Before all of us get carried away with arguments and discussions on the findings of the Steering Committee, building guidelines and new development in the neighborhood, we should not forget the important need for our green space. In the year and a half that my husband and I have lived in the neighborhood, we have seen some very positive changes but we have also watched as Castleberry Hill increasingly keeps losing any possible spaces for a park of some kind.
I am all for growth in the neighborhood and will support any development that will benefit all of us but I do not want to live in a neighborhood of concrete. I am a dog owner and as I watch more and more dog owners in the area, I am also seeing more poop on the sidewalks, in part because there are few areas for the dogs to use.
It saddened me to read Daniel Read's comments that he was so excited that something was being built on the corner of Haynes and Peters. As disscused in past neighborhood meetings, I am sure that many of us wish that something was becoming a park.
I understand that I moved into an urban neighborhood, not a suburb (thank godness!), and growth and development is an essential part of city life. However, I would encourage everyone to at least think about what remaining green areas that we have left and how we can save some of them. I would hate for our neighborhood to lose sight of the current and future benefits of undeveloped sections as we continue to argue about the height of the buildings that will swallow up any remaing hopes for a park.
Katy Hutchins
By Katy Hutchins
I am all for growth in the neighborhood and will support any development that will benefit all of us but I do not want to live in a neighborhood of concrete. I am a dog owner and as I watch more and more dog owners in the area, I am also seeing more poop on the sidewalks, in part because there are few areas for the dogs to use.
It saddened me to read Daniel Read's comments that he was so excited that something was being built on the corner of Haynes and Peters. As disscused in past neighborhood meetings, I am sure that many of us wish that something was becoming a park.
I understand that I moved into an urban neighborhood, not a suburb (thank godness!), and growth and development is an essential part of city life. However, I would encourage everyone to at least think about what remaining green areas that we have left and how we can save some of them. I would hate for our neighborhood to lose sight of the current and future benefits of undeveloped sections as we continue to argue about the height of the buildings that will swallow up any remaing hopes for a park.
Katy Hutchins
By Katy Hutchins