Wednesday, May 23, 2007

A River Runs Through It


Who can resist a waterfront view? The closest I've come thus far is an obstructed glimpse of the top of the towers that support the George Washington Bridge when I lived in New Jersey. Right now, I stare out over a lovely community garden (if you ignore the fruit flies that converge on the site, and infiltrate our apartment). But it's not the same. I still have fond memories of the places my fiance and I stayed in Hawaii when we visited a few years ago. At one locale we stared out over the beaches of Kapalua, on Maui, with the volcanic humps that make up modern-day Molokai off in the distance. On the Big Island, we were literally on the water, looking out over the western horizon, allowing us the chance to watch the sunset from the comfort of our lanai. As we head to Portugal for our honeymoon next month, we wait in anticipation for the resort we have lined up in Madeira, the island off the coast, where we will have unobstructed views of the Atlantic Ocean below. When available, waterfront property still reigns as one of the most sought after places to locate. But who wants to risk being under water in a few years once the polar ice caps cross over the tipping point? In the interest of global warming-minded folks out there, it seems that in lieu of those treacherous, and potentially costly ocean views, vantage points overlooking a river seem like a welcome alternative.

For instance, in the St. Louis region, 28,000 homes on over 6,000 acres have been built near the majestic Mississippi in the last fifteen years. One little tidbit that should be mentioned is that this same area was under water during the massive floods that hit the region that year. In light of the recent flooding in the region, where the nearby Missouri River jumped its banks, it seems that maybe even rivers aren't safe from the upheaval happening in the Earth's climate. Nonetheless, people cannot resist the innate urge to be by the water. As one resident in the threatened area noted, "'It's not going to flood here for another 100 years and I won't be around by then.'" Not exactly the best attitude, but one that appears to carry the day for the people that have decided to tempt fate and live near the river.

How about Knoxville, Tennessee, where optimistic developers are investing in projects along the Tennessee River. On the south banks, where the manufacturing base of the community once hummed, a new residential neighborhood is sprouting to offer people the chance to live near the central business district, have access to the burgeoning arts scene in the city, and, you guessed it, live near the water. Part of the vision by Mayor Bill Haslam to bring people back downtown, it has the strong draw of the river to entice people away from their McMansions in the suburbs. As one proud, recent buyer into the area noted, "'It's all about being on the water. It's a great investment.'" (See, "Reviving a No Man's Land Along the Tennessee River," by Keith Schneider, New York Times, May 13, 2007).

Another feel good story is Newark, New Jersey, a place I called my workplace for several years. Bordered by the Passaic River, people are returning to the city best known for the 1967 riots. Not just about the Ironbound now, other areas of the city are seeing growth in new residential projects. Attracted by the beach heads of the New Jersey Performing Arts Center, the aforementioned Ironbound district, so named for the railroad tracks that surround it, and today a hotbed of Portuguese restaurants and appreciating residential units, young professionals working in New York City see it as a welcome alternative to the high costs of Jersey City, Hoboken, and the City itself. Maybe the river is a stretch in this case, particularly since no one aside from the intermittent rowing teams seem to use it for recreational purposes (with good reason). Nonetheless, a view of the Passaic is still a view of the water.

But a river won't guarantee a place's success. Take the example of Cairo, Illinois, at the confluence of the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers. At first blush, it seems like an ideal location. But Cairo has fallen on hard times, combined with bad soil, the end of the riverboat era, the Great Depression and civil strife. Nonetheless, the new mayor, the city's first African American chief executive, Judson Childs, at 73, is looking to turn the corner. Although he has a long way to go, he certainly has one thing going for him: that highly sought after location next to two mighty rivers. Someday someone no doubt will see the gold mine hidden at the bottom of Illinois, once many of the other waterfront views are no more. Perhaps this is an unduly dire prediction, but it is one that should be in the calculation of regions looking to expand "along the water."

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