Returning students find downtown Blacksburg under construction

Monday, August, 23, 2010; 8:47 AM | 6 | | Print

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TOPICS: the cellar hokie house main street improvement project town of blacksburg

A sea of dirt, rocks and excavated pavement is bordered by fluorescent orange signs warning pedestrians and drivers of the construction on Main Street.

New and seasoned students returning to Virginia Tech for the fall semester will find new routes to restaurants such as  The Cellar and Hokie House as work continues outside.

According to Lisa Sedlak, spokeswoman for the town of Blacksburg, the Downtown Master Plan, created in 2001, called for downtown improvements to allow for more pedestrian-friendly travel, public gathering spaces and improved landscapes.

After nearly a decade of debate and planning, actual construction began June 14, 2010 and will gradually reshape the downtown Blacksburg landscape by spring 2012.

When the town council approved the project, it was “concerned about the vibrancy of downtown,” said Adele Schirmer, director of engineering and GIS department for the town. Because there were multiple store vacancies, the council was worried about the direction that the downtown was heading.

“(There was) a strong community desire to keep the downtown a very healthy and vibrant place that is appealing to people,” Schirmer said, noting that those are considered signs of a flourishing area.

To keep Blacksburg the place the council thought it should be, it hired a team of consultants to work up a master plan, which focused on making physical improvements to the downtown, as well as filling an underrepresented niche by showcasing the arts and health.

There was also a recommendation to preserve and renovate historic buildings. There are now shops and studios concentrating on the arts opening downtown.

When the enhancement plan is complete, the stretch of Main Street beginning at College Avenue and extending to the intersection with Prices Fork Road will have only one lane running in each direction with a shared center lane for left turns.

Additionally, the intersection at North Main Street and Prices Fork Road will be replaced with a roundabout.

The existing traffic signals at College Avenue and Turner Street intersections will be replaced and a new traffic signal will be placed at the Alumni Mall intersection.

Pedestrian signals, street lighting and expanded sidewalk areas will be in place.

For example, the sidewalks along the College Avenue extension in front of The Cellar and extending up Main Street will be widened to more than 10 feet for outdoor dining and public gathering space.

The sidewalks will be brick and adorned with modern black benches, landscape planters, trees, lights and trash receptacles.

However, that picture of downtown is years away.

Two local businesses, The Cellar and Hokie House restaurants, as well as many others, are affected by the current construction. Stepping out of their front doors, restaurant staffers find themselves literally face-to-face with construction.

Joe Gillespie, manager at Hokie House, is concerned about clientele’s access to the restaurant.

“We have dirt and machines in front of our building,” Gillespie said. “If I was a customer coming into town from a different state for the football games or something, I personally would be a little discouraged from wanting to go into a business with construction around.”

According to Gillespie, business has been a bit slower, however this could be because not as many people are in Blacksburg during the summer.

He is confident business will increase this semester, not only because students are returning from summer break, but also because of the many home football games scheduled.

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A version of this article appeared in the Aug 23 issue of the Collegiate Times.

Leave a comment 6 Comments Write a letter to the editor

Local | # August 23, 2010 @ 9:51 AM — Flag Comment

It's pretty basic.
Construction is messy. Completion will be amazing, beautiful
and people will see that it's worth the trouble. Enjoy. This will
make Blacksburg that much better to enjoy all summer long.

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anon | # August 23, 2010 @ 10:51 PM — Flag Comment

i don't see how there is the issue with parking spaces. the construction has gotten rid of about 5 or 6 spaces out in front of the cellar and hokie house while all the spots are still available behind the restaurants as they always have. this project will be good for Bburg when completed and will help foot traffic to the restaurants.

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Anonymous | # August 24, 2010 @ 3:04 PM — Flag Comment

There will be no bike lanes with this project

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Anon | # August 24, 2010 @ 3:13 PM — Flag Comment

There is no point to this project, "foot traffic" was fine before it, I don't see how it wasn't. Now "foot traffic" is not fine because of the construction. This is just a waste of money, time, and unnecessary congestion. I'd like to be proved wrong at the end of the project but I just don't see it happening.

Yea it will "look" different but foot traffic will be the same. You still have to cross the road.

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Actually | # August 24, 2010 @ 5:52 PM — Flag Comment

Foot traffic will be very different as there will be spaces for
sidewalk cafes, people hanging out benches, plaza space for
downtown events and with the new performing arts center
more space to hold events, spend an evening. Folks who don't
"get it" will when its done. Just have a little patience and a little
faith, please. Not everything that happens is "BAD".

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Anon | # August 26, 2010 @ 12:20 PM — Flag Comment

what's irritating is the fact that it will take 2 years to do this. It'd be totally different if this could all be done over the span of a summer or say 6 months. But 2 years. That's half of most student's time in blacksburg.

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