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Observations on "Pacific Boulevard"

June 8, 2005
Editor, WatchOurCity.com

Huntington Park, CA - The background musical arrangements here on
WatchOurCity.com’s site are original compositions by the editor.

"Pacific Boulevard"
Each of the compositions is titled after main street thoroughfares that bisect the city of Huntington
Park. The inspiration for each tune, its structure, cadence and rhythm is based on observing the
unique street's daily sound and "ritmo". In fact, there is a store named “Ritmo Latino” right on
Pacific: if it is on a CD, and it is in Spanish, Ritmo Latino has it, just do not ask for "A Flock of
Seagulls" or the soundtrack to Quentin Tarentino's "Kill Bill" Volumes 1 and 2.  

Take “Pacific Boulevard”, the street, for example. It is arguably one of Southern California's most
Latino shopping districts, is perhaps one of the most walkable, and is a major regional shopping
attraction on par with the nearest suburban malls around. It is hugely popular with immigrants
from all over the region and even south of the border.

The wildly popular storefront district on Pacific runs north-south and is bounded on the south by
Florence Avenue and on the north by the active Southern Pacific railroad tracks along Randolph
Street. A precipitous drop in sidewalk foot traffic along the last two blocks of the boulevard's
north end is in part due to misguided wannabe big-box retail developments from the 80's and 90's
that failed miserably because they abandoned everything that makes the rest of the boulevard a
smashing retail success. This faulty development formula of asphalt jungles and deep-set buildings
was precisely the right thing to follow if the goal was simply to capture tax base dollars without
capturing the heart and peripatetic soul of the immigrant shopper.

The result was a complete failure and a planning black eye. The city won't admit it, but in addition
to not getting its projected flow of tax revenue money, it probably did not recoup  redevelopment
funds invested in the boondoggle. This sea of empty parking stalls with boxy stores far away from
the sidewalk, in fact, lay boarded up, moribund and left for dead from the mid 90's, while only a
stone's throw away lay a pedestrian renaissance and retail bonanza along Pacific's street fronts.

No one connected the dots.

It wasn't until 2002 that the asphalt jungle was resurrected by retail operator La Curacao. It
cleverly stuck cartoonish pre-columbian decorations on the homely stucco box and dressed up the
asphalt with a few trees. Is it a coincidence the pre-columbian motifs trumped suburban big box?
By all accounts it's a great financial success, measured by the complete lack of available parking
spaces on weekends. But a pedestrian friendly place it is not. Not that it matters on this end of
Pacific Boulevard. La Curacao did its best given the limited opportunities. Bring your car and
wallet, but leave your walking shoes behind.

And the dots remain unconnected.

A new development being hustled by city council and the redevelopment agency makes no
pretensions about its proposed retail big box aspirations: an island surrounded by an asphalt sea of
parking stalls. It will push the retail corridor north past Slauson Avenue. You wouldn't walk there.
You would drive there, even if it's only three blocks away. The city must know what it's doing
since no one questions the rubber-stamp wisdom at work here.

It's the people, not the cars, stupid. Just for a moment imagine what Old Town Pasadena would
like if a big box development took up space there with all the noble glory of its sea of parking stalls
in full view. Scary. Development, good; sea of parking, bad.

Pacific Boulevard, the lively pedestrian-friendly side, seems to be a suburban mall engineered in
reverse that tears open the roof to expose the “Street” and let cars and trucks wheeze on by
alongside throngs of people; chewing gum ends up as sidewalk art worthy of Jackson Pollack’s
best work. This may scare many used to more sanitized environs. No upstanding local high school
graduate, Ivy League alumni son of his immigrant mother will ever be caught shopping, walking on
Pacific Boulevard or contributing to sidewalk art in the making, or waiting for a bus on Gage and
Pacific....unless he was campaigning for public office. Traditional malls are just fine for this type.
It may just be that the poor country cousin Pacific Boulevard turns out to have more fun because
it is flush with pocket cash and has more of it than the stuck-up suburban mall relative saddled
with credit card debt.

Who knows, if the city puts a roof on the boulevard and reroutes cars and buses away, Pacific can
become just like a suburban mall, or another Olvera Street.

Urban planning graduate students from USC recently made Pacific Boulevard a focus of their
Urban Planning studies. Urban planners and academicians decry the loss of walkable communities
and champion transit oriented development, and spend enormous amounts of time educating the
masses of elected officials on the benefits. Most overlook a living, breathing, immigrant-driven
money-making-machine of a livable community, aqui, in our very own back yards: a walkable
community. A good portion of the shoppers depend heavily on public transportation to visit here.
A good other portion also walks from nearby dense apartment blocks merely blocks away.

A difference between Pacific Boulevard and Colorado Boulevard in Old Town Pasadena or The
Grove at Mid-Wilshire is that shoppers here are recent immigrants mostly from Mexico and
Central America and tend to be on the low end of the socio-economic ladder.  However, you
wouldn't know that from the sales receipts.

Pacific Boulevard is hugely successful financially as well. The tax base generated by a daily influx
of immigrant dollars swells merchant bank accounts and city hall coffers. The dollar per square
foot in sales here is equivalent to that at Rodeo Drive in Beverly Hills, according to recent studies.
There are more bank branches sprouting up here in storefronts as there are taquerias, or taco
shops.

City council members must know well the power and temptation inherent in so much free flowing
cash, to the point of seeming arrogant, wasteful and pushing agendas of questionable priorities
with use of public funds. Despite State and Federal budget cuts, council members spend nicely on
travel, overlook questionable billing practices by city contractors who coincidentally just happen to
be friends and hefty campaign donors. Taxable retail sales on Pacific is an income stream that is
the envy of cities around.

On weekends, Pacific Boulevard moves at a slow steady rhythm that mixes shoulder-to-shoulder
and toe-to-heel storefront foot traffic of strollers, babies, families, green-card and mango vendors,
teenagers, grandmothers and guys with $500 ostrich skin boots, black Stetson hats and green silk-
printed shirts, with bumper-to-bumper traffic of heaving buses delivering standing room only
shoppers to the boulevard that jostle with SUV’s sporting 20 inch tires and shiny chromed rims
that give the illusion of movement even while standing still; the Boulevard hosts SUV’s that seem
to follow a DNA protocol suggesting that the son of campy Chevy Impala low rider has grown into
a highly stylized aesthetic of Chrome, rubber and tropical fruit-colored body shop paint on a sheet
metal Zoot suit, with accompanying thumping sound systems.

Pacific Boulevard would make a fine Zocalo if not for the diesel spewing and badass muffler
traffic sounding through every day.

It is a Zocalo. At sunrise: No people and no cars for long stretches of time, except for the power
steam cleaners sanitizing the chewing gum out of the sidewalk canvas.

The city may be able to enhance the walking experience along Pacific if it adopts pedestrian
crosswalks on all fours sides simultaneously, similar to crosswalks in Old Town Pasadena, who
probably borrowed the idea from the major lively commercial streets in Tijuana, Mexico City,
Tegucigalpa, Managua, or Buenos Aires and many a town in Europe. And if it does something
about the narrow and overcrowded bus stop shelters at Gage and Pacific.

"
Gage and Pacific"
At peak hour, on a quarter-block stretch of a six-foot wide, merciless hard-edge sidewalk on Gage
Avenue at the corner with Pacific, are bus stop shelters that barely serve the waiting crowds.

A toddler learning to walk, styling a brand new pair of shoes holds on to dear life gripping
grandma's index finger while barely two feet away from speeding traffic of trucks, cars and buses,
each with its own signature sound, speed and cadence at odds with the other, but well syncopated.
Bus brakes wheeze to a jolting halt, accompanied by noises of engine belts about to snap while
cars speed by one lane over in vain attempt to beat the flashing orange then red traffic light at
Gage and Pacific. A fire engine passes by, sirens at full blast.

A walkable community is a luxury in the suburbs but a necessity here; like a rationed cigar is a
luxurious necessity on a fine summer evening in Havana.

Enjoy Pacific Boulevard the street and the music.

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