The Four Points
The
National Trust Main Street Center
offers a comprehensive commercial
district revitalization strategy
that has been widely successful in
towns and cities nationwide.
Described below are the four points
of the Main Street approach which
work together to build a sustainable
and complete community
revitalization effort.
Organization
involves getting
everyone working toward the same
goal and assembling the appropriate
human and financial resources to
implement a Main Street
revitalization program. A governing
board and standing committees make
up the fundamental organizational
structure of the volunteer-driven
program. Volunteers are coordinated
and supported by a paid program
director as well. This structure not
only divides the workload and
clearly delineates responsibilities,
but also builds consensus and
cooperation among the various
stakeholders.
Promotion sells
a positive image of the commercial
district and encourages consumers
and investors to live, work, shop,
play and invest in the Main Street
district. By marketing a district's
unique characteristics to residents,
investors, business owners, and
visitors, an effective promotional
strategy forges a positive image
through advertising, retail
promotional activity, special
events, and marketing campaigns
carried out by local volunteers.
These activities improve consumer
and investor confidence in the
district and encourage commercial
activity and investment in the
area.
Design
means getting Main Street into top
physical shape. Capitalizing on its
best assets — such as historic
buildings and
pedestrian-oriented streets — is
just part of the story. An inviting
atmosphere, created through
attractive window displays, parking
areas, building improvements, street
furniture, signs, sidewalks, street
lights, and landscaping, conveys a
positive visual message about the
commercial district and what it has
to offer. Design activities
also include instilling good
maintenance practices in the
commercial district, enhancing the
physical appearance of the
commercial district by
rehabilitating historic buildings,
encouraging appropriate new
construction, developing sensitive
design management systems, and
long-term planning.
Economic
Restructuring
strengthens a community's existing
economic assets while expanding and
diversifying its economic base. The
Main Street program helps sharpen
the competitiveness of existing
business owners and recruits
compatible new businesses and new
economic uses to build a commercial
district that responds to today's
consumers' needs. Converting unused
or underused commercial space into
economically productive property
also helps boost the profitability
of the district.
Coincidentally, the four points of
the Main Street approach correspond
with the four forces of real estate
value, which are social, political,
physical, and economic.
(Taken from
The National Trust Main Street
Center's website at
www.mainstreet.org)