Public Meeting #2 Recap: Villages, Main Street, and a More Connected Central City

Aug 30, 2025 | Public Process | 0 comments

Where are we in the process?

This was our second community session. We introduced the concept of “villages” as a way to organize future change, discussed how Main Street can become more pedestrian-friendly, and explored how trails and transit can better connect the steep parts of town. Your comments here will guide the refinement of a set of concepts at Meeting #3 and inform draft plan updates this fall.

What we presented.

  • Stability vs. change. The historic core stays protected as an area of stability. Areas of change focus on growth where it fits the terrain and infrastructure.
  • Main Street & arrival. A pedestrian-first block with unified paving and furnishings, plus a ceremonial gateway/roundabout that invites people to stop, park, and explore.
  • Villages & sites.
    • Gregory Gulch (active application) can fund and frame a new linear park and public realm.
    • Quartz Hill/T-Lot uses step-down heights (lower near Main, taller stepped back) and a pedestrian bridge with an “adventure walk” so people of all abilities can enjoy the hillside.
    • Academy / Boodle Mill / Winnebago: the right mix of multifamily, duplexes, and single-family where access and services can support it.
    • Mobility & trails. Safer intersections (roundabouts), consistent street types, and a network of trails and gentle-grade paths. A Pulse Gondola concept could link Briggs lot downtown Academy, expanding car-free access and broadening the visitor base.
  •  Preservation with integrity. We’ll protect what’s historic and ensure new buildings are clearly new and high-quality — not faux-historic — so the district stays authentic and alive.

What we heard

  • Keep historic character front-and-center — especially near Main Street.
  • Improve safety and wayfinding alongside any pedestrianization.
  • Make nature and trails easier to reach for everyone, not just strong hikers.
  • Ensure new development contributes to infrastructure and public space.

What happens next

  • Translate the concepts into clear rules (step-backs, view-shed checks, materials) that applicants must meet.
  • Pilot weekend pedestrianization and measure results.
  • Advance a gondola feasibility study and a Trails Gaps Plan.
  • Update our preservation guidelines so new work is compatible, contemporary, and honest about what’s historic.
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Written By Central City Comprehensive Plan

Written by: City Planning Team

Our dedicated team is committed to guiding Central City through this pivotal planning phase. With expertise in urban development and a passion for community engagement, we are here to ensure that every voice is considered in shaping our city’s future.

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