All I want for Christmas is … a revitalized Downtown

Hello! Yes, BNC5 is back after an unfortunate delay. There’s been so much happening in Downtown Jacksonville in recent months! And tomorrow includes a big event, that I am absolutely delighted to share: The reopening of Friendship Fountain on the Southbank. If you’d like to attend, the program will begin at 9 am at Friendship Fountain on the Southbank of the St. Johns River.

It’s been nine months since the groundbreaking to start renovation. While driving home from a morning meeting yesterday (more on that in another post), I noticed the fountain was on. It had been tested in the evenings in recent weeks, but something else was different. As I walked up the sidewalk, I realized: The fencing was down!

Music was playing — oddly enough, Christmas music. I listened to a few songs, and — with a break from recent smoke-filled skies (and the extra heat that brings to the day) plus spray carried off the fountain by the breeze, and the lovely sounds of Ella Fitzgerald, Elvis Presley and Mariah Carey singing about Christmas — I would have sworn it was close to Halloween.

Without going into all the history of the Fountain (check out Bob’s wonderful blog at jaxfountain.com), it’s so exciting to see the Fountain return to its former glory. I recently had a conversation with Ron Barton of the Jacksonville Economic Development Commission about the Fountain project. He pointed out that this is a maintenance project, not a capital project — something Downtown sorely needs. Many of JEDC’s current projects are maintenance, with big costs because that work is so long overdue. I asked him if the restored Fountain could be considered an attraction or destination, and he said when it was constructed, it was such because not much else was on the Southbank of the river. The Fountain now is surrounded by business and commercial activity. I maintain that it will continue to be an attraction, in some sense. Each time I’ve visited in recent weeks, there have been others peeking through the construction fence, standing on benches, eagerly watching and waiting for completion of the project.

Here are some photos. There will be plenty taken tomorrow, as well. Architect Taylor Hardwick is supposed to attend and speak, and I hope to meet him.

Thank you to the readers who have tuned in, awaiting another post. There’s a lot to share and I hope to get to it quickly. Downtown Jacksonville seems to be gaining momentum.

See you in the morning! I recommend arriving early, for parking and getting a good seat.

Posted in Downtown as Sanctuary, Festive neighborhood, Jax History, Make it better, Revitalizing Downtown, So much to do! | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

We are CoWorkers

There is energy in Downtown Jacksonville. Is it the temperature changing from warm to cool and back to warm in the annual spring dance? Is it the bright sunshine that insists we have left wintry grey skies behind? Is it the influx of visitors this week for the USA Gymnastics AT&T American Cup at Veterans Memorial Arena?

More likely, it is the CoWorkers.

Downtown Vision and CoWork Jax have partnered to bring shared office space to Downtown Jacksonville. According to the CoWorking wiki, “the idea is simple: that independent professionals and those with workplace flexibility work better together than they do alone.”

There’s been a good bit of collaboration and plenty of connections. So, who’s CoWorking? There are designers, marketing pros, PR pros, writers, consultants, tech folks, and lots of awesome people.

Originally proposed for one week, CoWorkers learned yesterday that the space is available again next week. This is exciting news, as the two days I’ve been here have invigorated me. I didn’t think it possible to focus on Downtown more than I already do.

Jacksonville’s CoWork space is in the AT&T tower, formerly known as the Southern Bell Building, built in 1983 by KBJ Architects. Geer Services is a neighbor (and generous provider of the free WiFi).

The view over Forsyth and Julia streets is amazing. If you’d like to watch the construction progress of the Unified Duval County Courthouse, it’s convenient from the fourth floor site. Also visible are the former Federal building, Simpson Federal Court House and Ed Ball Building. Looking up Forsyth to the east, there’s the former Barnett Bank headquarters, Atlantic National Bank Building, and even the Marble Bank, Bisbee and Lynch buildings.

There are three parking garages within view and a few surface lots, with Central Station for the Skyway just across Bay Street. As with much of Downtown Jacksonville, parking is not an issue here.

If you need any more convincing, you can definitely hear Big Jim, loud and clear, from the CoWork space.

Check out CoWork Jax for more information.

Posted in Career Development, Downtown as Sanctuary, Make it better, Networking, Revitalizing Downtown | 1 Comment

Photographs and memories

This afternoon, while looking for the perfect photo to make a birthday card, I went through a number of old (read: four to eight years ago) photo files. They brought back terrific memories, especially those from 2005. So, here’s a little nostalgia. (Click the photos for more information.)

What I remember vividly about Super Bowl week 2005 is the great number of people around Downtown Jacksonville. There were pedestrians everywhere: crossing the Main Street Bridge, along East Bay Street, in Friendship Park and at The Landing, on both Riverwalks. Pedicab companies were in town, and stretch limos were popular choices as well. At night, the Main Street bridge was closed to vehicles, and it was a great thrill to ride a bike across the bridge in the traffic lane.

One of my most distinct memories is riding down from Springfield with a friend Friday night. We wanted to see the action and feel the energy. At Main and Bay, it was easy enough to ride our bikes. At Bay and Newnan, we had to start walking our bikes. By the time we got to Catherine Street, we had to lock up the bikes. Why? Because pedestrian traffic was that thick. I’ve never been so happy to give up my bike for walking.

Posted in Downtown as Sanctuary, Festive neighborhood, Football, Jax History, Revitalizing Downtown, So much to do! | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Why Are We Sleeping?

The post title and following text come from T. Frederick Davis’s 1925 work, “History of Jacksonville Florida and Vicinity, 1513 to 1924.” The green cloth-covered hardback beckoned to be read from the beginning. This text is at the end of the Chapter 1. (Emphasis mine)

“From Maine to California in the schools of every city and hamlet of the nation where American history is taught, children recite in a word or two the events that occurred in the vicinity of St. Johns Bluff recorded in this chapter. They know that perhaps the destiny of a continent was settled somewhere in Florida, but they do not know that it was anywhere near Jacksonville, nor that here the first white women and children landed in the territory now the United States in the first really substantial attempt at permanent colonization, and that here according to a record inference the first white child was born–the first Protestant white child born in North America. They do not know that the first battle in North America between white races was fought at Fort Caroline. But they do know all about Jamestown and Plymouth rock and a good deal about the missions of California. Thousands of people visit those places every year for no other reason in the world than for their historic interest.

The Daughters of the American Revolution, on May 1, 1924, unveiled near Mayport an enlarged copy of the marker placed by Ribault at the mouth of the river in 1562, and which was undoubtedly destroyed by the Spaniards upon the capture of Fort Caroline in 1565. This is the only effort that has been made to commemorate any of the events of history along the St. Johns River between Jacksonville and the sea.”

Some recent events have led me back to the green book that I generally reference for early 20th century Jacksonville history.

First, a Jacksonville Historical Society meeting in December to celebrate U.S. Rep. Charles Bennett’s 100th birthday taught me what he did for the area, from securing the land for Fort Caroline National Memorial to writing his history of the Fort and Laudonniere.

Second, a meeting of Old Arlington Inc. featured a speaker from the Timucuan Ecological and Historic Preserve and Fort Caroline National Memorial and a McCormick family member speaking about the life of Willie Browne, whose land became what is now the Theodore Roosevelt Area at the National Park Service site.

Third relates to the italicized quote above. Even a north Florida native who wholeheartedly loves this state can miss the historical marker. While working at the St. Augustine Record, I ran an “In Depth” page about Jamestown and Plymouth Rock, to recognize Jamestown’s 400th anniversary. The copy desk chief included a small box with a statement that St. Augustine celebrated its quadricentennial in 1965. Looking back, it is a miracle the Historical Society did not call for my immediate firing.

I realized after seeing the page in print that I had never put the timeline together. No matter how many elementary school field trips we took to St. Augustine, what I remembered as oldest were Jamestown and Plymouth. It escaped me that these were continuously occupied *British* settlements. St. Augustine is the oldest continuously occupied *Spanish* settlement.

St. Augustine has fought Jamestown and Plymouth a bit unsuccessfully for the title in the public mind of Nation’s Oldest City. Williamsburg figured out years ago how to capitalize on cultural and historic tourism, which St. Augustine has been working on. Even Roanoke and its Lost Colony has created something to see and they promote it, too.

So, why haven’t we done anything in Jacksonville? We predate St. Augustine, which means we predate Jamestown and Plymouth and Roanoke. Why do we not see the value in our own history?

It’s not only the value of the story of French Protestants at Fort Caroline–we also dismiss or forget our role in film history (winter film capital), tourism (winter holiday capital until Flagler kept building that railroad), banking and finance (so many banks and insurance companies had their headquarters here), Black history (some have boldly reversed our stature of Harlem of the South to state that Harlem was actually the LaVilla/Jacksonville of the North), music (hello, birth of Southern rock) … Need I go on? Why aren’t there museums to each of these?

As Mr. Davis noted in 1925, people visit historic places out of an interest in history for its own sake. With our budget still in jeopardy, imagine the economic impact of just one history-centered attraction, promoted across the state, region and nation. We have so much to offer–including accuracy in the historical record.

Posted in Jax History, Make it better, Take a look around | Tagged , , , , , , | 13 Comments