The
Oberlin Central District Study, prepared by Victor
Gruen Associates, is eerily formulaic. While facts and
figures accompany Gruenist rhetoric in the
twenty-one-page document, it fails to show whether
anyone at VGA took a genuine interest the Oberlin
project. It may just have been a matter of urban
planning algebra.
Examples
of this are strongest in the opening pages. A section
that apparently is meant to win the favor of the
Oberlin Central District Committee is only specific
that it addresses the committee explicitly.
ÒThe
members of the Oberlin Central District Committee are
to be commended for recognizing the ever growing
problems of OberlinÕs Central District and for
commissioning this initial study of those problems.
These difficulties, which in a compounded manner beset
Oberlin, are quite common to almost all communities
today.Ó [i]
This
introduction gives little indication of what VGA views
as the problems that Òbeset Oberlin.Ó Later,
however, the document does give an explanation of the
general problems that cities face across the United
States. This section reads like a Gruen treatise, and
could have easily been reproduced in the preliminary
plans for most of VGAÕs retail projects around this
time. [ii]
Eventually,
the plan does delve into the specifics of OberlinÕs
downtown, since this is required for any sort of
logistical planning. The need for growth is top
priority, and anything that might restrict it is
negatively characterized. Interestingly, the team from
VGA writes that,
ÒÉMain Street
and College Street act as two sharp knives, slicing
through the central district in two directions. It
causes the development of business on a considerably
stretched-out basis. It disrupts and interferes with
well organized growth.Ó [iii]
This
priority is reiterated by stating that,
ÒThe purpose of
this analysis is to assist the Oberlin Central District
Committee in their efforts to promote a healthy,
efficient, diversified, and aggressive growth.Ó [iv]
While
growth was more than likely on the minds of members of
the Oberlin Central District Committee, it seems like
an overly general objective. There was probably a need
for revitalization, and a desire to stay competitive
with shopping centers. Growth does not directly
translate into these things, but it appears that VGA
equated them.
If the
Oberlin Central District Study failed to communicate
its vision for healthy commerce in words, it certainly
succeeded in communicating it visually. Downtown
Oberlin would hardly be recognizable. Under the plan,
it would abandon its perpendicular layout and transform
into a centralized square area of commerce.
This
transformation would come with its battles. The plan
wanted to reroute RT. 58 around the Central District.
Traffic would flow one way around the central district,
and eliminate all traffic within the business area.
Because 58 is a state route, any alteration would
require the favor of state officials. This change, on a
local level, would necessitate building a new road to
Vine Street. Additionally, to make enough room for
parking, Plum Creek would need to be covered.
Residents, perhaps even a large number, would likely
oppose such changes.
Implementing
the ideas of the Oberlin Central District Study, even
in phases, would mean creating a large construction
zone in the center of a relatively small community.
Examine VGAÕs proposed figures for the central
district:
Total
Ground Area Required in Square Feet
Buildings 297,500
Courts and Malls 59,000
Parking 906,000
Total 1,262,500
(Total Available in the Oberlin CD 1,310,000) [v]
Likely,
most every square foot in 1,262,500 would be affected
in some way during completion of the project. The
members of the Oberlin Central District Committee must
have asked themselves a plethora of questions. Can the
residents of Oberlin weather the inconvenience that
this construction would create? Would enrollment at the
college suffer? Would retailers suffer in the short
term for the promise of future growth? Could that
growth become a reality?
Unfortunately,
members who looked to the Oberlin Central District
Study document for answers could not find any
information specific enough to address their questions.
They did, however, find the lukewarm reassurance of
Victor Gruen Associates: ÒYou have certain characteristics, advantages, and
potentialities in Oberlin no other community has in
this part of Ohio. Exploiting these under the forgoing
chain of events and action, the healthy growth of the
Oberlin Central District will be assured.Ó [vi]
[i]
Oberlin Central District Study, by Victor Gruen
Associates, 1957, pg. 1
[ii]For
an example of GruenÕs writing style and
recurring themes, check out http://uwadmnweb.uwyo.edu/AMS/WebCt_Mall/myweb/gruen%20collection/gruen%20text.htm
[iii]Oberlin
Central District Study, by Victor Gruen
Associates, 1957, pg. 8
[iv]
Oberlin Central District Study, by Victor Gruen
Associates, 1957, pg. 1
[v]
Oberlin Central District Study, by Victor Gruen
Associates, 1957, pg. 13
[vi]
Oberlin Central District Study, by Victor Gruen
Associates, 1957, pg. 21