Wednesday, August 07, 2013

The Epic Struggle


            The majority of time I remember living in Fayetteville, North Carolina someone always was trying to revitalize our downtown.  While I was attending Terry Sanford Senior High School in the early l980’s our rector at St. John’s Episcopal Church himself championed this movement.  Unfortunately it only amounted to the placement of wrought iron street lights and over-sized black pots on  Hay Street nearest the Market House.  Needless to say this was not successful in promoting the economic growth of downtown.  Over the past three decades this attempted metamorphosis has continued.  The second  chapter in the visual revitalization of downtown Fayetteville was the “cleansing” of the 500 block of Hay St.  Although the movement was successful in the elimination of downtown’s bawdy entertainment atmosphere, it did not cleanse one element
that is hindering the cultural renaissance desired by a small group of wealthy patrons.  Pundits may not agree that the “cleansing” of the 500 block of Hay Street of its old movie theaters, its clubs and bars, and its massage parlors was a fruitful economic policy. During her hey day photos of Fayetteville’s Hay Street can be seen teeming with life and activity.  Who was to say the entertaining of Fort Bragg’s G.I.’s was a bad thing?  If you had been training in the field for the last two weeks with very few amenities, a cold beer and some female companionship would be both appealing and necessary.  Despite its “low brow” functionality people were frequenting the businesses in downtown.  This designation itself could be a metaphor for the types of businesses a few Fayetteville elite are attempting to eliminate.  While I feel the last decade in particular has been the most successful in rejuvenating Fayetteville’s downtown, a value judgment could be placed upon the types of businesses that seem to be emerging.  In its hey day large department stores occupied downtown.  Both Sears and Robuck and The Capital department stores  were staple businesses on Hay St.  The emergence of Cross Creek Mall nailed a final stake in their presence.  Another movement had transpired that effectively moved the hustle and bustle of Bragg Boulevard to Skibo Rd.  No longer was this corridor from Ft. Bragg to Hay Street a needed route for soldiers to migrate downtown for entertainment purposes.  No longer was a rail trolley needed to chauffeur inebriated soldiers back to their barracks.  This seminal movement changed downtown forever.  The evolution has taken many turns and the building of a military museum and memorial has been effective in putting Fayetteville’s downtown on the map.  Still there is one annoying and tenacious deterrent.  No matter how much downtown developers try to market Hay St. as a future cultural Mecca, one reality will remain.  Unlike many other small Southern towns Fayetteville pragmatically has endured because of her economic base.  This economic base never has been music, art, or culture.  It has been the military, the presence of the military, and the service of the military.  The Strategic Rail Corridor Network (STRACNET) must be able to handle a full deployment of 450 fully loaded rail cars in one day.  While a study of rail operations in downtown Fayetteville stated that these fully loaded military trains only are needed a few times a year, the infrastructure for such defense activity must actively be in place.  The resultant rail commerce that is integrated with the service of Ft. Bragg is lucrative, and it continues to flourish.  Ironically it is the economic hub of downtown, not culture.  While it is admirable that developers have been successful building housing and businesses downtown, the realization that twenty to thirty trains pass through this area everyday is impossible to ignore.  It also is  impossible to ignore that CSX-T chooses God’s day of rest for which to assemble their freight trains.  Air transportation has limitations of operation considering the health and well being of nearby residents.  The rail industry does not so it seems.  They operate uninhibitedly whenever they please despite the semi-artistic community that is determined to give downtown a much-needed facelift.  The reality is that any real estate that exists in Fayetteville’s downtown is subject to this sensory skirmish.  Sound and vibration both are present in great amplitude and pressure most of the time in downtown.  The colloquial, genteel, cultured atmosphere that many people seek is not possible in the wake of this large-scale industrial commerce.  While it may not appear large-scale to the eye, the ramifications of its process are.  They are inescapable.