Downtown Syracuse

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Downtown Syracuse
Alternative Name: (none)

Location in Syracuse
Annexed -
Population (2000) 2,444
Median Age 31.5
Median Household Income $9,940
Owner-Occupied Housing 1.4%
Postal codes 13202, 13206
The AXA Towers in Downtown Syracuse are perhaps the best-known buildings in Syracuse, after the Carrier Dome.
The AXA Towers in Downtown Syracuse are perhaps the best-known buildings in Syracuse, after the Carrier Dome.

Downtown Syracuse is the economic center of Syracuse, New York, and Central New York, employing over 30,000 people, and housing over 2,000. It is also one of the 26 officially recognized neighborhoods of Syracuse.

Contents

[edit] History

Downtown Syracuse during its golden years. This photo is of South Salina Street around 1915.
Downtown Syracuse during its golden years. This photo is of South Salina Street around 1915.

Downtown Syracuse, as the rest of the city, grew as a result of the city's salt industry and its location on the Erie Canal. For over a century it was also the retail and entertainment center of Central New York with large department stores such as Chappell's, The Addis Co., Flah's, E.W. Edwards, Woolworth's, Grant's, Lincoln Stores, The Mohican, David's, Kresgee's, Clark Music Co., Dey Brothers, and Sibley's. This attribute began to fade with development of large suburban malls, with the final blow coming in 1992 when the combined Addis & Dey's department store became the last major store to leave downtown. Today Downtown Syracuse is an economic center, with many insurance companies, banks, and law firms having a large presence there.

Since the late 1980s Downtown Syracuse has also increasingly become a nightlife center, with many bars, clubs, restaurants, and pubs being located in the Armory Square area. Most of Syracuse's cultural festivals, such as Oktoberfest and Festa Italiana also take place downtown. The Downtown Committee of Syracuse has also taken a great deal of effort to revitalize the area, and most sidewalks and streetlights have been restored in the past 15 years, with maps and other information posted on many street corners. Today downtown is lively on weekdays, but, with the exception of the three main Squares: Armory, Hanover, and Clinton, it is very dormant on weeknights and weekends.

[edit] Future

[edit] Hotels

In 2004 Downtown Syracuse suffered a major blow when the potentially 790-room Hotel Syracuse closed. It had been operating in bankruptcy, renting a limited number of rooms and had been open continuously since 1922. Its closing leaves only two hotels downtown, both newly renovated, plus one more, opened in October 2005. Onondaga County plans to have a new 16-floor hotel built for its Oncenter Complex. This had originally been planned in the late 1980s when the convention center was built.

A path by the Everson Museum of Art
A path by the Everson Museum of Art

Also in December 2004 the city announced that a million-dollar payment by the chief creditor of the Hotel Syracuse would settle the unpaid property taxes dispute, thereby emerging the hotel from bankruptcy. In August of 2005 an Israeli firm named GMUL, agreed to buy and renovate both the Hotel Syracuse and its garage into a new four star hotel and condos. More detailed plans became public that December[1], listing the following plans for the complex:

  • 70 condominiums (including four penthouses) with a price range of $170,000 to $450,000
  • 155-room business hotel
  • 100 Apartments
  • Restoration of banquet facilities and street-level storefronts
  • Rehabilitation of the complex's parking garage
  • Pool and gym

[edit] Other projects

A new, large retail/apartment complex was announced in August of 2003, but construction on that has not begun either, and was officially put on hold due to lack of funding in December 2004. A scaled-back plan was presented in 2005. It involves replacing six narrow buildings on Salina Street with a new mixed retail/office/residential complex.

The Amos Building at Clinton Square is being renovated to house 19 upscale apartments and an upscale supermarket[2].

[edit] Syracuse University involvement

In December 2005, Syracuse University announced it had purchased eleven buildings downtown, and leased another. Hundreds of faculty, staff, and students will begin to use these buildings beginning spring 2006. SU's chancellor, Nancy Cantor's motto is "Exploring the Soul of Syracuse." The university and the city are working on a project called the "Connective Corridor," a special path from SU to Armory Square. The main building of SU downtown is The Warehouse.

[edit] References

  1. ^  Knauss, Tim (Dec. 16, 2005). "Condos, ballrooms for Hotel Syracuse". The Post-Standard, p. A1.
  2. ^  Moriarty, Rick (Nov. 23, 2005). "Downtown grocery store set to open in 3 months". The Post-Standard, p. A1.

[edit] External links


Armory Square
Hanover Square
Tipperary Hill
  • Lakefront
Franklin Square
Inner Harbor
Hawley-Green
Little Italy
Marshall Street