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As a final footnote, I ate at Primes( great restaurant) on 1st after the East Village meeting on Wednesday. I showed the Street to Nowhere concept to a few waiters and showed them my painting/photo of the closed pedestrian only Pier Ave street in Hermosa Beach. Both of the waiters said they go to that street in Hermosa to hang out and spend money. Wouldn't that be nice if LOTS of young people from such places as Cerritos, Torrance, and all over over SO CAL came to the East Village to "hang out and spend money" because it is the place to be. In the cities I have visited in many parts of the world, the real organic pedestrian only streets are "the place to hang out and shop and eat and be seen". In my opinion that is win win for everyone.
As a final final note, the article also mentioned I spearheaded the Bikestation effort "a few years back". If interested, check out www.bikestation.org. A few years back is 17 years to be exact. I along with my wife Georgia advocated the Bikestation concept in 1991 to help encourage a bike commuting culture based upon successful examples of bike parking facilities in the US and Japan. The Bikestation opened in 1996. It was the first of its kind in the USA. 7 live TV cameras and CNN showed up for the opening. Since then the Bikestation non profit effort has helped 7 other communities in the US open bike parking facilities(Palo Alto, Berkeley, 2 locations in SF, Santa Barbara, Seattle, Chicago) and as well as soon to be opened in Washington DC($4 million budget) and Tempe in 2008. I have never made a penny off the Bikestation effort in 16 years.
I don't know if anyone reads comments on web articles but I am glad to have the opportunity to comment on a article as often times something is written where the journalist misinterprets or leaves out or focuses on something that doesn't really mean what one is trying to get across. If anyone wants to email me about the Street to Nowhere good bad or indifferent just email me at johnhcase@gmail.com. Regards, John Case