October 12, 2010

The Small Metropolitan Of Hoquiam Thinks About The Future And Its Riverfront Property

A city needs to form and change to survive, and over and over again this can be an arduous matter. Repeatedly a town has been deep-rooted in a spot to fill some particular ethnic or economical necessity, and if those days pass, the town has to alter its game. How this city goes about remaking itself says a lot about how hardworking the town itself is, but it also serves as an expression on our forward-looking times and us.

Glance at the city of Hoquiam, Washington; it’s a town passing through changes. Hoquiam was primitively a logging metropolitan, a history it recalls with a twelve-monthly event — Loggers’ Playday. On top of that, there’s a logging competition and consequent parade every fall. Henceforth where some traditions are timeless, basic to the fabric of a town’s culture, others have to be created afresh.

Take, for illustration, the Hoquiam waterfront. The stretch of river in Hoquiam’s downtown hasn’t been often used since the 1980s. Now that some development has taken an interest in it, at hand’s a possibility for it to become a much further colorful and central component of the local neighborhood. It can’t be all logging contests and lumber festivals, after all.

There’s place on the Hoquiam waterfront for hotels and shops, the mode of commerce that makes a town a city — or at least a bigger town. Waterfront maturation has been a major boon for cities such as Baltimore and San Antonio. Hoquiam could be like these cities in having an attractive downtown with plenty of cultural resources. The river itself becomes a major attractor, a natural feature that lends the downtown its own unique beauty whilst giving the public a place to have a drink.

There’s different wonderful reason for Hoquiam to attend to its progress options. There’s a kind of long-running contention with its bigger neighbor to the east, the city of Aberdeen. These bigger towns ofttimes derive more development opportunities, more tax money, than its smaller sister. Older siblings continuously receive the fresh stuff while littler kids obtain the hand-me-downs. If Hoquiam could get prepared and turn its downtown into a beautiful and useable waterfront district, it would get a high-quality opportunity at showing its big brother next door what a real town is like.

It is important to hang on to heritage and what went before. It’s also of great consequence to reach out to new opportunities. And whilst modest towns such as Hoquiam find this chance for phylogenesis, they should take a chance or two and materialize.

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