In 1950, the classic American downtown of Norristown,
Pennsylvania, centered on the six blocks of Main Street, was the
bustling commercial heart of central Montgomery County, and had
been for over a century. With depression and war in the past,
downtown merchants looked forward to an extended period of
prosperity. It was not to be.
By 1975, downtown's core stood largely shuttered and
deteriorating, with 99 storefronts vacant and countless others lost
to the wrecking ball, as first shoppers and then the merchants fled
Main Street.
What Killed Downtown? Was it... The Malls? Commercial wisdom
points to the King of Prussia Mall as the prime suspect. But were
there accomplices? Municipal Government? The Main Street merchants
always believed that the Borough Council was the culprit--and with
good reason. The Downtown Merchants themselves? Did the shopholders
blind themselves, then step into the firing line, ignoring the
threats of a changing world? Or was it something else...something
more fundamental?
Historian Michael E. Tolle's extensive research into the
collapse of downtown Norristown reveals not only the answers to
these questions, but also recreates the classic American downtown
shopping experience, long an American characteristic, but now
largely foreign to anyone below middle age. In so doing, Tolle lays
bare the fundamental incompatibility between the urban grid and the
automobile, as he recounts how a middle-sized American city
struggled -- and failed -- to solve the the issues of traffic flow
and parking, issues that are no closer to solution today,
regardless of the size of the city.
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