Submitted by [deleted] t3_z70von in Connecticut
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Submitted by [deleted] t3_z70von in Connecticut
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Between state govt. buildings, federal govt. buildings, churches, schools, etc. SOOOOO much of the actual real estate in Hartford is non taxable. Move the highway exchanges and / or bury the highways to create more developable land. More multi-family houses, and small apartment buildings. Also, schools are old and dilapidated. A huge % of the money spent on each school is just spent on bandaids to fix major structural problems. Stop wasting money on repairs, and just build new.
Bury the highways. Or move them to skirt the city.
Won't happen.
Bring back the Hartford Whalers. People will come, Ray. People will come.
That’s a tough one.
There’s decades of poor planning and urban renewal damage to undo.
You’d have to build a massive amount of apartments and have all new neighborhoods built with street level retail.
It would also help to bury 84, maybe 91 too. But that’s not going to happen.
I always knew New Haven would gentrify, even in its worst days, because it had great bones. There’s a large continuous walkable area that has a traditional street layout (downtown, East Rock, Wooster Square in the heart of it). Not too many office plazas that reduce usable street front space. Not too many parking lots, and the ones left are mostly being redeveloped.
Yes, you have problem neighborhoods still feeling the urban renewal challenge, like the Hill and Fair Haven, but compared to downtown Hartford, it just has a better layout.
Public Transportation that's worth a shit.
Invest in jobs for people. Reform section 8 rental rebate program.
Gentrification of all the bad neighborhoods. Beautification.
You’d have to make it an actually appealing place to live. Right now there is absolutely zero reason to not just work there then take your money out to the suburbs
Build a fast train straight to NYC and another one straight to Boston.
Lol way more then the state is willing to do
Less crime would be a good start
More housing density and mass transit.
Turn 84 and 91 into boulevards and route through traffic clear around the city.
You can find happiness anywhere.
Real estate that is appealing to young professionals that work there then hightail it out at 5pm.
Is development along the river possible?
Thinking something like Boston, but don’t know if it makes sense here.
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Food, beer festivals, and some sort of sports team/ outdoor free concerts. Have something like providence does with water fire, or whatever idk… people enjoy doing shit like that.
Wow! I'm a former Hartford area resident and I'm impressed with the thoughtful comments. Seriously!
I left the state mostly because of the congestion. Too many people, not that anyone cares, or should care, what I think.
I miss the CT spring. It's really glorious.
Many businesses were leaving because millennials want subways and easy access to entertainment, restaurants and nightlife. Well, that was before covid. Not sure what has changed with work-from-home.
There aren’t enough young people living in Hartford to make late night restaurants, bars, music venues, and event spaces viable. And there isn’t enough nightlife to attract young people. And Hartford isn’t a walkable city. It comes down to awful planning and it seems like too much work to undo at this point. Like others noted, there isn’t enough housing either. Lots of projects need to be worked simultaneously and that’s just too costly.
Correct. Young people move to cities for jobs. But they want jobs near where they can have fun, and get there easily. That's why business were leaving. They need young talent because boomers and Gen x are retiring. Hartford just isn't conducive to any of it, and now covid has thrown in a curveball; changing habits and ways of working. We need to study what cities are still thriving and come up with a plan. But then there is the challenge of financing it.
Get rid of the people. Set loose a bunch of radio controlled bulldozers.
Question, what's the law school like? Like is it safe around uconn law?
I live a block away from the law school. It's a great neighborhood and very safe. I mean, we're another two blocks away from the West Hartford town line and tucked in a very wealthy neighborhood.
I pretty regularly walk to Farmington Ave to grab a bite or visit a bar. Hartford is great, but small. The North and South ends are rough, but downtown is mellow (if abandoned) and the West end is rad. Suburbanites are idiots.
Not OP but UCONN Law is on the West end which is “safer” compared to the Northend or Southend of Hartford. Again this is all relative but short answer is yes it’s safer.
maxanderson350 t1_iy42enm wrote
Massive changes - like 10 to 20 thousand new apartments downtown. Only with that level of density can the city begin to support a real downtown area with self-sufficient shops and restaurants.
The only way to achieve that though is massive investment by the state to allow Hartford to lower property taxes and reduce crime, along with streamling zoning and approvals.