P
Patrick
Guest
Everyone knows I love Portland, but I think there are a number of other great cities in New England. Last week I posted some pics of Burlington, and another quaint little city is Portsmouth. Portsmouth, like Burlington, feels kind of like a stage/play, but it is nice for a visit. The city reminds me of Portland without a central business district (a modern high-rise one, anyway). There appear to be as many shops as the Old Port, if not more, but it could be an illusion because Portland's retail base is spread out along Congress in all directions, as well as Free Street and Gorham's Corner, too. Portland needs to work on connectivity between its various retail hubs, which would instantly make the city feel bigger. There was some progress made here with Monument Way, but Gorham's Corner needs to be developed. Check out some of these pics. There is also one of Manchester, too, which looks much more like a southern new england city.
There was a funny article written by a Portsmouth newspaper a while ago comparing Portland and Portsmouth, which referred to Portland as Portsmouth's grittier sibling, with "fewer millionaires." Then there was a particularly funny quote from a Portland businessman, who when asked about Portsmouth said it was just a place to stop to use the bathroom on the way to Boston. I've always thought Manchester is like Portland without an Old Port/tourist destination, and Portsmouth is like Portland without a modern business district.
This first one is actually NEW construction. I spoke to a planner in the City, which doesn't have a form based code, about it. I mention the form based code issue because this is the sort of development a FBC often tries to mandate. Portsmouth's entire downtown is a historic district, that's how this building (as well as several others) look so nice and appropriate to context.
Sweat stain.
Here is Manchester, Elm Street. The plaza on the west side between the two tallests ( I used to know their names...one is city hall plaza, and the other?) needs to be redeveloped. This is the city center, but a suburban project prohibits urban continuity. I think everyone in Manch recognizes this, but it is difficult to change a project once built (I know from trying).
This pic is a nice view. Manchester is so close to Boston I enjoyed both in the same night (the same afternoon as I was in Portsmouth). The mill district looks sweet, but the parking in front ruins it for me. If more walkability was introduced, that district would be the city's primary attraction. Parking needs to be placed elswewhere (but where? the mills are on the water, so it can't go "out back" from the street perspective, which would be on the water, and it probably can't go underground because of the water table, so this is where Manchester could really benefit from a public transportation system like rail or streetcar.
There was a funny article written by a Portsmouth newspaper a while ago comparing Portland and Portsmouth, which referred to Portland as Portsmouth's grittier sibling, with "fewer millionaires." Then there was a particularly funny quote from a Portland businessman, who when asked about Portsmouth said it was just a place to stop to use the bathroom on the way to Boston. I've always thought Manchester is like Portland without an Old Port/tourist destination, and Portsmouth is like Portland without a modern business district.
This first one is actually NEW construction. I spoke to a planner in the City, which doesn't have a form based code, about it. I mention the form based code issue because this is the sort of development a FBC often tries to mandate. Portsmouth's entire downtown is a historic district, that's how this building (as well as several others) look so nice and appropriate to context.
Sweat stain.
Here is Manchester, Elm Street. The plaza on the west side between the two tallests ( I used to know their names...one is city hall plaza, and the other?) needs to be redeveloped. This is the city center, but a suburban project prohibits urban continuity. I think everyone in Manch recognizes this, but it is difficult to change a project once built (I know from trying).
This pic is a nice view. Manchester is so close to Boston I enjoyed both in the same night (the same afternoon as I was in Portsmouth). The mill district looks sweet, but the parking in front ruins it for me. If more walkability was introduced, that district would be the city's primary attraction. Parking needs to be placed elswewhere (but where? the mills are on the water, so it can't go "out back" from the street perspective, which would be on the water, and it probably can't go underground because of the water table, so this is where Manchester could really benefit from a public transportation system like rail or streetcar.