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The Four Points
The
National Trust Main Street Center offers a comprehensive
commercial district revitalization strategy that has been
widely successful in towns and cities nationwide. Described
below are the four points of the Main Street approach which
work together to build a sustainable and complete community
revitalization effort.
Organization
involves
getting everyone working toward the same goal and assembling
the appropriate human and financial resources to implement a
Main Street revitalization program. A governing board and
standing committees make up the fundamental organizational
structure of the volunteer-driven program. Volunteers are
coordinated and supported by a paid program director as well.
This structure not only divides the workload and clearly
delineates responsibilities, but also builds consensus and
cooperation among the various stakeholders.
Promotion sells
a positive image of the commercial district and encourages
consumers and investors to live, work, shop, play and invest
in the Main Street district. By marketing a district's unique
characteristics to residents, investors, business owners, and
visitors, an effective promotional strategy forges a positive
image through advertising, retail promotional activity,
special events, and marketing campaigns carried out by local
volunteers. These activities improve consumer and investor
confidence in the district and encourage commercial activity
and investment in the area.
Design
means getting Main Street into top physical shape.
Capitalizing on its best assets — such as historic buildings
and pedestrian-oriented streets — is just part of the story.
An inviting atmosphere, created through attractive window
displays, parking areas, building improvements, street
furniture, signs, sidewalks, street lights, and landscaping,
conveys a positive visual message about the commercial
district and what it has to offer. Design activities
also include instilling good maintenance practices in the
commercial district, enhancing the physical appearance of the
commercial district by rehabilitating historic buildings,
encouraging appropriate new construction, developing sensitive
design management systems, and long-term planning.
Economic
Restructuring
strengthens a community's existing economic assets while
expanding and diversifying its economic base. The Main Street
program helps sharpen the competitiveness of existing business
owners and recruits compatible new businesses and new economic
uses to build a commercial district that responds to today's
consumers' needs. Converting unused or underused commercial
space into economically productive property also helps boost
the profitability of the district.
Coincidentally, the four points of the Main
Street approach correspond with the four forces of real estate
value, which are
social, political, physical, and economic.
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