My hometown: Columbus. Part 6: The East 5th Avenue Hoods

Minneapolisite

My hometown: Columbus. Part 6: The East 5th Avenue Hoods

Postby Minneapolisite » February 20th, 2013, 10:57 pm

Neighborhoods that should be worth visiting every now and then, but instead are left to rot: an all too common phenomena in Columbus. Kinda explains why one would opt for Minneapolis.

Milo-Grogan

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A quick recap of Milo-Grogan: traditionally blue-collar neighborhood (lots of Italians) built by the huge railroad yards nearby and saw 1/3 of the neighborhood bulldozed for highways (I-71 splits the neighborhood in half and I-670 acts as a wide buffer on the remaining southern end) and unlike German Village, has not bounced back yet. The neighborhood mainly functions as a stepping stone for suburban commuters speeding through along the highways or suburbanized main streets.

After entering the railroad bridge gateway to the neighborhood there's a bit of an incline. Here you can see where more homes once stood.

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It figures that this residential street right that's the link closest to Italian Village would be the first to have a rainbow flag pop up.

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Oh, hi doggy.

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While some homes still need work you can see that a few improvements are going on here and it's doing better than the east half.

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Ironic advertising: using the corpse of a dead local business for a McDonald's product that is vastly inferior to what is offered by numerous coffeeshops just west of here.

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A common sight here and in the south end of neighboring North Central: industrial abutting residential. The fuschia trees are a nice touch.

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This is I-71.

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Crossing from this side

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to the other side.

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I could hear work being done on the highway. How about ODOT spending some of that money on the neighborhood that they helped messed up?

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Here's the still usable outdoor area of the neighborhood recreation center. I was even invited to play some b-ball and was kinda tempted, but I was pretty busy.

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A couple of businesses on St Clair: a bar and a grocery store (people still complain about Downtown not having a grocery store).

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E 5th Ave is the saddest street in Columbus. I just walked half a block east from St Clair and could feel my soul being sucked out by this trash-lined, ugly arterial road.

Mally Gal's Lounge: best bar you never heard of.

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I hear this is rather good diner.

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See? There's even trash growing on the trees here!

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Seriously, E 5th Ave is used as a trashcan by motorists passing through here and traffic is going 50MPH. It needs help real bad and is really nothing more than a mini-highway even though 670 is just a couple blocks south. Now for the NE quadrant continuing up St Clair.

Nice.

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Ooh, a new playground.

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Heading east...

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Umm, where are the sidewalks? What's happening? I think I'll head back to St Clair.

Not quite sure what it is, but I like it.

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End of the road.

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Another traffic calmed street: kids playing in the street and the driver slows down accordingly. I saw quite a few people hanging out on their porches here.

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Is that Jewish graffiti on that house?

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Not a pedestrian-friendly street.

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Actually, that's probably not good for those residents' property values. What @ssholes.

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Where the sidewalk ends.

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Ice cream!

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Some of the friendly residents.

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And few bonus shots of Cleveland Ave from Fall 09.

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North Central

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North Central is a large, unknown neighborhood, one of the most off-the-beaten-path places around. Industrial, rural, residential, ghetto, all rolled into one. It's rather sparsely populated and the city has divided it into several sub-neighborhoods.

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(from the city of Columbus *American Addition and Leacrest have been combined in this map into "Amer Crest", probably a typo since there was an article on the area where it's called the easier to pronounce "Americrest")

I covered Devon Triangle and American Addition. So, yeah, here you go.

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East Columbus
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The neighborhood of East Columbus (scroll down) tells the same sad story of other near-northeast neighborhoods: industrial and cultural decline, disinvestment from the city, isolation from the city, etc. Maybe I'm not as optimistic, but the only change I saw was very superficial, in the form of new signage. East 5th Ave is still a traffic sewer and businesses have closed while other commercial buildings sit abandoned. I checked out a National Night Out Kickoff event there, but the event took place in a local park tucked away in a residential area, not out on the main street. It takes a good imagination to imagine what it was like in it's heyday, but even a dilapidated neighborhood business district is better than none at all. I mainly focused on E 5th Ave and went off to a couple of residential streets. In the central and northern part are large industrial areas which I only grazed.

Welcome to East Columbus!

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A bar lost in time. Weird place. I recommend stopping in.
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A nice surprise.
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Here's another view.
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This is pretty cool.
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Rather common in numerous Columbus neighborhoods: residential right next to industrial. Smelled kinda funny around here.
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The National Night Out Kickoff.
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Who knew Krumm Park had a lake? (If you even knew Krumm Park existed)
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God. Damn. Cars.
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At least there's a market.
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I was half tempted to check out the café part.

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Talk about mixed use. Wow.
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This used to be a bar and the only difference is that the name was on the sign in green lettering. Was I missing out?
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This is one case where a building burning down isn't such a bad thing. Unfortunately, this dumpy motel is poised to come back due to the fire restoration sign not in the picture. If it was a nice building you can be sure we would have found a reason to tear it down for good.
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Fancy COTA sign, but how about including, I dunno, a bus schedule?
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I'm not quite sure what's open for lunch.

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A bit of residential just south of here across the tracks from Bexley. This corner feels the safest.

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seanrichardryan
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Posts: 4092
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Re: My hometown: Columbus. Part 6: The East 5th Avenue Hoods

Postby seanrichardryan » February 20th, 2013, 11:51 pm

Uh no, that's not Jewish graffitti, it's BDG.
Q. What, what? A. In da butt.

mulad
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Re: My hometown: Columbus. Part 6: The East 5th Avenue Hoods

Postby mulad » February 21st, 2013, 7:39 pm

Looks like Milo-Grogan could use a lot more street trees (I see those shots were taken in the spring, but still -- seems pretty sparse).


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