First of all, just want to point out that I love Buffalo and I love preserving historical architecture. However, I was reading more about the Central Terminal
on the web and I am still not convinced it is worth restoring.
Here is an interesting site on the history of it
Buffalopundit
even called it
Buffalo's unofficial convention center
.
Why dwell on a building so far removed from the downtown area and in such bad condition? After attending an event at the "neo convention center" it seems like suburbanites would be much ore likely to flee home to the suburbs than to go out downtown. Especially for some non-city people, downtown would seem downright freakin' scary if that neighborhood
(e:paul,38905) was their view of Buffalo.
It seems like it was always too distant to serve downtown.
The New York Central had agreed in 1926 to build an additional Buffalo station to satisfy the city officials who believed that the East Side location was too far uptown to effectively service downtown Buffalo. This promised downtown station was never to be built.
The Environmental Question
How much would it cost not only to rehab it, but to make it hospitable, environmentally sustainable and cost effective in our winter climate. When people talk about how this type of rehab happens all the time in places like San Francisco, they fail to note that it gets to freezing temperatures here most of the year. I am just saying be realistic. According to one of the comments on Buffalopundit's journal
The building was once heated by a separate coal plant behind the terminal that pumped steam heat into the building was torn down in the early 80's.
Even then, would it even change the neighborhood around it. Why would we not invest in things closer to areas that are already succeeding and let it expand from their instead of planting seeds in this distant, broken location.
At the two events I attended there during the last week, I heard so many people say, "Wow, I had no idea it was still so crappy and cold."
What do all you rehabbers propose as a responsible and sustainable heating mechanism in a cement chamber with 100+ foot ceilings in a place where winter is nearly perpetual?
Does anyone think that if the Central Terminal is renovated, that businesses are really going to sprout up all around it and a light rail system will connect it to the city?
I don't think they can really. A friend of mine owns a shop on Allen St and one of the ASCAP reps busted her for playing a radio in her store. The enforcement of the royalties takes some funky turns