Jeramey Jannene

How to Improve Cathedral Square

What would make Milwaukee's town square better?

By - Aug 23rd, 2012 09:23 am

What would make Milwaukee's town square better? Back to the full article.

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Categories: Real Estate

11 thoughts on “How to Improve Cathedral Square”

  1. Peter Zanghi says:

    Since Jefferson St. ends at MSOE anyway, it would be great if they could just close that road permanently on the block containing Cathedral Square. Pave it with brick, and have the restaurants and businesses become more intimately connected with the park. The main issue I could see holding this back would be parking for the businesses, but wouldn’t it be great if that stretch was a little pedestrian mall? Not only would it compliment the park and businesses, but would compliment MSOE, as well.

    I do like the rising bollards idea for that part of Jackson St., which should also be paved with brick, at the very least. In addition, rising bollards could be installed to the north of the park on Kilbourne for large events, since they already close it off for Jazz in the Park. It would make things look a lot neater than orange barricades.

  2. Jesse Hagen says:

    It would be really nice to have a bandshell with restrooms, as has been proposed. Personally, I worry that it won’t be maintained as it should, hopefully the Parks dept. isn’t in charge of that.

    Also, better lighting of the pathways at night. Then, an area on the north or east sides of the park that street food vendors are allowed to sell late Thurs-Sat night. It would be a magnet for people already out on the town, with the late hours I don’t see competition between existing restaurants being a real concern.

    Also, I know there is a (rundown,disused,ugly) fountain in the park already, but I would like to see something smaller & nicer put in… we really have a dearth of great fountains in this area.

    ps… lets just say no to a permanent ped mall. look at how busy former Jefferson street is… yeah, thanks but no thanks, keep it for temp. events only.

  3. Jim says:

    I hope they do it right and refer it out to a landscape architect like they did for Erie Plaza in the Third Ward.

  4. Dave Reid says:

    @Jesse I love the vendor ideas, and I think the fountain should be fixed up and put to use!

  5. Dave Reid says:

    @Peter I’m not sure I’m sold on completely closing down Jefferson St., but the ability to shut it down on the weekends and connect the street to the park is appealing to me..

  6. Dave Reid says:

    @Jim Right.. maybe even a competition?

  7. Chris says:

    I agree with pretty much everything stated above. I think Jefferson could indeed be made a permanent pedestrian street (just between Wells and MSOE), with the Taylor’s block having temporary bollards for weekend or event closure. People generally recoil from the thought because, my goodness, what about the parking?!?! But countless progressive cities have proved this fear to be unfounded for affected business owners. To be fair, there have been some epic fails on the concept as well, so it has to be implemented wisely. But with a strong year-round park connected to this one-block stretch you have a viable anchor that could make this a truly special street. As always, refer to what Jan Gehl and associates have been up to in Copenhagen to understand this in more detail. They’ve increased business and pedestrian life by leaps and bounds over the last 3o years.

    I’d also consider reorienting the park such that a band plays on the North side. It solves the park’s weakest component — it’s ill-defined Northern edge. Imagine performance on the North with a bustling streetcar stop on the South. If it all goes as planned, that station will be one the most significant stops on the route.

    For me, Bryant Park in NYC is precedent Milwaukee should be aspiring toward. An amazing, diverse, active, and well-connect public place.

  8. Frank says:

    How about just leaving the park alone. Other than the park along the lakefront, Cathedral Square is the only public green space east of the river in the downtown area. Human beings do need some serenity once in a while. I understand that there are businesses that prosper because of all the festivities, but taxpayers shouldn’t be the ones flipping the bill if renovations do occur. The business owners should put up or shut up. Enough is enough with all these taxing authorities.

  9. judith ann moriarty says:

    frank: you are correct. do all of our parks need to be entertainment centers? if you are looking for a sweet space, check out the little pocket park and the intersection of brady & water st. the site is maintained by a lovely couple who donated their money and time and sculptures, in a partnership with the city of Milwaukee.

  10. Erica says:

    I agree with beautifying the park – updating the fountain, adding more floral areas, more seating. We should just maintain the park to make sure that it looks beautiful year-round.

    I do enjoy the vendors on weekends in the square and closing off some surrounding streets with brick pavers which could serve as the vendor’s selling locale instead of the grass. I love the square, but with all of the traffic the grass gets so worn.

    It would also be nice as well to have functions at the square more often than just the summer. Could we do something special for fall (like Harvest Days) or offer Holiday vendors the first few weeks of December?

  11. Kristine says:

    Perhaps a nice splash pad/fountain – like the one at the river in Portland, OR. Just one look at the splash pad at Bayshore shows how people gravitate to them. However, do it RIGHT so that it is also a beautiful water sculpture.

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