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By Mr. Meister (anonymous) | Posted December 08, 2009 at 09:53:16
The problem with your whole argument is it contradicts itself. Downtown was bustling and busy that is why Jackson Square was built where it was. Downtown's demise has nothing to do with one way streets. If that were the case then Hamilton would be the only city with a deteriorated core. Instead it is one of many most of which have two way streets. Society has changed what people want has changed where people live has changed. Thirty years ago Stelco workers I knew lived on James North, Ferrie Street and Wentworth Street. Now the Steelworkers I know live off Upper Wellington, Upper Gage and in Winona. Though they are different people it is indicative of what has hapin pened. Look at the size of houses built in the fifties and compare that to the size of most new houses today. Our expectations have changed radically.
Hamilton's downtown bustled and grew with one way streets. Changes in society as a whole have lead to many cores falling on hard times. The problem is not the street direction but the cores failure to meet the needs of the populace.
Another example of this phenomenon is our malls. For some number of years the number of malls increased dramatically. Eastgate Square, Limeridge, Stone Road ( in Guelph) Square One (Mississauga) just to name a few. Now malls are not being built. Not just here but all over North America. The current trend is to build Power Centers. This to shall pass and some other style will take its place. Nothing to do with one way streets, everything to do with the demands of the populace and the merchants.
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