No, a town center can be new buildings. |
Don’t worry! In just 30 years they will seem authentic and in 100 years they will be the New England town… |
I think this is what the OP is posting about though...no one calls a real town a "town center." That is used for the mallish new planned town things ime. |
Like whatever they’re trying to call the Springfield Mall as a Town Center? |
The New England “villages”, for the most part, are simply giant intersections for very busy and overcrowded highways. There is usually no walking around a village green unless you want to cross a 4 lane route 20 or something to get there. |
I don’t think you know what that actually means. |
| I think downtown silver spring is a good town center. There’s the main strip plus many side side streets full of restaurants and retails. Plus an ice rink in the winter, a civic building, farmers market, and pretty soon a new public pool. |
Can you name some of this New England Villages, for visiting purposes. |
Washington Depot CT is the inspiration for Gilmore Girls. I thought Fairfield CT was nice & walkable but I was there about 5 years ago & only for about an hour. |
| If you are talking about newly constructed “fake” towns referenced above… I think Fairfax Corner is not too bad. It has a common green area, splash pad for kids, they hold some outdoor festivals, music, etc. More small stores and restaurants, few big box stores. |
Not OP, but I visited Manchester Vermont last year, and I think that probably fits what OP is referring to. Maybe Stowe also. |
| Maine > Bar Harbor, Boothbay Harbor, Cornish, Houlton, Camden |
| Mosaic |
|
Would the Walter Reed redevelopment count? Seem like they are trying to make it a one stop destination for multiple demographics and have had an increasing amount of events throughout the year.
If you mean a real town center, I like Summit, NJ. |
Uh huh. That is exactly how I would describe e.g., Chatham, Concord, Lexington, Harvard, and Arlington, Massachusetts. And Yarmouth, Brunswick, and Camden, Maine. Hanover, NH. Just big highways.
|