vaughn knows that to bring new residents to the Downtown<br />

area, they first must have a reason to travel Downtown, then<br />

discover more reasons to stay and live there.<br />

“It’s like the chicken and the egg — which comes first, development<br />

or people?” he said. “To live in an area, people<br />

need housing, of course, but they also need art,<br />

culture, entertainment, sports venues, restaurants,<br />

grocery stores and many more things. We have to be<br />

forward-looking in our understanding of that.”<br />

Vaughn also sees a new convention center as a<br />

catalyst for Downtown regeneration.<br />

“We really need a new convention center to bring<br />

more life, more vitality to Downtown,” he said. “It<br />

would not only bring more Jacksonville residents Downtown,<br />

but would also bring in a lot of out-of-town visitors, as well. That<br />

would encourage the opening of more shops and restaurants. It<br />

could serve as the nudge that revitalization has been needing.”<br />

WILL DICKEY<br />

QUICK<br />

TAKES<br />

PROGRESS FROM WITHIN<br />

“In the past, people who live here haven’t<br />

seemed as excited about Downtown<br />

revitalization as those from outside the<br />

city. But, that seems to be changing for the<br />

better. People like Shad Khan and Peter<br />

Rummell have shown that they can make<br />

a significant difference without any outside<br />

help. From what I’m hearing and reading,<br />

I’m very encouraged by the progress that is<br />

now coming from within.”<br />

INVESTMENT THE KEY<br />

“I’ve had the opportunity to spend quite a<br />

bit of time in many large cities that invested<br />

heavily in their downtown areas, and I’ve<br />

seen the many ways those investments<br />

paid off.”<br />

SPRING <strong>2018</strong> | J MAGAZINE 55


W H E R E<br />

H A V E<br />

ALL THE<br />

bOATERS<br />

G O N E ?<br />

BY RON LITTLEPAGE // PHOTOGRAPH BY BOB SELF // J MAGAZINE


DECADES AGO,<br />

BOATS AND<br />

BOATERS FILLED<br />

THE ST. JOHNS RIVER<br />

IN JACKSONVILLE’S<br />

DOWNTOWN.<br />

NOW, EXCEPT<br />

DURING SPECIAL<br />

EVENTS, THEY SEEM<br />

TO BE BECOMING A<br />

RARE SIGHT NEAR<br />

THE URBAN CORE.<br />

hen taking in the<br />

beauty of the St.<br />

Johns River as it<br />

W runs through the<br />

heart of Downtown,<br />

you will notice<br />

something is missing<br />

on most days.<br />

Where are the boats and the boaters?<br />

A number of years ago, an out-of-town<br />

consultant with expertise on improving<br />

downtowns met with a group of the city’s<br />

movers and shakers, looked at the river<br />

while dining at the University Club high<br />

above it and asked that same question.<br />

Sure, on the few days each year when<br />

there are special events, such as Jaguar<br />

games, boaters use the river as a fun and<br />

convenient highway.<br />

And there’s no better view of Downtown’s<br />

spectacular skyline than there is<br />

by approaching it from the river.<br />

St. Augustine’s river is full of boaters.<br />

So are the harbor in Baltimore and the<br />

waterways in South Florida.<br />

But that’s not the case in Jacksonville’s<br />

Downtown.<br />

There hasn’t always been a dearth of<br />

boaters Downtown.<br />

Tony Lanzetta is a boat captain who<br />

specializes in piloting other people’s<br />

boats and taking his clients places where<br />

they want to go. He’s watched the St.<br />

Johns River for 20 years.<br />

Despite perfect weather, few boats could be found on the St. Johns River in Downtown on a recent Sunday.<br />

In an interview, he recalled when the<br />

Landing was still a hotspot and “boats<br />

were rafted up there while people were<br />

going to the restaurants.”<br />

City Councilwoman Lori Boyer, who<br />

has taken on the challenge of activating<br />

the city’s waterways, also remembers<br />

when boaters were common Downtown.<br />

“I have photographs of there being<br />

quite a few recreational boats on the river<br />

Downtown 20 to 25 years ago,” she said in<br />

an interview.<br />

“The Landing was brand new, and<br />

there might have been 10 restaurants in<br />

the Landing that people wanted to go to.”<br />

What happened?<br />

JEFF DAVIS<br />

58<br />

J MAGAZINE | SPRING <strong>2018</strong>


There are two keys to luring boaters to<br />

a destination: adequate docking space<br />

and something to do.<br />

In typical Jacksonville fashion, we have<br />

shot ourselves in the foot when it comes<br />

to Downtown.<br />

In the past, there were attractions that<br />

brought boaters there.<br />

And it wasn’t just football games. There<br />

were events like the St. Johns River City<br />

Band playing concerts in Friendship Park<br />

on Sunday afternoons.<br />

“There were more just everyday places<br />

and everyday things to go to that were<br />

drawing people to get in their boats,”<br />

Boyer said.<br />

Those things are rare now, and we’ve<br />

let the Landing deteriorate until it’s no<br />

longer a destination.<br />

Lanzetta said his clients ask: “Where<br />

can we go? St. Augustine or the Landing?”<br />

“Well, there’s nothing at the Landing.<br />

Let’s go to St. Augustine. They aren’t<br />

going to come Downtown to see a vacant<br />

storefront.<br />

“When Hooters is your biggest draw<br />

been an embarrassment as hurricane<br />

damage was left unrepaired for more than<br />

a year.<br />

A large part of the marina at the River<br />

City Brewing Company remains in shambles<br />

after being damaged during Hurricane<br />

Irma.<br />

But coinciding with the resurgence<br />

of Downtown, the future is brighter for<br />

bringing boaters there.<br />

A finger pier is being built on the<br />

Southbank at the Riverplace Tower that<br />

will have space for recreational boaters<br />

and provide access to the nearby restaurants.<br />

“We’ve got others in the works that are<br />

in design,” Boyer said, “and we are definitely<br />

focused on that on the Northbank.”<br />

Space for recreational boaters has been<br />

added to a river taxi dock at A. Philip Randolph<br />

that can serve visitors to Intuition<br />

Ale Works and the Doro District.<br />

Also on the Northbank, the city has<br />

secured funding for a dock at the end of<br />

Post Street that will serve Five Points.<br />

Plans are also underway for a dock at<br />

address the riverwalks to make the riverwalks<br />

interesting, energized places and<br />

alive, people will go to them.”<br />

Restaurants. Light shows. Entertainment.<br />

People coming to a revitalized Downtown,<br />

including boaters, will add to the<br />

excitement.<br />

Build it and they will come.<br />

Just ask Marc Hardesty, one of the partners<br />

in Palms Fish Camp on Heckscher<br />

Drive at Clapboard Creek.<br />

There’s already talk of expanding the<br />

dock there at the recently opened restaurant.<br />

“When the weather is good, we have<br />

loaded the dock up,” Hardesty said. “It’s<br />

really a cool thing.”<br />

That brings us back to The Jacksonville<br />

Landing, once a showpiece but now a<br />

drag on Downtown.<br />

Progress there has been slowed by legal<br />

skirmishes and a war of words between<br />

the Landing’s owners, the Sleiman family,<br />

and the city, which owns the property the<br />

buildings sit on.<br />

“When Hooters is your biggest draw Downtown,<br />

it’s an issue. Nothing against Hooters.”<br />

Tony Lanzetta, JACKSONVILLE Boat captain<br />

Downtown, it’s an issue,” Lanzetta said,<br />

quickly adding, “Nothing against Hooters.”<br />

We’ve also done some not-so-smart<br />

things when it comes to providing docking<br />

space Downtown.<br />

The reconstruction of the Southbank<br />

Riverwalk created a magnificent riverfront<br />

linear park, but there’s no space for recreational<br />

boaters to tie up if they want to<br />

stroll on the riverwalk and then eat dinner<br />

at the Chart House or at Ruth’s Chris Steak<br />

House.<br />

The city paid $400,000 to put in a<br />

floating dock on the Northbank Riverwalk<br />

to serve the Riverside Arts Market, but it’s<br />

only available to boaters for four hours on<br />

the Saturdays the market is open.<br />

The marina the city built at Metropolitan<br />

Park is a good facility, but as Lanzetta<br />

pointed out, “When you step off your<br />

boat, you step into a field.<br />

“In St. Augustine, you get off your boat<br />

and take a couple of steps and you are in<br />

downtown St. Augustine. There are places<br />

to go, things to do there.”<br />

And the docks along the Landing have<br />

the end of Jackson Street near the new<br />

YMCA that will provide access to Brooklyn.<br />

The redevelopment of the JEA property<br />

on the Southbank into The District will<br />

provide both things to do and docking<br />

space for boaters.<br />

Michael Munz, one of the partners in<br />

The District, said plans call for a 125-slip<br />

marina that can handle boats from 15<br />

feet to 125 feet in length. Federal and<br />

state agencies have already approved the<br />

marina.<br />

There will also be a kayak launch and a<br />

river taxi stop there.<br />

Shad Khan’s development on the Shipyards<br />

property on the Northbank also will<br />

likely include a marina and will add to the<br />

draws already there — Daily’s Place and<br />

EverBank Field, Veterans Memorial Arena<br />

and the Baseball Grounds.<br />

Boyer is also adamant on adding more<br />

activities on the riverwalks and creating<br />

different nodes that will attract attention.<br />

“Part of my belief is that if we can<br />

address the access with the docks and<br />

“If you go down there now, the docks<br />

are still broken,” Lanzetta said in late December,<br />

more than a year after the docks<br />

were first damaged during Hurricane<br />

Matthew.<br />

“There is not a lot of space to tie your<br />

boat up.”<br />

There’s been more than enough talk<br />

about what to do with the Landing.<br />

“Somebody has to take the ball and<br />

say, hey, this is our vision. This is what we<br />

want to do,” Lanzetta said.<br />

“Until somebody sticks a shovel in the<br />

ground and starts it, we can talk about this<br />

until we are blue in the face.”<br />

Things are happening Downtown that<br />

will bring boaters back to the riverfront<br />

there.<br />

Solving the Landing issue is critical to<br />

success.<br />

What’s been “wait, wait, wait,” in Lanzatta’s<br />

words, must become “do, do, do.”<br />

Ron Littlepage wrote for the Times-Union<br />

39 years, the last 28 as a columnist, before<br />

retiring last year. He lives in Avondale.<br />

SPRING <strong>2018</strong> | J MAGAZINE 59


J PARTNER PROFILE<br />

By Barbara Gavan<br />

CYNTHIA BIOTEAU, President of<br />

Florida State College at Jacksonville<br />

Florida State College<br />

at Jacksonville<br />

Local college makes two-fold investment Downtown<br />

hen she arrived in Jacksonville four years ago,<br />

W Florida State College at Jacksonville President<br />

Cynthia Bioteau was struck by the Downtown<br />

area and its views of the St. Johns River.<br />

“The quality of the water feature aligning<br />

with the urban core set the city apart and a<br />

bit above other comparable cities,” she said.<br />

“There’s a wonderful energy to Downtown.<br />

The city government understands its<br />

importance and is striving to revitalize and<br />

reinvigorate the area. I see great hope and<br />

promise.”<br />

Bioteau believes that more daily activity<br />

— locally grown and engaged with the city<br />

— is what is needed to dispel the feel of vacancy and<br />

disrepair in some areas.<br />

“It is very important for FSCJ to take part in bringing<br />

people Downtown and keeping them there,” she<br />

said. “I hope our project at 20 West Adams, which is a<br />

historic building being repurposed as student housing,<br />

can be a model for Downtown renovation. It has 58<br />

beds that are all reserved, with a waiting list of 300! And<br />

these students are Downtown 24/7.”<br />

In addition to this project and FSCJ’s<br />

Downtown campus, Bioteau says that, visioning<br />

forward, the college could include<br />

additional phases for student housing and<br />

opening a culinary arts café, which she<br />

sees as highlighting the promise of what is<br />

to come for the area.<br />

“When we bring in developers on a<br />

project like that, not only are we helping<br />

the students and giving people another<br />

reason to come downtown, but we’re also putting the<br />

buildings on city tax rolls,” she said. “The more student<br />

facilities there are Downtown, the better it is for everyone.<br />

The more development and renovation there is,<br />

the better it is for everyone.”<br />

QUICK<br />

TAKES<br />

TEAMWORK<br />

VITAL FOR<br />

DOWNTOWN<br />

“I ask everyone<br />

to look into<br />

Downtown and<br />

find your own<br />

way to improve<br />

it. Where there<br />

is inactivity, let’s<br />

leverage our<br />

resources to bring<br />

activity to the<br />

Downtown core.<br />

There’s room to<br />

grow. To succeed,<br />

it just takes a<br />

collaboration<br />

of the city, the<br />

developers<br />

and private<br />

enterprise. FSCJ<br />

is proud to have<br />

such wonderful<br />

partners in our<br />

endeavors.”<br />

SAVING<br />

HISTORY<br />

“I am a fan of<br />

history, so I would<br />

much rather see<br />

historic buildings<br />

renovated and<br />

repurposed<br />

as something<br />

vibrant and vital<br />

to Downtown<br />

than to see them<br />

torn down. That’s<br />

what we are<br />

doing with our<br />

student housing<br />

in Downtown.<br />

Phase I at 20 West<br />

Adams is only<br />

the first of three<br />

planned historic<br />

renovations.”<br />

BOB SELF<br />

60<br />

J MAGAZINE | SPRING <strong>2018</strong>


CORE EYESORE<br />

FORMER JEA<br />

HEADQUARTERS<br />

At some point, a white elephant<br />

becomes an eyesore. This is the case<br />

with a former JEA headquarters<br />

building. No, not the current one at the<br />

corner of Main and Church streets, the<br />

former Universal Marion Building.<br />

JEA is preparing to move from that<br />

current location.<br />

The eyesore is a former JEA building<br />

at 233 W. Duval St., across the street<br />

from the federal courthouse. This<br />

building has been largely empty now<br />

for about 20 years. Most of us just<br />

walk by, not thinking of all the wasted<br />

space Downtown.<br />

The building once housed Independent<br />

Life Insurance headquarters, which<br />

later moved to the building now<br />

known as Wells Fargo.<br />

JEA bought the building for $2.9<br />

million in 1975. In 1989, most JEA<br />

officials moved out of the building.<br />

A search of Times-Union archives<br />

reveals a few stories from 1998 to<br />

2003. In 2000, JEA reportedly was<br />

interested in selling the 19-story<br />

building for a minimum of $4 million.<br />

In 2003, there was talk of South Florida<br />

developers buying the building and<br />

converting it into apartments. Since<br />

then, the building has been out of sight,<br />

out of mind, one of several vacant<br />

structures that are pockmarks on<br />

Downtown.<br />

Aundra Wallace, CEO of the<br />

Downtown Investment Authority,<br />

confirms there is no news on the site.<br />

There ought to be.<br />

BY MIKE CLARK<br />

PHOTOGRAPH BY JEFF DAVIS<br />

J MAGAZINE<br />

Spot a downtown eyesore and want<br />

to know why it’s there or when it will<br />

be improved? Submit suggestions to<br />

frank.denton@jacksonville.com.<br />

62<br />

J MAGAZINE | SPRING <strong>2018</strong>


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12 HOURS IN DOWNTOWN<br />

By Paula Horvath<br />

Volunteer Reginald Graham serves breakfast at Clara White Mission. The mission serves breakfast to about 500 people each weekday morning.<br />

Downtown’s rich history is easy<br />

to find if you know where to roam<br />

BOB SELF<br />

ome with us on a 12-hour journey to visit<br />

some of the most historic spots Downtown.<br />

C<br />

This trail will take you from the west side of<br />

Downtown, then right across its central heart.<br />

It ends on the northern boundary before sweeping southward<br />

toward the river for its last stop.<br />

Along the way, we’ll visit spots that commemorate the<br />

grand history that is Jacksonville. Although most of these<br />

spots no longer serve the precise purpose they once did,<br />

most are still vibrantly alive.<br />

Want to learn more about Downtown? Then follow us<br />

for a history-filled day that begins at 7:30 a.m. and ends 12<br />

hours later.<br />

1<br />

7:30 a.m.<br />

Clara White Mission<br />

613 W. Ashley St.<br />

The streets are still empty when a hardy crew of volunteers arrived<br />

at Clara White Mission but already the smell of baking sweets<br />

and oatmeal is wafting from the direction of the mission’s kitchen.<br />

Most of the jeans-clad visitors were from the University of<br />

SPRING <strong>2018</strong> | J MAGAZINE 65


LEFT: Artist Roosevelt Watson III talks with Ritz Museum volunteer Kate MacKinnon before the opening of “Journey To South Africa: A Cultural Exchange.”<br />

RIGHT: Colorful lollipops cool before being packaged at Sweet Pete’s, a downtown candy shop located in what once was the Seminole Club.<br />

North Florida’s social work program. We<br />

were there that morning to celebrate the<br />

memory of Clara and her daughter, Eartha<br />

White, who jointly fed Jacksonville’s poor<br />

and disadvantaged since the 1880s.<br />

The mission has been operating on this<br />

very spot since 1932 and the second floor<br />

contains a small museum in the same<br />

rooms where Eartha lived for years. Before<br />

it became a mission, however, this building<br />

was the Globe Theater, a thriving black<br />

club where “Ma Rainey,” the Mother of the<br />

Blues, belted out her songs to encores.<br />

But the blues have been long gone from<br />

the mission and this morning, as happens<br />

every weekday morning, community<br />

volunteers are on hand to serve the breakfast<br />

prepared in the mission’s kitchens to<br />

some 500 men, women and even children<br />

who have few other places to go for their<br />

morning meals.<br />

On the serving line, volunteer servers<br />

dipped into large pots of oatmeal, eggs,<br />

sausage and freshly baked breads to load<br />

onto individual plates. In the dining room<br />

other volunteers delivered the heaped<br />

plates to a continuing wave of people<br />

brought into the mission with promises of<br />

warm food.<br />

“Good morning, here’s your breakfast,”<br />

one of the volunteers said as she carefully<br />

set the plate in front of one man. “Thank<br />

you,” he replied gratefully. “May God bless<br />

you.”<br />

And so it went on for two hours. Plate<br />

after plate. Thank you after thank you.<br />

Until all had been sated.<br />

» For information on how to volunteer<br />

at the Clara White Mission go to its<br />

website at clarawhitemission.org.<br />

People interested in touring the museum<br />

should call the mission at 904-354-4162<br />

to set up a time.<br />

2<br />

10:30 a.m.<br />

Ritz Theatre and Museum<br />

829 N. Davis St.<br />

The building sitting on the corner of<br />

West Union and North Davis streets — just<br />

down the street from the mission — provides<br />

another insight into the French<br />

Quarter-like atmosphere that once existed<br />

in this part of Jacksonville.<br />

For here lived LaVilla — the center<br />

of much of the country’s black cultural<br />

Renaissance. It was where some of America’s<br />

best-known black artists, musicians,<br />

intellectuals and politicians visited or lived<br />

before moving up north to escape the<br />

South’s Jim Crow laws.<br />

The Ritz originally opened in 1929 and<br />

was a stopover on the “Chitlin’ Circuit.”<br />

Black performers traveled throughout the<br />

states but were able to play only at places<br />

open to them due to segregation. Other<br />

theaters within the circuit were Harlem’s<br />

Cotton Club and the Apollo Theater.<br />

Some historians have called LaVilla<br />

the “Harlem of the South,” but given that<br />

this Jacksonville community predated its<br />

Northern cousin, perhaps Harlem should<br />

really be called the “LaVilla of the North.”<br />

Sadly, this once-thriving cultural hub was<br />

mostly destroyed in the name of “urban<br />

renewal” during the 1990s.<br />

Some of the flavor of LaVilla has been<br />

captured within the museum. A “street” of<br />

shops set up within the museum illustrates<br />

what life was like, and ever-changing<br />

exhibits cover facets of that life.<br />

Today, on display is the art of 27 black<br />

mostly Jacksonville artists ranging from oil<br />

on canvas to fiber art. This display will be<br />

at the Ritz until June 8 when it’s torn down<br />

to be shipped to South Africa, where it’s<br />

been requested for a special showing at the<br />

Nelson Mandela Metropolitan Museum<br />

of Art.<br />

Adonnica Toler, the museum’s administrator,<br />

said the Ritz has been focusing on<br />

Downtown’s black history for years, and<br />

this display of art marks the 25th year black<br />

artists have had their work showcased.<br />

“There are so many aspects of this story,”<br />

Toler says. “There’s sadness and there’s<br />

tragedy. But there’s also beauty and grace<br />

and hope.<br />

“A facility like this is important because<br />

it lets us know where we’ve come from so<br />

we know where we’re going.”<br />

» The Ritz Museum is open Tuesday<br />

through Friday from 10 a.m. 4 p.m. The<br />

theater housed within the same building<br />

offers a variety of performances. The<br />

schedule can be accessed and tickets<br />

purchased at 904-807-2010.<br />

3<br />

Noon<br />

Sweet Pete’s and<br />

the Candy Apple Café<br />

400 N. Hogan St.<br />

Only blocks away from remembrances<br />

of LaVilla lies the precise center of Down-<br />

BOB SELF (LEFT); BOB MACK (RIGHT)<br />

66<br />

J MAGAZINE | SPRING <strong>2018</strong>


LEFT: Now home to Jacksonville City Hall, the historic St. James Building was designed by architect Henry James Klutho and opened in 1912.<br />

RIGHT: One of Downtown’s most unique and historic landmarks is Old City Cemetery, established in 1852 as Jacksonville’s main burial ground.<br />

JEFF DAVIS (MAP); JEFF DAVIS (LEFT); DON BURK (RIGHT)<br />

town and the site of a lip-smacking candy<br />

store and restaurant.<br />

Sweet Pete’s and the Candy Apple Café<br />

were opened in 2014 in a magnificent old<br />

building that had been empty for years.<br />

The new owner transformed the building<br />

into a destination that would make Willie<br />

Wonka proud.<br />

But once it was the Seminole<br />

Club, the spot where<br />

Jacksonville’s white male<br />

elite gathered. It was built in<br />

1903 and once even sported<br />

a bordello on its third floor<br />

for patrons bored with the<br />

more-mundane activity on<br />

the lower floors.<br />

The likes of Presidents<br />

Teddy Roosevelt, Dwight<br />

Eisenhower and John F. Kennedy<br />

visited the social club<br />

during its heyday. However<br />

as the city’s tastes changed,<br />

the club’s clientele dwindled<br />

and it was closed in 1990.<br />

Today it appeals to a<br />

much more diverse group<br />

of people — those who have<br />

come here both to sample its<br />

homemade sweet delicacies<br />

and those who have come here to catch a<br />

bite at its café.<br />

At one table set for five a small group<br />

of Jacksonville residents are ready to enjoy<br />

the meal. Kimberly Robertson is treating<br />

her two children, 6-year-old Sebastian<br />

and 10-year-old Sofia Guitierrez, to their<br />

first taste of the Candy Apple.<br />

“It’s amazing,” Sofia says, biting into<br />

her hamburger. Sebastian, his eyes fixed<br />

on the enormous plate of macaroni and<br />

cheese in front of him, can only muster a<br />

thumbs up before packing his cheeks with<br />

food.<br />

Later as Sofia tours the candy store<br />

where jars of jelly beans of every color fill<br />

12 HOURS IN DOWNTOWN<br />

Davis St.<br />

2<br />

Jefferson St.<br />

ACOSTA<br />

BRIDGE<br />

Broad St.<br />

1<br />

Duval St.<br />

Forsyth St.<br />

Bay St.<br />

State St.<br />

Union St.<br />

Beaver St.<br />

3<br />

JACKSONVILLE<br />

LANDING<br />

ST. JOHNS<br />

RIVER<br />

4<br />

HEMMING<br />

PARK<br />

Laura St.<br />

Main St.<br />

Ocean St.<br />

the shelves, she carefully runs her hand<br />

across the glass. Hundreds of containers<br />

of blue, green, speckled, yellow and even<br />

black beans make purchasers’ mouths<br />

water.<br />

And this downstairs room only houses<br />

a small segment of the sweet offerings<br />

here in the candy store — there’s much<br />

more on the second floor. It’s not only<br />

6<br />

MAIN<br />

STREET<br />

BRIDGE<br />

Liberty St.<br />

enough to make visitors’ mouths water<br />

but is symbolic of the store’s dedication to<br />

sweets.<br />

Even Sofia was obviously impressed.<br />

“They sure spend a lot of time making all<br />

this,” she says, still eyeing the shelves of<br />

colorful candies. “It’s really cool.”<br />

» For information on the hours<br />

for Sweet Pete’s go to its website<br />

at sweetpetescandy.com.<br />

For hours and reservations at<br />

the Candy Apple Café, go to<br />

candyapplecafeandcocktails.com.<br />

5<br />

4<br />

1:30 p.m.<br />

Jacksonville City Hall<br />

117 W. Duval St.<br />

Just a short walk across<br />

Hogan Street is the Jacksonville<br />

City Hall, a massive edifice<br />

with intricately carved cornices<br />

and Gotham-like blue orbs<br />

seated on the edges of its roof.<br />

Once known as the St.<br />

James Building, it was designed<br />

by famed Jacksonville<br />

N<br />

architect Henry John Klutho<br />

after Jacksonville’s Great Fire<br />

of 1901 and considered by many to be his<br />

masterpiece. It opened in 1912 and became<br />

the Cohen Bros. Department Store, later<br />

known as May Cohens.<br />

Most striking for customers was the 75-<br />

foot glass-domed arcade within its center.<br />

The arcade’s floor was once scattered with<br />

showcases displaying various goods and<br />

elevators operated by uniformed atten-<br />

SPRING <strong>2018</strong> | J MAGAZINE 67


dants zipped customers up and down the<br />

store’s levels.<br />

Ronnie Brown, who works with Jacksonville’s<br />

Human Rights Commission,<br />

remembers that as a boy his parents often<br />

brought him from his home in Live Oak to<br />

Downtown and Cohen Bros.<br />

“This was a happening place,” he says,<br />

especially during the holidays when store’s<br />

fanciful window displays were a destination<br />

in themselves.<br />

Today the building is still something of a<br />

destination. Visitors are welcomed through<br />

its front doors where they can once again<br />

gaze upward in amazement at the restored<br />

arcade and glass dome.<br />

“I’m telling you, you get people all the<br />

time here taking pictures,” Brown said. “You<br />

don’t get to see this kind of architectural<br />

detail anymore.”<br />

» City Hall is open weekdays from<br />

8 a.m. to 5 p.m. for visitors.<br />

5<br />

3 p.m.<br />

Old City Cemetery<br />

Corner of East Union and<br />

North Washington streets<br />

On the northern boundary of Downtown<br />

is historic ground far removed from<br />

the gaiety of Sweet Pete’s or the excitement<br />

that was once Cohen’s. Here, the crowd is<br />

much quieter; in fact you could say their<br />

moods are more grave.<br />

A walk through cedar-lined Old City<br />

Cemetery is a walk through the city’s<br />

history.<br />

Old City Cemetery, its entrance off<br />

East Union Street, was created in 1852<br />

as Jacksonville’s main burial ground. Its<br />

occupants represent the early diversity of<br />

the city.<br />

To the north side lie the early graves of<br />

the city’s black residents. To the west is the<br />

Jewish cemetery. A group of Confederate<br />

graves are near the pavilion in the center.<br />

Whites, Cubans and Minorcan graves are<br />

scattered throughout.<br />

Some have even claimed Native Americans<br />

buried their dead here many decades<br />

before.<br />

There are the graves of numerous<br />

yellow fever victims struck down in the<br />

epidemic of 1889. Nearby are the graves<br />

of French nuns sent to educate black children.<br />

Both black Union soldiers and freed<br />

slaves are buried here.<br />

Also entombed are several governors,<br />

numerous military officers, local politicians<br />

and Jacksonville volunteers in the<br />

The historic Bostwick Building on the corner of Ocean and Bay streets is home to Cowford Chophouse,<br />

Downtown’s newest restaurant. The upscale restaurant also features a picturesque rooftop bar.<br />

Cuban Revolution as well as more recent<br />

luminaries.<br />

Although it’s a quiet respite in Downtown’s<br />

hubbub, visitors with knowledge of<br />

history can almost hear the whispers.<br />

“I missed you after you were gone,”<br />

Eartha White might murmur to her mother,<br />

Clara, who died in 1920, leaving her<br />

daughter alone for the next 54 years of her<br />

life to continue the family’s good works.<br />

“Yes, but I certainly am proud of what<br />

you’ve accomplished, daughter,” Clara<br />

might possibly say in a quiet voice.<br />

The two women’s graves lie side by side<br />

in City Cemetery, bound in death as they<br />

were in life.<br />

» City Cemetery is open to the public<br />

from sunrise to sunset every day.<br />

6<br />

6 p.m.<br />

Cowford Chophouse<br />

101 E. Bay St.<br />

The historic building at the corner of<br />

East Bay and Ocean streets is the final stop<br />

on this 12-hour tour of Downtown. Once<br />

known in Jacksonville as the building<br />

where Jaguars peeked from the windows,<br />

it’s now Downtown’s newest upscale<br />

restaurant.<br />

But decades before the Chophouse,<br />

the 1902 Bostwick Building was the home<br />

of another upscale institution — The First<br />

National Bank, later replaced by Guaranty<br />

Trust and Savings Bank. In later years, it<br />

became an office building and was home<br />

to the architectural business run by Klutho.<br />

The building was lovingly restored by<br />

Forking Amazing Restaurants over a nearly<br />

four-year period. More damaged than<br />

originally thought, it was taken apart brick<br />

by brick then carefully resurrected.<br />

Wood found in the building was<br />

refinished and now covers one side of the<br />

restaurant’s elevator. A silhouette of the St.<br />

Johns River and its tributaries is cut into<br />

the wood and the river’s interior is covered<br />

in gold flakes, remnants of some of the gold<br />

items found within the original bank’s vault<br />

during restoration.<br />

Kassidy Lankford and Trevor Spinks<br />

are on their first visit to the Cowford, a celebratory<br />

meal before catching a showing<br />

of “The Lion King” at the Times-Union<br />

Performing Arts Center.<br />

The couple had just finished plates of<br />

salmon and steak, wishing they had room<br />

for one of the desserts heralded at the<br />

restaurant. But not this night.<br />

“Maybe we can come back here sometime<br />

just for dessert,” Spinks said wistfully,<br />

eyeing a triple dark chocolate torte on a<br />

neighbor’s plate.<br />

Although Lankford and Spinks had to<br />

rush off to catch their evening’s performance,<br />

visitors should not neglect the<br />

Cowford’s rooftop bar, for its splendid view<br />

of Downtown and the St. Johns River.<br />

An unforgettable ending for an unforgettable<br />

12 hours.<br />

» To obtain more information about<br />

the Cowford Chophouse and to<br />

make reservations go to its website<br />

at cowfordchophouse.com.<br />

Paula Horvath is an editorial writer and<br />

Editorial Board member at The Florida Times-Union<br />

and teaches multimedia journalism at the University<br />

of North Florida. She lives in St. Nicholas.<br />

DANIS BUILDING CONSTRUCTION COMPANY<br />

68<br />

J MAGAZINE | SPRING <strong>2018</strong>


100%<br />

occupied<br />

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Downtown Jacksonville<br />

Coming Fall <strong>2018</strong>


Giving more than<br />

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The Hope<br />

That every child has a clean, unused<br />

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The Dream<br />

A portion of all mattress set purchases at<br />

Ashley HomeStore goes to provide free<br />

bed sets to children in need. Over the<br />

past seven years, Ashley HomeStore –<br />

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Know a child with big dreams?<br />

Visit your local Ashley Homestore for more<br />

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preview us online at www.AshleyHomeStore.com


J PARTNER PROFILE<br />

By Barbara Gavan<br />

Christopher Caprio,<br />

President of Ashley HomeStore<br />

Ashley HomeStore<br />

Furniture retailer works to improve Jacksonville’s quality of life<br />

s president of a company concerned with the challenges<br />

A of daily living, Christopher Caprio can easily relate the<br />

needs of the individual to the needs of the community.<br />

“Ashley HomeStores exists to improve the efficiency, comfort<br />

and ease of daily life for our customers,” he<br />

said. “Children do better in school when<br />

they have a good night’s sleep, and to do<br />

that, they must have a good bed. That’s also<br />

true with the community. If we improve the<br />

lives of Jacksonville’s residents, we improve Jacksonville.”<br />

Caprio is relatively new to the city, but visited often before<br />

moving to Jacksonville, and likes what he sees.<br />

“There have been so many changes already,” he said. “Downtown<br />

has received a real facelift; I appreciate the revitalization<br />

throughout the area. There’s so much to do with the sports complex,<br />

entertainment, cultural and dining opportunities. The city<br />

provides a good experience.”<br />

But, he’s also noticed construction projects that need finishing,<br />

dilapidated buildings that should be renovated, and improvements<br />

to the city’s infrastructure that are necessary for the<br />

well-being of its residents.<br />

“We believe that we can aid in this revitalization<br />

by helping people one at a time,”<br />

he said. “After the hurricane, we helped over<br />

20 families refurnishing their homes — three<br />

52-foot semi-trucks full of furniture and mattresses! We also<br />

donated 280 beds to First Coast kids through our Hope to Dream<br />

in 2017 alone. Throughout Jacksonville, Ashley works with over 35<br />

different charitable organizations, including a partnership with<br />

the Jacksonville Jaguars, EverBank and HabiJax, to help put single<br />

moms into homes to better care for their families. This is our way<br />

of contributing to Jacksonville’s revitalization.”<br />

WILL DICKEY<br />

QUICK<br />

TAKES<br />

BUILDING ON PEOPLE<br />

“I believe in building on people. Everything starts and ends<br />

with people. As we improve the lives of Jacksonville’s people<br />

through local charities and through improvements in education,<br />

we’ll improve the entire city. If we take care of the people, the<br />

people will take care of the community.”<br />

HELPING WHERE NEEDED<br />

“It’s not Downtown, but we’re taking steps to help another<br />

underserved area - Regency. We’ll be opening an Ashley HomeStore<br />

Outlet there by the end of May. At a time when other companies are<br />

leaving the area, we feel we can help by bringing more business back<br />

into Regency and, by doing so, perhaps begin a turnaround there.”<br />

SPRING <strong>2018</strong> | J MAGAZINE 71


PRESERVING<br />

DOWNTOWN<br />

whEN DEVELOPERS EMBARK ON RENOVATING<br />

HISTORIC DOWNTOWN BUILDINGS, ONE CONSTRUCTION<br />

COMPANY TENDS TO BE AT THE TOP OF THEIR LISTS<br />

BY LILLA ROSS // FOR J MAGAZINE<br />

ILLUSTRATION BY JEFF DAVIS // J MAGAZINE


Some of the Downtown<br />

Jacksonville projects Danis<br />

Building Construction<br />

Company have worked<br />

on include (far left,<br />

clockwise): the Farah &<br />

Farah building, Cowford<br />

Chophouse, the Barnett<br />

Bank building and the<br />

Jessie Ball duPont Center.


When Danis Building Construction Company<br />

began renovating the old Haydon Burns Library,<br />

it faced a unique challenge.<br />

Part of the building’s exterior is covered<br />

in mosaic tiles, and over the years,<br />

tiles had fallen off — and disappeared<br />

into the pockets of passersby.<br />

But one of the goals of the owner, the<br />

Jessie Ball duPont Fund, and Danis was<br />

to preserve as much of the iconic building<br />

as possible as it was transformed<br />

from the Downtown library into the Jessie<br />

Ball duPont Center, which provides<br />

offices for nonprofits and meeting spaces<br />

for the community.<br />

The Italian company that manufactured<br />

the distinctive green and yellow<br />

tile for architect Taylor Hardwick in 1965<br />

no longer made the tile.<br />

“We had heard stories that people would<br />

collect the tiles, so we offered a bounty and<br />

got several thousand tiles from people who<br />

BELOW: When Danis began renovating the Haydon<br />

Burns Library (now the Jessie Ball duPont Center)<br />

at Ocean and Adams streets, they tracked down<br />

thousands of mosaic tiles which had fallen off the<br />

building’s exterior over the years. Later, Danis<br />

incorporated the tiles into the new structure.<br />

had collected them,” said Tony Suttles, vice<br />

president for preconstruction.<br />

That’s an example of the creative<br />

lengths the employees of Danis will go<br />

in the interests of historic preservation.<br />

And one reason Danis is the go-to company<br />

in Jacksonville for people who are<br />

repurposing historic buildings Downtown.<br />

The other reason, Suttles says, is that<br />

Danis, based in Dayton, Ohio, has been<br />

around 102 years. The company learns<br />

something from every project it does,<br />

WILL DICKEY (3)<br />

74<br />

J MAGAZINE | SPRING <strong>2018</strong>


Suttles says, especially from old buildings.<br />

“At the end of every project, we go<br />

through the lessons learned. It definitely<br />

helps after you’ve done dozens and dozens,<br />

you learn things someone coming<br />

in cold would never think about,” Suttles<br />

said.<br />

“We do it with new construction but<br />

the lessons from these historic adaptive<br />

reuse projects are really valuable. It<br />

would be silly not to leverage those lessons<br />

and help the next owner, the next<br />

project.”<br />

Suttles said Danis likes the challenge<br />

presented by old buildings. “It’s a giant<br />

puzzle, and you don’t have all the pieces,”<br />

he said. “Our people have to use their<br />

brain power. Big-box retail projects can<br />

be interesting but with old buildings, you<br />

expect to be surprised.”<br />

In addition to the duPont Center,<br />

here’s the Downtown challenges Danis<br />

has taken on so far:<br />

The Jake M. Godbold Annex,<br />

the former Haverty’s building<br />

Farah & Farah Building, the<br />

former Kress building<br />

Cowford Chophouse, the<br />

former Bostwick building<br />

The Barnett bank building,<br />

now under restoration<br />

The Laura Street Trio: The<br />

Marble Bank, the Bisbee building and<br />

the Florida Life Building<br />

FSCJ dorms at 20 W. Adams St., the<br />

“[The Jake M. Godbold<br />

city hall annex] was<br />

a Klutho building that<br />

was in worse shape<br />

than the (Laura Street]<br />

Trio, from what I’m<br />

told, and they put that<br />

one back together.”<br />

Steve Atkins, The Southeast Group<br />

former Lerner building<br />

That’s not just a lot of real estate, it’s<br />

a lot of historic real estate, many of the<br />

buildings dating to the building boom<br />

after the Great Fire of 1901.<br />

It’s that track record that appealed to<br />

Steve Atkins of the Southeast Development<br />

Group and why Danis was hired<br />

to do the Barnett and Laura Street Trio<br />

projects.<br />

He was especially impressed with the<br />

work Danis did on the Jake M. Godbold<br />

building.<br />

“That was a Klutho building that was<br />

in worse shape than the Trio, from what<br />

I’m told,” Atkins said. “And they put that<br />

one back together.”<br />

Every building has a story to tell. Over<br />

the decades they’ve had multiple uses,<br />

multiple owners, multiple tenants and<br />

sometimes multiple renovations, Suttles<br />

said.<br />

And they have surprises galore: The<br />

crumbling foundation of the Bostwick<br />

building and the decorative plaster ceiling<br />

of the Barnett building had been concealed<br />

for decades.<br />

There’s even a secret tunnel.<br />

Back in the day that robbers lurked<br />

outside banks, the Marble Bank had a<br />

tunnel with a trap door in the sidewalk<br />

where carriages could safely drop cash<br />

deposits.<br />

Since surprises come with the territory,<br />

Suttles said Danis likes to uncover<br />

them early in the process. The design<br />

team researches the history of the building,<br />

studies old architectural plans,<br />

drawings and photos.<br />

The Southeast Development Group<br />

wants to restore the original banking<br />

JEFF DAVIS<br />

The Jake M. Godbold City Hall Annex at Laura and Duval streets.


hall on the first floor of the Barnett Bank<br />

building, Suttles said. The original pendant<br />

lights and Corinthian columns are<br />

long gone but were preserved in old photos.<br />

In some cases, people who worked<br />

on the original building are still around.<br />

Danis was able to talk to architect Taylor<br />

Hardwick about his design of the library.<br />

He offered a lot of insight, Suttles said,<br />

and quashed an urban legend — that the<br />

88 “fins” on the exterior of the building<br />

mimicked the 88 keys of a piano. Pure<br />

coincidence, Hardwick said.<br />

Research also is done through “selective<br />

demolition.”<br />

“We are most successful when we are<br />

involved early in the design process before<br />

the drawings are complete,” Suttles<br />

said. “We get in and do some selective<br />

demolition to see what’s behind the<br />

walls and above the ceilings.”<br />

In the Florida Life Building, demolition<br />

revealed the original marble wall<br />

panels. “You assume they tore it down,<br />

but they did the easy thing and covered<br />

it up,” Suttles said.<br />

The latest technology is enlisted as<br />

well. A drone was used to inspect the<br />

fragile exteriors of the Barnett building<br />

and the Laura Street Trio.<br />

“Some of the buildings have been<br />

abandoned and have significant safety<br />

issues,” Suttles said. “We feel like the<br />

“We are most<br />

successful when we<br />

are involved early in<br />

the design process<br />

before the drawings<br />

are complete.”<br />

Tony Suttles,<br />

VP of Preconstruction at Danis<br />

more investigation we can do on the<br />

front end, it helps minimize the surprises,<br />

which can be very disruptive.”<br />

Sometimes, what Danis is searching<br />

for with early demolition is accurate information<br />

about the building, like the<br />

dimensions.<br />

“Everything we do now on new construction<br />

is perfectly square, straight and<br />

level. As beautiful as they are, the old<br />

buildings weren’t built as precisely as we<br />

do today,” Suttles said. “Dimensions aren’t<br />

close to what the drawings indicate.<br />

Some aren’t square, not 90 degrees. So,<br />

in these old buildings, you’re going to<br />

have to make some adjustments.”<br />

Many historic buildings were built<br />

before the era of building codes, or before<br />

they were enforced, and often have<br />

elements that don’t meet current codes,<br />

Suttles said.<br />

“You have to figure out how to strike<br />

a balance between preserving the historic<br />

nature of something like a staircase<br />

while making it safe,” Suttles said. “There<br />

are some interpretations in the code with<br />

historic structures that allow the city and<br />

builders some leeway. You might retrofit<br />

or get a variance or a combination.”<br />

Another challenge is incorporating<br />

modern mechanical and<br />

electrical systems into buildings<br />

that weren’t designed for<br />

things like air conditioning ad<br />

sprinkler systems.<br />

“You can’t just hang<br />

ductwork and cover it with acoustic<br />

tiles,” Suttles said. “Sometimes you need<br />

sidewall vents or floor vents. What might<br />

work on one floor might not work on another.”<br />

JEFF DAVIS<br />

Jessie Ball duPont Center at Forsyth and Ocean streets.


“<br />

Old buildings are unique. They have a place character,<br />

and Downtown is on the verge of losing its character.”<br />

Sherry Magill, president of the of the Jessie Ball duPont Fund<br />

And there’s another balance to be struck between repairing<br />

something with historic value or replacing it.<br />

“If something like a window is too far gone, there are guidelines<br />

for replacement. That’s a big challenge, finding companies<br />

and craftsmen that can do that type of work,” Suttles said.<br />

The Barnett building, for instance, has bronze work around the<br />

arched windows that needs to be restored. The only company that<br />

does that kind of work is in Maryland.<br />

“If you get into ceilings that need plaster repair,<br />

you don’t have a lot of people who do Portland<br />

cement plaster. That’s not something<br />

young people go into. For the Ribault<br />

Clubhouse, we did the plaster work<br />

ourselves because there were no<br />

subcontractors.<br />

“Our goal, especially in Jacksonville,<br />

is to keep everything as<br />

local as possible. When we did<br />

duPont, one of the tile setters<br />

had been an apprentice on the<br />

original project,” Suttles said.<br />

“There are really good companies<br />

and craftsman that do this<br />

kind of work, but they’re getting<br />

harder to find.”<br />

As the redevelopment of<br />

Downtown takes shape, Suttles<br />

said he thinks Jacksonville is beginning<br />

to realize the value of adapting<br />

and reusing its historic buildings.<br />

“They can be phenomenal places to<br />

conduct business,” Suttles said. “These<br />

buildings can be saved and saved on a<br />

Before renovating historic buildings, Danis Building Construction<br />

budget, but it does take the right kind<br />

Company researches as much original information as possible. In<br />

of owner. Historic restoration adds the case of the Jessie Ball duPont Center project, that research<br />

a level of difficulty for everyone involved.”<br />

included the original plans for the Haydon Burns Library.<br />

Sherry Magill, president of the Jessie Ball duPont Fund, said she<br />

wanted to build something from scratch in LaVilla 10 years ago,<br />

but that didn’t pan out. But over that decade she said she watched<br />

as old buildings were renovated, and one day in 2012 she was driving<br />

past the Haydon Burns Library and saw the “for sale” sign.<br />

“Serendipity is underrated,” she said.<br />

Several efforts had been made to do something with the mosaic-clad<br />

building famous for its “fins” and floor-to-ceiling windows,<br />

but they didn’t survive the Great Recession.<br />

Magill arranged a tour with owner Bill Cesery.<br />

“When I walked in the building, I fell in love with the lighting,”<br />

she said. “I was predisposed to stay Downtown. The duPont Fund<br />

78 J MAGAZINE | SPRING <strong>2018</strong><br />

has always been located on the Northbank. It’s our home, our<br />

neighborhood.”<br />

The trustees were open to the idea of using the building as office<br />

space for nonprofits, and Magill began researching what it<br />

would take to make it happen.<br />

She said she was encouraged by other “adaptive reuses” like the<br />

conversion of an old furniture store into the Jake M. Godbold Annex,<br />

a $10 million project by the Police and Fire Pension<br />

Fund, and the makeover of the Kress five & dime<br />

by the Farah & Farah law firm.<br />

Both projects were done by Danis.<br />

In 2013, the trustees decided that<br />

buying and renovating the old library<br />

“was the responsible thing for du-<br />

Pont to do. It aligned with our values.<br />

We decided to put our money<br />

where our mouth is.”<br />

When the duPont Center<br />

opened in June 2015, the fund<br />

had invested $25 million.<br />

The center is often held up<br />

as an example of what can be<br />

done Downtown.<br />

“Old buildings are unique.<br />

They have a place character,<br />

and Downtown is on the verge of<br />

losing its character,” Magill said. “I<br />

don’t think we love what we have.<br />

We’re never developing it for the people<br />

who live here. We’re always looking<br />

for people outside Jacksonville. I<br />

don’t share those assumptions.”<br />

Magill said she thinks there’s a<br />

shared sense that things are starting<br />

to move in Downtown Jacksonville.<br />

“The Chophouse, the Laura Street<br />

Trio, all of that adds up to something,”<br />

she said.<br />

Suttles agrees. He thinks the Barnett and Laura Street Trio<br />

projects — a combined investment of $90 million — is the most<br />

significant project in Downtown history.<br />

“As people see more and more of these projects getting done,<br />

our hope is that it builds momentum,” Suttles said.<br />

Marilyn Young contributed to this report.<br />

Lilla Ross is a freelance writer in Jacksonville. She worked<br />

for The Florida Times-Union for more than 30 years as a<br />

writer and editor. She lives in San Marco.<br />

THE FLORIDA TIMES-UNION


CAN FOOD TRUCKS COEXIST WITH<br />

BRICK AND MORTAR RESTAURANTS?<br />

BY ROGER BROWN // J MAGAZINE<br />

Jack Shad<br />

co-founder of the Court Urban Food Park IN DOWNTOWN<br />

PHOTO: BOB SELF // J MAGAZINE


TURF WARS<br />

Jeriees Ewais<br />

Co-owner of the Zodiac Bar & Grill in Downtown<br />

PHOTO: WILL DICKEY // J MAGAZINE


Over the past several years, food trucks have become increasingly popular in Downtown Jacksonville, where lines of customers are a common sight.<br />

Food trucks.<br />

Traditional, brick and<br />

mortar restaurants.<br />

We want both in Downtown Jacksonville.<br />

We need both in Downtown Jacksonville.<br />

But can both coexist in Downtown Jacksonville?<br />

It is a big deal for Downtown Jacksonville’s<br />

present and future.<br />

PASSIONATE VIEWS<br />

It sure is a big deal to Jeriees Ewais,<br />

co-owner of the Zodiac Bar & Grill.<br />

On this weekday morning, there is an<br />

air of calm preparation as Ewais and some<br />

employees get ready to open the doors to<br />

the Zodiac — a fantastic Mediterranean<br />

restaurant that’s been an 18-year fixture<br />

on West Adams Street — for lunch.<br />

But as he takes a brief break and takes<br />

a seat at a dining table, Ewais’ calm demeanor<br />

steadily become one that’s much<br />

more animated.<br />

Why?<br />

It’s because he’s talking about the havoc<br />

that he says food trucks are wreaking<br />

on traditional brick and mortar restaurants<br />

in Downtown Jacksonville.<br />

“No question, they are really hurting the<br />

restaurant industry Downtown right now<br />

— and what’s even worse, they will keep<br />

new restaurants from deciding to come into<br />

Downtown in the future,” Ewais says.<br />

“If I wanted to open an exciting new<br />

restaurant in one of the vacant properties<br />

we have Downtown — and just look<br />

around, we have a lot of them — why<br />

would I end up doing it?” Ewais adds.<br />

“Why would I do it when I know that<br />

after I spend hundreds of thousands in<br />

investment, there will be five food trucks<br />

set up near me at lunchtime? Food trucks<br />

that don’t invest anything close to what<br />

I do but can still park near me, grab as<br />

much money as they can during lunch<br />

— and then drive away and do the same<br />

thing parked outside a nightclub that evening?”<br />

WILL DICKEY<br />

82<br />

J MAGAZINE | SPRING <strong>2018</strong>


Ewais sighs.<br />

“To me, the problem is a pretty clear<br />

one,” he says.<br />

“I don’t know how some people in this<br />

city just can’t see that.”<br />

But there is no problem from where<br />

Jack Shad is standing.<br />

During this windy but sunny weekday<br />

lunch hour, Shad is standing amid a lively<br />

crowd of people.<br />

They’re congregating in the Court<br />

Urban Food Park behind the SunTrust<br />

building Downtown.<br />

They’re lined up to order fare from<br />

the five food trucks — serving everything<br />

from burritos to fusion Asian to burgers to<br />

cupcakes — arranged in a neat row in the<br />

food park.<br />

And the scene leaves Shad — who<br />

served as the director of the city’s public<br />

parking division Office of Public Parking<br />

in former Mayor Alvin Brown’s administration<br />

— wearing a smile.<br />

“You know, when you’re the parking<br />

director of a city, you get used to doing<br />

things that don’t make people happy,”<br />

Shad says.<br />

“But look around at all of these people.<br />

Look at how many of them are smiling.<br />

Look at how many are laughing. What’s<br />

not to love about doing this?”<br />

Shad and business partner Mike Field<br />

are the co-founders of the Court Urban<br />

Food Park, which they opened in February<br />

2017 after reaching an agreement<br />

with SunTrust to rent space on a portion<br />

of bank property located on Hogan Street.<br />

Since then, the food park — which<br />

operates from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday<br />

through Friday — has drawn sizeable<br />

lunch crowds who are able to order from<br />

the ever-changing row of food trucks and<br />

then eat their fare while sitting amid an<br />

eclectic mix of picnic tables, benches and<br />

other provided seating.<br />

“We’re here to provide another food<br />

option,” Shad says.<br />

“It may not be the right option for every<br />

person. Or for every day. But it’s pretty<br />

obvious that lots of people Downtown do<br />

like it. And they like it a lot.”<br />

In fact, Shad says, the clear popularity<br />

of food trucks and the Court Urban Food<br />

Park should make Downtown’s traditional<br />

restaurants feel inspired — and not threatened.<br />

“I absolutely think we can co-exist,”<br />

Shad says.<br />

“I know we can.”<br />

The challenge, as Shad sees it, is for the<br />

traditional restaurants to be willing to embrace<br />

that the old ways of doing things in<br />

Downtown Jacksonville are changing and<br />

fading away before everyone’s eyes — and<br />

the rising tide isn’t going to roll them back.<br />

“I don’t think this reality only applies<br />

to the restaurants when it comes to our<br />

Downtown and I truly respect what they<br />

provide,” Shad says.<br />

“But when a lot of us look at Downtown,<br />

we have this tendency to want to keep doing<br />

what we’ve always been doing — even<br />

when it’s no longer working — because it’s<br />

all we know.”<br />

Adds Shad: “If we’re truly going to<br />

have a successful Downtown, we’re going<br />

to have to do things differently. We’re going<br />

to have to embrace new ideas, even if<br />

not all of them will work. To me, the food<br />

trucks perfectly represent the attitude<br />

of ‘Let’s put ourselves out there, let’s try<br />

something new and make it work.’”<br />

But that still leaves the question:<br />

Can traditional restaurants and food<br />

trucks truly work in harmony in Downtown<br />

Jacksonville?<br />

A SMALL PIE SLICE<br />

One thing is for certain: Downtown<br />

Jacksonville isn’t starved for food options,<br />

whether they are served from food trucks or<br />

traditional restaurant kitchens.<br />

According to Downtown Vision Inc., the<br />

nonprofit that advocates for living, working,<br />

visiting and investing in Downtown,<br />

there are approximately 90 traditional brick<br />

and mortar restaurants within the city’s<br />

center.<br />

It’s not as easy to have an exact number<br />

of food trucks operating in Downtown.<br />

But most weeks the Court Urban Food<br />

Park has as many as 20 different food trucks<br />

rotating in and out of the space each Monday<br />

through Friday.<br />

Now add the regular presence of food<br />

trucks at Hemming Park during weekday<br />

lunch hours and special events.<br />

Then add the other food trucks scattered<br />

at various sites in the Downtown area (like<br />

On the Fly, a sandwich food truck that has<br />

a fixed site in a parking lot on West Adams<br />

and Jefferson streets, near the Duval County<br />

Courthouse ).<br />

OK, but so what?<br />

Shouldn’t everything still work out fine<br />

for restaurants and food trucks alike given<br />

that some 59,100 people work in Downtown<br />

Jacksonville (according to the stats in Downtown<br />

Vision’s 2016-17 State of Downtown<br />

report)?<br />

Shouldn’t there still be enough customers,<br />

money and attention for everyone?<br />

Alas, not really.<br />

That’s because when it hits 5 p.m.<br />

in Downtown Jacksonville, there aren’t<br />

enough people leaving their offices and<br />

staying Downtown to have dinner.<br />

They are leaving their offices and getting<br />

OUT of Downtown Jacksonville, period.<br />

And not enough people are driving into<br />

Downtown Jacksonville after 5 p.m. for dinner,<br />

either.<br />

So that leaves the weekday lunch hours,<br />

roughly 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m., as the narrow<br />

sweet spot that Downtown restaurants and<br />

food trucks must hit — in terms of lots of<br />

customers and revenue — to thrive in the<br />

city center.<br />

“If you don’t make a huge segment of<br />

your revenue and business during the lunch<br />

time hours, it’s going to be a challenge for<br />

you to really prosper (as a restaurant or food<br />

truck),” says Jake Gordon, CEO of Downtown<br />

Vision.<br />

“The pie isn’t as big as we want it to be<br />

right now,” Gordon says.<br />

“So that means that everyone for the moment<br />

is getting smaller slices of a smaller<br />

pie.”<br />

It’s a reality that’s hitting home for Downtown<br />

restaurateurs like Ewais.<br />

“I would say that we’ve lost 5 to 10 per-<br />

SPRING <strong>2018</strong> | J MAGAZINE 83


cent of our lunch business over the past year,”<br />

Ewais says.<br />

“I would bet that’s similar to what<br />

other restaurants are suffering in lost<br />

business,” he adds.<br />

“And we’re not even talking<br />

about places like the Bank Bar<br />

BQ (a traditional restaurant on<br />

West Forsyth Street that recently<br />

closed after less than a<br />

year in operation).”<br />

Ewais notes that during<br />

the last few years, the Zodiac<br />

was able to have dinner hours<br />

because it made enough revenue<br />

during lunchtime to<br />

cover the predictable drop in<br />

evening business.<br />

“I really felt it was important<br />

to give people as many dinner options<br />

as possible Downtown, even<br />

though it was a stretch for us to stay<br />

open for dinner,” Ewais says.<br />

But several weeks ago, the Zodiac finally<br />

had to throw in the oven mitt.<br />

It ended its dinner service.<br />

The reason was simple, Ewais says: The 5 to 10 percent loss in<br />

lunchtime revenue has left no cushion to support dinner hours.<br />

“Absolutely, it’s related to the food trucks,” he says of the drop<br />

in lunch money.<br />

“[Going to a food truck] may<br />

not be the right option for every<br />

person. Or for every day. But it’s<br />

pretty obvious that lots of people<br />

Downtown do like it. And<br />

they like it a lot.”<br />

Jack Shad,<br />

co-founder of the Court<br />

Urban Food Park<br />

But Shad suggests it may be overly simplistic<br />

to link any reduction in lunch<br />

business among brick and mortar<br />

restaurants solely to food trucks.<br />

“When I was the parking director,<br />

I’d always get numbers<br />

on what kind of activity we had<br />

going in and out of our Downtown<br />

parking garages,” Shad<br />

says.<br />

“One thing that would always<br />

amaze me would be the<br />

number of people who would<br />

leave one of our parking garages<br />

around lunchtime, be<br />

gone for about an hour or 90<br />

minutes, and then come back<br />

and park back in the garage.”<br />

With a pause, Shad adds: “Do<br />

I know where all of them were going?<br />

Of course not. But you would<br />

have to think a lot of them were leaving<br />

Downtown, going somewhere outside<br />

Downtown to have lunch and then coming<br />

back to work. And there was no food park like this<br />

back then. So I think our food trucks are actually helping to<br />

keep some of those people Downtown.”<br />

Yes, it’s the old the-chicken- or-egg debate.<br />

But this time, there actually are real chickens and actual eggs<br />

on the line.<br />

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“They are really hurting the<br />

restaurant industry Downtown<br />

right now — and what’s even<br />

worse, [food trucks] will keep<br />

new restaurants from deciding<br />

to come into Downtown.”<br />

Jeriees Ewais,<br />

co-owner of the Zodiac<br />

Bar & Grill<br />

THE LAW<br />

Currently, food trucks operate in<br />

Downtown Jacksonville under city<br />

ordinance 2014-472, which was<br />

championed by City Councilman<br />

Reggie Brown and approved<br />

in 2014.<br />

Among other things, the<br />

ordinance requires food<br />

trucks to be more than 50<br />

feet away from a traditional<br />

brick and mortar restaurant.<br />

The aim, according to the<br />

ordinance’s language, was<br />

“to allow both the Mobile<br />

Food Dispensing Vendor and<br />

the established restaurant industry<br />

to co-exist without negative<br />

financial impact to the other.”<br />

Obviously, not everyone thinks<br />

that has been the result.<br />

Ewais and other members of the<br />

Downtown Restaurant Association of Jacksonville<br />

— an evolving group of local restaurants<br />

that seeks a greater voice for local eateries in shaping<br />

Downtown’s future — contend the 2014 ordinance is outdated<br />

because it neither foresaw nor reflects the explosion in food<br />

trucks that has happened since it originally took effect.<br />

The group is pushing for revised legislation that would significantly<br />

increase the distance that food trucks<br />

must stay clear from traditional restaurants<br />

— “50 feet is nothing, really,”<br />

Ewais says — and require the food<br />

trucks to be spread out across a<br />

wider area rather than heavily<br />

concentrated in the heart of<br />

Downtown.<br />

“There’s just too many<br />

of them Downtown,” Ewais<br />

says.<br />

“There’s just too many<br />

of them too close to all of us<br />

(traditional restaurants).”<br />

But Shad suggests the<br />

current ordinance is largely<br />

working well by encouraging<br />

entrepreneurship and making<br />

Downtown a more vibrant place<br />

in general.<br />

“I think in reality we have become<br />

an established element of Downtown<br />

— and the city is benefiting from that as<br />

much as the individual patrons,” Shad says of<br />

food trucks.<br />

“The food truck operators are true entrepreneurs. They<br />

have to buy trucks. They have to buy fuel. They have to buy supplies.<br />

They have to pay rent. They have to be innovative to stand<br />

out from everyone. So there is a real sense of energy and boldness<br />

in what they do. And it’s really valuable to have that kind of energy<br />

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in a Downtown that’s still figuring out how<br />

to shape its future.”<br />

Adds Shad: “I don’t see food trucks<br />

going away. I don’t see concepts like the<br />

Court Urban Food Park going away. Why<br />

should we?”<br />

MIXED FEELINGS<br />

The most striking thing about the food<br />

trucks vs. traditional restaurant debate is<br />

that it has plenty of city officials admitting<br />

they don’t have some easy, magical answer<br />

to resolve it.<br />

Indeed, Gordon says it’s impossible to<br />

applaud and support the “can do” initiative<br />

of the Downtown food truck operators<br />

who are putting their ideas and business<br />

plans into the free market without also<br />

totally understanding and respecting the<br />

concerns of traditional restaurant owners<br />

— some of whom have been in Downtown<br />

Jacksonville for decades and genuinely<br />

love and care about it.<br />

“It’s a hard thing to figure out,” Gordon<br />

says.<br />

“What I do know is that when food<br />

trucks and restaurants are both succeeding<br />

Downtown, all of Downtown is succeeding.<br />

We want them all to thrive.”<br />

To Gordon, the food trucks vs. restaurant<br />

issue may solve itself if Downtown<br />

Jacksonville is successful in attracting<br />

more economic development and activity.<br />

‘The more development we have going<br />

on Downtown, the more activity we have<br />

in general going on Downtown, the bigger<br />

the economic pie becomes for everybody<br />

Downtown — including our food trucks<br />

and restaurants,” Gordon says.<br />

“That’s the best answer to this that I<br />

can come up with. Let’s grow the pie, so<br />

everyone in every business in our Downtown<br />

benefits by getting bigger slices of<br />

the pie.”<br />

Gordon’s view is echoed with gusto by<br />

City Councilman Scott Wilson.<br />

While chairing City Council’s Neighborhoods,<br />

Community Investments and<br />

Services Committee last year, Wilson<br />

held sessions with food truck and restaurant<br />

operators to hear their perspectives<br />

and explore whether the 2014 ordinance<br />

needed to be dramatically revised.<br />

And what was Wilson’s verdict after<br />

those discussions?<br />

“I came away thinking it was a complex<br />

issue,” Wilson says with a chuckle.<br />

‘I came away from it with really torn<br />

feelings. I could really see both sides of it.<br />

I could absolutely see how the food truck<br />

operators felt and how the restaurant<br />

owners felt, too.”<br />

But Wilson says he didn’t come away<br />

from the sessions feeling that the 2014 ordinance<br />

will dramatically change anytime<br />

soon.<br />

‘I don’t get the sense there’s any great<br />

movement among my colleagues (on City<br />

Council) to do anything,” Wilson says.<br />

“And I kind of go along with that. Do<br />

we really want to try to change something<br />

that’s already in place?’”<br />

Wilson adds that it’s beyond doubt that<br />

“both restaurant owners and food truck<br />

operators are making huge investments in<br />

their businesses. Both add something to<br />

our city. So what I would like to see is both<br />

co-exist and both thrive.”<br />

And Wilson may have come up with<br />

the best way of all to resolve all of this:<br />

“Look, I like to eat good food, whether<br />

it’s at a food truck or in a restaurant,” Wilson<br />

says with a smile.<br />

“And I know I’m not alone in this city<br />

when it comes to that. So just give us good<br />

food to eat, and we’ll find a way to get<br />

there to eat it — wherever it is Downtown.”<br />

Roger Brown has been a Times-Union editorial<br />

writer since 2013. He lives in Downtown Jacksonville.<br />

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plea<br />

for<br />

Resurrection<br />

DREAMS OF REVIVING<br />

THE ICONIC SNYDER<br />

MEMORIAL CHURCH<br />

COME AND GO,<br />

BUT SAVING THE<br />

LIMESTONE AND<br />

GRANITE BUILDING<br />

WILL TAKE PASSION,<br />

VISION AND QUITE<br />

POSSIBLY A MIRACLE<br />

BY CAROLE HAWKINS<br />

PHOTOGRAPH BY JEFF DAVIS<br />

J MAGAZINE


“I certainly believe there will be someone with the<br />

right vision and strategy. We’ve just got to find that<br />

right person who has the financial wherewithal.”<br />

Aundra Wallace, CEO OF THE Downtown Investment Authority<br />

there aren’t many buildings<br />

as beautiful as an<br />

old church, and Snyder<br />

Memorial is no exception.<br />

The 1902 Gothic<br />

Revival just opposite<br />

Hemming<br />

Park, with its rough-hewn granite<br />

walls, crenellated bell tower<br />

and intricate glass rose window,<br />

could double as a fairy-tale<br />

castle.<br />

The biggest problem with a<br />

beautiful old church is it always<br />

looks like, well, a church. It<br />

makes it tough to imagine a<br />

future for Snyder Memorial,<br />

abandoned by its suburbs-bound<br />

parishioners decades ago and<br />

idling on the city’s list of lazy<br />

assets since 2006.<br />

The Downtown Investment<br />

Authority hopes a private partner<br />

will deliver the capital needed to<br />

resurrect the historic landmark.<br />

“I certainly believe there will be<br />

someone with the right vision and<br />

strategy,” said DIA CEO Aundra<br />

Wallace. “We’ve just got to find that<br />

right person who has the financial<br />

wherewithal.”<br />

That vision so far has proven<br />

elusive. Founded in 1870 as Trinity<br />

Methodist Episcopal Church,<br />

Snyder Memorial’s congregation<br />

earned an early reputation as<br />

a social safety net, tending sick<br />

soldiers during a typhoid outbreak<br />

in 1898.<br />

The original church burned down in the<br />

Great Fire of 1901, and the current building<br />

was part of Downtown Jacksonville’s<br />

rebuilding.<br />

COMMUNITY CONSCIENCE<br />

For 90 years, Snyder opened its doors<br />

to the military, youth groups and passing<br />

townsfolk in need of spiritual reflection.<br />

It served as a refuge for 1960s civil rights<br />

The Snyder Memorial Church (seen here in1964) served as a refuge for<br />

1960s civil rights protesters, fed the poor and sheltered the indigent.<br />

protesters, fed the poor and sheltered the<br />

indigent. But support petered out in the<br />

1990s as the church evolved more into an<br />

urban ministry for vagrants than a place of<br />

worship for the faithful.<br />

In 2000 the building was deconsecrated<br />

and sold, first to a band for a<br />

performance venue and later to the city<br />

when the band could no longer afford it.<br />

The city has tried to sell the church once<br />

since then, but received only one<br />

proposal from an under-financed<br />

bidder. The building now stands in<br />

disrepair.<br />

For years, Jacksonville’s pension<br />

woes have kept projects like Snyder<br />

off the budget. But this year the city<br />

set aside $600,000 for the building.<br />

To what purpose? “To be determined,”<br />

Wallace said. It’s possible<br />

it’ll be used for repairs, grants or<br />

other incentives.<br />

But Wallace wants engineers to<br />

evaluate the building’s condition<br />

first. The city has already put<br />

$427,000 into roof and foundation<br />

repairs, but Snyder is leaking<br />

again. By spring, the DIA hopes<br />

to publish a notice of condition,<br />

giving potential buyers a better<br />

idea of what a full rehabilitation<br />

could involve.<br />

Wallace says he’ll then defer<br />

to the market for clues as to what<br />

Snyder’s highest and best use<br />

might be.<br />

CREATIVE CHURCHES<br />

Jacksonville has never seen<br />

a historic Downtown church<br />

adapted for reuse by a private<br />

investor before. But Philadelphia<br />

has. There are 82 historic sacred spaces in<br />

Philadelphia that have been converted for<br />

non-religious uses, according to a study<br />

completed last year by The Pew Charitable<br />

Trusts.<br />

That amounts to about 10 percent of all<br />

FLORIDA TIMES-UNION ARCHIVE<br />

90<br />

J MAGAZINE | SPRING <strong>2018</strong>


Light streams through the empty sanctuary at Snyder Memorial Church. The Downtown church was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2013.<br />

JEFF DAVIS (MAP); JON M. FLETCHER<br />

Monroe St.<br />

historic churches in the city, compared to 5<br />

percent that stand vacant. The re-purposed<br />

churches have morphed into loft apartments,<br />

mixed-use space, service agencies,<br />

arts venues and schools. Those most likely<br />

to be converted were located in stable<br />

neighborhoods or in areas undergoing revitalization.<br />

Condition, size and layout were<br />

other success predictors, with investors<br />

favoring simple rectangular layouts over<br />

more complex ones.<br />

Snyder’s layout has some challenges,<br />

admits DIA Operations Manager<br />

Guy Parola. Churches can be more<br />

difficult to repurpose than other<br />

types of buildings, because they<br />

aren’t large square boxes. Redeveloping<br />

a complex space demands<br />

skilled artisans, and that raises costs.<br />

“You really have two buildings<br />

there,” he said. “You have a beautiful<br />

open sanctuary that screams for public<br />

engagement, for example, as a restaurant<br />

or art gallery.<br />

The other half of Snyder’s footprint is a<br />

two-story maze of empty offices and classrooms.<br />

That attracts a very different type<br />

of tenant. “The nut everybody’s trying to<br />

crack is which half of the building will pay<br />

for which? You can’t bifurcate that space,”<br />

Parola said. “It’s too connected.”<br />

Alon Barzilay is a Philadelphia developer<br />

who specializes in adaptive re-use<br />

of historic buildings. He’s re-purposed<br />

three old churches, converting them into<br />

loft apartments, creative office space and<br />

events venues.<br />

DALTON<br />

AGENCY<br />

HEMMING<br />

PARK<br />

VISIT<br />

JACKSONVILLE<br />

Adams St.<br />

CITY HALL<br />

Duval St.<br />

Laura St.<br />

CHAMBLIN’S<br />

UPTOWN<br />

JIMMY<br />

JOHN’S<br />

N<br />

MUSEUM OF<br />

CONTEMPORARY<br />

ART<br />

MAIN<br />

LIBRARY<br />

Snyder<br />

Memorial<br />

Church<br />

There are three advantages to working<br />

with historic churches, he says: Federal<br />

historic tax credits can help finance the<br />

project, there’s less competition from other<br />

developers at bidding, and old churches are<br />

gorgeous.<br />

“The number of marketing ideas that<br />

come with an adapted church — it’s just<br />

fantastic,” he said.<br />

LOCATION FIRST<br />

The key to profitability lies in diligent<br />

cost analysis. Zoning attorneys, architects,<br />

environmental scientists and construction<br />

estimators are all part of Barzilay’s investigative<br />

team.<br />

“You can’t do it in a hurry,” he<br />

said. “Very often you spend money<br />

for an analysis, and it just doesn’t<br />

make sense. So you move on. It’s<br />

important to think of it as real estate<br />

project, not as a church, he said.<br />

Location is what determines the<br />

highest and best use, not the building.<br />

A walkable downtown district,<br />

with coffee shops, cafes and art galleries?<br />

It could become creative-class office<br />

space for an architect, ad agency or tech<br />

company — tenants who would be drawn<br />

in by the church’s large open work spaces,<br />

attractive exposed timbers, hardwood<br />

floors and intricate windows.<br />

A neighborhood you’d never want to<br />

develop? Walk away, no matter how beautiful<br />

the church is. “Not every church is a<br />

winner,” Barzilay said.<br />

SPRING <strong>2018</strong> | J MAGAZINE 91


“The city needs to move this thing<br />

forward and activate it ASAP,<br />

while the economic cycle is still<br />

strong. We should stop waiting.”<br />

Oliver Barakat, DIA BOARD MEMBER<br />

In Downtown Jacksonville, location is what tempted local<br />

businessman Jacques Klempf to convert the Bostwick, a historic<br />

bank circa 1902, into a high-end steakhouse. The building, which<br />

sits at the corner of Ocean and Bay streets, is one of the first things<br />

commuters see driving into town across the Main Street Bridge.<br />

From Cowford Chophouse’s rooftop bar, customers can take in<br />

Jacksonville’s Southbank skyline, bridges and the St. Johns River.<br />

“That location, the visibility, gave credence to us moving forward<br />

to do what we did,” Klempf said.<br />

Snyder’s location at Jacksonville’s civic square excites Klempf<br />

less. There’s the Museum of Contemporary Art nearby that could<br />

help draw customers for a trendy shop or restaurant. But with<br />

larger buildings all around, there’s no scenic view.<br />

“It’s hard to get people to want to come Downtown,” he said.<br />

“You’ve really got to create a good experience, something they’re<br />

not going to get anywhere else.”<br />

Historic renovation doesn’t come cheaply, either. Klempf<br />

figures it’s about three times the cost of new construction. And<br />

there are always surprises. The Chophouse’s foundation turned<br />

out to be so compromised contractors had to erect a new steel<br />

frame structure within the building and attach the historic walls<br />

to it.<br />

Still, Klempf says he would do it all over again. “I really feel<br />

really good about preserving this for Jacksonville,” he said. “The<br />

building is beautiful. I’m very proud of it.”<br />

Snyder Memorial isn’t nearly as challenged by its condition as<br />

the Chophouse was, said DIA Board member Oliver Barakat. And<br />

he believes it’s at a marquee and underutilized location.<br />

“The city needs to move this thing forward and activate it<br />

ASAP, while the economic cycle is still strong. We should stop<br />

waiting,” Barakat said.<br />

The city can offer two programs to tempt a private investor:<br />

an enhancement grant for retail stores and creative offices, and<br />

a historic trust fund. But Snyder isn’t waiting on incentives or<br />

inspections, really.<br />

It’s waiting for a creative vision of what a beautiful old church<br />

can become if it’s never going to be a church again. On this, the<br />

city comes up short, sidling its hoped-for private partner with the<br />

larger portion of risk. That’s a shame. The church which, through<br />

the ups and downs of Jacksonville’s history, cared for so many<br />

others perhaps deserves a similar fate for itself.<br />

CGC1521832<br />

CAROLE HAWKINS is a freelance journalist. She lives in Murray Hill.<br />

92<br />

J MAGAZINE | SPRING <strong>2018</strong>


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QUESTIONS & ANSWERS<br />

By Roger Brown<br />

Future coming fast<br />

for transportation<br />

A reimagined Skyway and driverless<br />

vehicles and are just two Downtown<br />

projects on JTA’s front burner<br />

WILL DICKEY<br />

N<br />

at Ford became the CEO of the<br />

Jacksonville Transportation<br />

Authority in October 2012,<br />

and in the five-plus years that have<br />

followed, he has given new meaning<br />

to the phrase “transformational<br />

figure.”<br />

During that time, Ford has:<br />

n Completely overhauled JTA’s once<br />

badly outdated<br />

NAT FORD<br />

WORK:<br />

CEO of the Jacksonville<br />

Transportation Authority<br />

FROM:<br />

New York<br />

LIVES IN:<br />

East Arlington<br />

transit route<br />

system — a<br />

step that has<br />

dramatically<br />

increased the<br />

daily on-time<br />

rate for JTA<br />

buses to<br />

80 percent.<br />

Before Ford<br />

arrived, the on-time rate was a mediocre<br />

65 percent (or worse).<br />

n Launched the Blue and Green lines<br />

of the popular First Coast Flyer system,<br />

which features environment-friendly<br />

buses equipped with Wi-Fi that travel<br />

extended distances from Downtown to both<br />

Jacksonville’s Southeast and North sides with<br />

few time-consuming stops.<br />

n Advanced the community conversation on<br />

whether the automated, overhead 2.5-mile Skyway<br />

can have a role in a future Downtown Jacksonville<br />

(it can), and started work on how to make it a<br />

relevant player in tomorrow’s Downtown.<br />

n Began work on the Jacksonville Regional<br />

Transportation Center — an idea that had been<br />

dormant for years until Ford arrived — in the<br />

LaVilla neighborhood. The first phase of the $58<br />

million transportation center is the construction<br />

SPRING <strong>2018</strong> | J MAGAZINE 95


Nat Ford watches as riders disembark from an autonomous vehicle at JTA’s test track near Metropolitan Park. The vehicles would eventually circulate Downtown.<br />

of a new Greyhound Bus terminal, which<br />

opens in March. By the end of 2020, the<br />

regional center will also house the JTA’s<br />

new administrative headquarters, the<br />

main bus transfer facility, an area for niche<br />

intercity bus services like the Megabus, a<br />

pedestrian bridge, an enclosed passenger<br />

waiting area, public restrooms, a bike storage<br />

area and much more.<br />

n Started work on pursuing a potential<br />

autonomous vehicle service, with a test<br />

track already in place to develop driverless<br />

vehicles that would circulate around the<br />

Downtown core and connect riders to key<br />

Downtown spots and neighborhoods. And<br />

that’s just some of the stuff Ford has gotten<br />

done.<br />

Clearly, Ford embraces the idea of being<br />

a change agent who isn’t afraid to think big.<br />

And Ford’s engaging “we can do it” spirit<br />

was clearly on display during a Q and A<br />

session with J <strong>Magazine</strong>.<br />

What should be the JTA’s role in shaping<br />

the future Downtown?<br />

It’s critical that the JTA step up and have a<br />

large role in Downtown’s success.<br />

Look at the cities that are generally<br />

considered our peers — and have<br />

downtowns that are really successful:<br />

Charlotte, Nashville, San Diego, Seattle and<br />

Portland.<br />

They all have public transportation<br />

systems that obviously help people get to<br />

and from work. But they do more than that.<br />

They also provide even greater mobility for<br />

people once they’re within the downtown<br />

area.<br />

They play a big role in creating the high<br />

levels of activity that those cities have in their<br />

downtowns.<br />

They are a big reason why those<br />

downtowns are so vibrant.<br />

That’s what our challenge is at the JTA.<br />

It is to build a robust transit network that<br />

doesn’t just move people into Downtown<br />

but, more importantly once they are<br />

Downtown, moving them quickly from one<br />

activity to the next, one location to the next,<br />

one venue to the next.<br />

That’s how we can add to the vibrancy<br />

of the future Downtown Jacksonville, and<br />

we’ve been working very hard in that regard.<br />

It started with the (overhaul of the route<br />

system).<br />

Then we introduced the first two legs of<br />

the First Coast Flyer to provide a premium<br />

bus line service from and to the north and<br />

south.<br />

And at the same time, we began our<br />

study into what to do with the Skyway —<br />

should it stay? Should it be torn down and<br />

turned into something else?<br />

The fortunate thing is that on all of these<br />

issues, we’ve been able to pull together all<br />

of the stakeholders — from the educational<br />

community, the business community,<br />

elected officials, the Downtown Investment<br />

Authority, our citizens.<br />

What’s an example of how that partnership<br />

has made a real difference in shaping the<br />

future Downtown Jacksonville?<br />

Well, for example, just from all of us<br />

working together, it became really clear<br />

that when you look at the development<br />

taking place Downtown, we are really<br />

going to need some type of conveyance<br />

BRUCE LIPSKY<br />

96<br />

J MAGAZINE | SPRING <strong>2018</strong>


system to take people from, say, a Downtown neighborhood like<br />

Brooklyn to a major venue like EverBank Field.<br />

And that led us to determine that while the Skyway may not<br />

have been as robust in the past as we may have liked, it’s definitely<br />

going to be necessary in the future Downtown Jacksonville.<br />

We’ll have to expand it somehow. We’ll have to stretch it<br />

somehow. But we will need the Skyway.<br />

So these are the kind of decisions that we’re going to keep<br />

making working in partnership with all of the other stakeholders<br />

working to build our future Downtown.<br />

What is the biggest transportation challenge facing the future<br />

Downtown Jacksonville?<br />

The biggest challenge would be with the rapid development<br />

that’s occurring Downtown, there will be traffic congestion issues if<br />

people do not have alternatives for transportation.<br />

Look at the Laura Street Trio site that’s now being redeveloped.<br />

Look at all the other once-dormant buildings Downtown that are<br />

being put in play and put back on the market to redevelop.<br />

These are all sites that are going to be eventually filled up with<br />

office workers and new businesses, all in our central core.<br />

Now, if every one of these employees is driving into Downtown<br />

Jacksonville every day in a single-occupant vehicle, we will have the<br />

alternative problem of prosperity — which is traffic congestion.<br />

So we have got to be smart. We have got to manage that.<br />

What I’m excited about is that we feel that we — the JTA — are<br />

ahead of the curve on this.<br />

The work we’re doing with the (autonomous vehicle) test track,<br />

the work we’re doing to transform the Skyway and make the<br />

conversion to getting it to street level, we’re not starting from<br />

scratch in coming up with solutions to address the potential<br />

problem of traffic congestion in our Downtown.<br />

So, yes, we do feel we are well ahead of the curve in terms of our<br />

planning.<br />

We’re more in “Let’s execute what we need to do” mode than in<br />

“What will we need to do?” mode.<br />

And that’s a good place to be.<br />

A year from now, what do you hope to point to and say, “This<br />

is what the JTA have accomplished that’s made Downtown<br />

Jacksonville a better place than it was last year”?<br />

Well, one, the Greyhound Bus terminal will be totally relocated,<br />

and it will be operating out of a state-of-the-art location.<br />

We’ll be a year closer to opening up the full regional<br />

transportation center, which is going to be a great thing in the<br />

ongoing revitalization of LaVilla.<br />

We will be even farther along in the process of making a decision<br />

on what kind of vehicle we want for our (autonomous vehicle project)<br />

and moving forward on our plan to build the system.<br />

The East Line of the First Coast Flyer — the Red Line — will be up<br />

and running.<br />

And we will be continuing our outreach to get folks out of their<br />

cars, and to give us a chance and try our system.<br />

It seems pretty clear that you feel really good about where the JTA<br />

is heading.<br />

Well, it’s an exciting time for the JTA. And it’s an exciting time for<br />

Downtown Jacksonville.<br />

Roger Brown has been a Times-Union editorial writer since 2013.<br />

He lives in Downtown Jacksonville.<br />

SPRING <strong>2018</strong> | J MAGAZINE 97


THE FINAL WORD<br />

Investments needed<br />

for Jacksonville to<br />

become a great city<br />

PRESTON<br />

HASKELL<br />

PHONE<br />

(904) 791-4507<br />

EMAIL<br />

preston.haskell<br />

@haskell.com<br />

great city is characterized by a<br />

A thriving Downtown, superior roads<br />

and public transportation, extensive<br />

access to parks and natural amenities, quality<br />

education for all, accessible libraries and<br />

broadband, low crime levels, aesthetic beauty,<br />

high levels of human and social services, quality<br />

arts and cultural institutions and, correspondingly,<br />

high per-capita incomes.<br />

These are not simply abstract or aspirational conditions.<br />

Cities with these characteristics provide a superior<br />

environment for earning a living, raising a family,<br />

starting or expanding a business. Such higher quality<br />

of life attracts smart and educated people and supports<br />

thriving business enterprises who invest in their<br />

businesses and pay superior wages. In this environment,<br />

the economy thrives, personal incomes go up, property<br />

becomes more valuable — in short, everyone benefits<br />

from a high level of economic activity and prosperity.<br />

In Jacksonville, we have not made adequate investments<br />

in economic development, infrastructure,<br />

social services, neighborhood beautification, arts and<br />

culture, and other attributes essential to achieving this<br />

level of quality of life. Indeed, we have operated our city<br />

government on the cheap: lowering the millage rate year<br />

after year, making it well below our peer cities, refusing<br />

to consider new taxes and even eschewing the continuation<br />

of existing taxes. We are only meeting essential<br />

operational needs, not investing in our future.<br />

We have become not the best city in Florida, but the<br />

cheapest.<br />

Our peer cities in Florida have not taken this self-destructive<br />

route. Orlando/Orange, Miami/Dade and Tampa/Hillsborough<br />

have invested far more, on a per capita<br />

basis, in public safety, infrastructure and environment,<br />

parks, social and children’s services, arts and culture,<br />

and libraries than we have. Their property tax rates are<br />

higher, but their vibrant downtowns, superior infrastructures<br />

and comprehensive social services and intellectual<br />

resources have resulted not just in better quality of life<br />

but also higher per-capita incomes.<br />

Raising taxes is never pleasant or uncontroversial.<br />

But if so doing will return benefits to the citizenry well<br />

beyond the cost, we should, thoughtfully and boldly, set<br />

out to do it. We should begin by funding the Downtown<br />

Investment Authority at a level that will enable it to<br />

attract significantly more housing, retail and entertainment<br />

venues to our city center.<br />

We must invest in public transportation to make<br />

neighborhoods and downtown more accessible and<br />

slow the rate of suburban sprawl.<br />

We should maintain our parks, recreation venues and<br />

river accesses at a higher level.<br />

We must increase services to children and resources<br />

for education.<br />

We must improve conditions of the indigent, homeless<br />

and underemployed with a view toward making<br />

them productive and secure members of our society.<br />

We must make resources like libraries and broadband<br />

accessible to all.<br />

We must increase support for public safety, our arts<br />

and cultural institutions, and for the beautification of<br />

our city and neighborhoods. And we can do this and still<br />

remain a relatively low-tax city.<br />

Transformation of our community in this manner<br />

will require thoughtful and resolute leadership from<br />

our elected officials, particularly the mayor. It will also<br />

require commitment from our civic leaders, business<br />

leaders, nonprofit institutions and the private sector generally.<br />

These forces, under the mayor’s leadership, must<br />

join together in crafting and communicating a vision for<br />

a more prosperous and higher-income community — a<br />

vision that people will believe in, will support and will<br />

implement because they know that it is in their own<br />

best interests and the best interests of their children and<br />

grandchildren, to do so.<br />

We already enjoy a distinct combination of natural<br />

assets in our ocean and beaches, river, climate and<br />

nature. If these features were accompanied by adequate<br />

investment in infrastructure and services, it would create<br />

a city known throughout the U. S. as a highly desirable<br />

place to move to or invest in. This, in turn would create a<br />

virtuous cycle of ever-increasing economic activity supporting<br />

a higher quality of life, which in turn increases<br />

economic activity — a dynamic that will perpetuate itself<br />

far into the future.<br />

If we do all of this, we will make Jacksonville one of<br />

the finest and most desirable cities in America.<br />

Preston Haskell is founder of The Haskell Company<br />

and a leading Jacksonville philanthropist. He and his<br />

wife live in Jacksonville’s Ortega neighborhood.<br />

98<br />

J MAGAZINE | SPRING <strong>2018</strong>


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