strongly disagree. demolition of houses built with high quality materials/workmanship is rarely a better option, no matter the level of neglect and deterioration. maintaining the integrity of the residential streetscape is just as important as maintaining the integrity of a commercial retail streetscape. the fact that we haven't figured that out, and that we're unable to protect these properties from various problems - the weather, arsonists, drug dealers - until they can be brought back to life, has lots of consequences. it means that we will continue to lose valuable, often irreplaceable, assets. it means we have less chance of keeping and attracting the people who want high quality, very affordable housing that offers them the opportunity to be creative in the restoration process, but who still want a safe neighborhood. and because demolitions are geometric on streets - one leads to two leads to four leads to eight - it means that the integrity and safety of streets and surrounding neighborhoods is compromised. and even in neighborhoods where in-fill replacement housing has been built, it is rarely as good as what was demolished.
plan for success. build on our assets, esp. the high quality residential housing stock. show me a city committed to pursuing a strategy of "smart decline" and i'll show you a city in decline. i know the statistics, i've read the reports, including "blueprint buffalo" from the national vacant properties campaign, and i refuse to believe that buffalo is a city in decline. our task is not to figure out how to efficiently turn out the lights, but how to re-light our vacant houses in a thoughtful, systematic way that brings people back to buffalo. as folks who read this website know, it is already happening, but we can do more.
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