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EDITORIAL: Historic Nassau - a city in desperate need of saving

WHILE a mostly jubilant public is still congratulating itself, gloating over the vote to throw out the reigning Progressive Liberal Party like a 78rpm vinyl record missing its cover, the clock is ticking quietly and dangerously on one of the most critical issues of the day.

We are not talking about crime. Or education. Or moving toward a balanced budget, albeit all are critical and must be addressed with urgency.

We are talking about a critical issue that for too long has received too little attention. The heart of the city of Nassau, the heartbeat of the nation.

Once a thriving mini-metropolis with dining and clubs, high-end shops and financial fervour, Nassau today is a sad and dirty shadow of its former self. In a window next to where a $60,000 crystal table once stood, there is now a sign offering three t-shirts for $9.99. Where Mademoiselle’s headquarters buzzed as the house of fashion, a second-storey wooden balcony railing is rotting. Just off the main street, derelict buildings stare back with blown-out windows and roofs, glaring eyesores. The magnificent mahogany and olive trees that dotted the street are struggling to survive.

There are remnants of Bay Street’s beauty. The good bones of Nassau’s historic architectural treasures so frequently mentioned by the late Jackson Burnside are still there, but they are shrinking, replaced by large glass panes and concealed behind garish signs.

Notable treasures survive. Dignity remains intact at John Bull, where soft sounds emanate from the grand piano in the gallery and a sense of style never seems to go out of style. Up the hill at the National Art Gallery of The Bahamas and on West Hill Street with the Graycliff spin-off crafts and museum, the art of the possible portrays a canvas of hope.

There are the quaint finds of a Café Matisse and a Coin of the Realm, both establishments that cater to those whose good taste is buoyed by healthy wallets. There are, of course, the government buildings that create a scenic backdrop. In the majestic leaded glass windows of the Masonic Temple, at John Watling’s Distillery and along the ridge of Historic Charles Towne, there exists hidden beauty and promise.

Between such high spots, there is the reality of a city in desperate, urgent need of rebirth.

What has happened to Nassau is what happens to every great city at some point in its history. Lacking leadership, vision, direction and focused funding, it ages, veers off course and wanders down a path until it finds the stream of least resistance, and when it nears death, then - and only then - does its revival begin.

There are those who argue Nassau would have gone down that path long ago had it not been kept alive by artificial respiration, cruise passengers flooding the streets searching for cheap souvenirs.

Unlike the old vinyl record that could be tossed out because there is no reason to save it - nothing to play it on and without a jacket, no story worth preserving - there is every good reason to rescue the city of Nassau.

Its history is the history of The Bahamas. Its buildings are like none other in their concentrated density and their design. Its harbour views are unmatched in the region. And it is, on top of all of that, a magnificent city that begs to be saved.

All it takes is management.

As the former executive director of the Nassau Tourism Development Board often said, if the Smiths or Joneses were smart enough not to open a convenience store over the hill without someone in charge, why do we think we can open our national living room without a single entity with responsibility and authority to look out for it?

How do we think half the ministries of the government tripping over each other trying to carry out some parallel task, one for sidewalks, another for garbage, another for planning, can do it when there is no single entity responsible for consultation and vision?

How can a people so smart be so recalcitrant, resisting the reality that they must provide proper management for the capital city with the largest population, highest profile, a soaring crime rate, the greatest potential of all? How long will the situation persist and how far downhill will Nassau slide with no one in charge and no plan or vision?

It is time to heed the findings of the Historic Nassau Study, the National Development Plan and the Sustainable Cities Nassau study, all of which call for management.

As Jane Jacobs wrote in her oft-quoted work, ‘The Death and Life of Great American Cities’, “Whenever and wherever societies have flourished and prospered rather than stagnated and decayed, creative and workable cities have been at the core of the phenomenon. Decaying cities, declining economies and mounting social troubles travel together. The combination is not coincidental.”

It is a non-coincidental combination that we are already experiencing. Our social, cultural and collective responsibility dictate that the City of Nassau be resuscitated before the coroner pulls the sheet over her eyes and we all lament the death, sighing and saying what could have been to save the grand lady in whom we once took such pride.

Is it not better to forsake a little authority from central government to local government rather than shed a tear for having left a patient to die because there was no authority there to save her when she needed it most?

Comments

killemwitdakno 6 years, 10 months ago

Historic Presevation policies needed.

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Jonahbay 6 years, 10 months ago

This is by far the most well written piece I've seen in this paper in months... I applaud whoever wrote this. Nassau the priceless jewel in a crown of 700 islands. I'm sure many odes have been written and many more can be written. Why is that we can write the solutions on paper and publish them in a daily newspaper, yet the persons who we have entrusted to legislate and make things happen don't seem to read and understand them? We have arrived where we are because people are scared to make the hard decisions.

Helpful hint 1 - Decriminalise marijuana and watch the criminal justice system become unclogged. We are seriously going to wake up one day and have marijuana legal in countries all around us. We can grow that at BAMSI and export it, regulate it, tax it, allow tourists to come to hotels and smoke it in an 18+ environment. We need 22nd century visionary thinking. The old myopic mindset must be done away with.

Helpful hint 2 - We can change our public education system from within...it is not too hard as some may have you believe. It will just require the right curriculum, and a whole lot of love. If one person can change the world, then the many of us who want real change in Nassau and the Bahamas at large can change the Bahamas. Not doing so is not an option.

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sheeprunner12 6 years, 10 months ago

Bahamians have moved out of Bay Street and Over the Hill ........ How can you save it anymore?????? ............. This is now in the hands of foreigners (Chinese/Haitians)

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letitbeme 6 years, 10 months ago

The White descendants of the White Bay Street Boys are the inheritors and owners of most of the properties on Bay Street. The government should create a blighted property law, and should give those property owners a time limited to spruce up those buildings and properties. if they don't, the government should seize the properties in the public interest

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Gotoutintime 6 years, 10 months ago

Since 1967 still blaming the white man---amazing!!

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banker 6 years, 10 months ago

While I agree with the intent of the article, I would like to point out that the decline of Nassau and Bay Street in particular is part of several larger trends. The first is our declining tourism, and huge numbers of cruise tourists that do not even bother to get off the boat in Nassau. Bay Street, by and large, catered to the tourists of a generation ago, which is not the profile and demographic of today's tourist.

The second major trend that affects Nassau, is the downward spiral of most retailers. This is not a local trend. If you peruse the business news, you will find that most serious retailers are in a decline or a state of retrenchment. Online shopping killed a vibrant retail economy, and the genericization of exclusive luxury veblen goods such as Tommy Hilfiger and Ralph Lauren, now catering to the unwashed masses pushed the decline onto a steeper gradient. One can now get brand names at stores that traditionally did not carry them.

The downtown core of many cities are in decline. It started with the advent of the shopping malls. Shopping malls are now in decline across North America in favour of box store campuses. The net effect is that the downtown core withers and dies.

Nassuvians have all but deserted the downtown. Have you been downtown after business hours and when there are no cruise ships in port? It is devoid of life. The downtown core needs a gentrification and a re-introduction of use by the local populace, but that is almost impossible with the monolithic economy, the decline of the middle class and the systemic, endemic unemployment problem, or under-employment situation in our stagnant economy.

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The_Logician 6 years, 10 months ago

The main problem is the blocking of the development of the waterfront. It is not as if there has been a lack of proposals, but the government insists on restricting the height of the proposed buildings. If you cannot go up 4 or 6 floors the development is not economic. Funny how they manage to allow that obscenity on PI, and the Chinese appear to have no problem with being allowed to build a multi-floor car park on the waterfront. Those old docks on Bay St. were all closed and moved to Arawak Cay. So allow the owners to re-develop them properly with ocean front condos, nightclubs, restaurants and the rest will take care of itself.

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