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Forum

Shivani

Silver Spring Dinner Club 1 Reply

Started by Shivani. Last reply by Erik Feb 22.

David and Lucy

Ideas for the Fall ( or at least cooler summertime )

Started by David and Lucy Jun. 9, 2008.

David and Lucy

Depressing Halloween Turnout :(

Started by David and Lucy Nov. 1, 2007.

http://www.thayeravenue.com/

233

We, therefore, the Representatives of the united States of America, in General Congress, Assembled, appealing to the Supreme Judge of the world for the rectitude of our intentions, do, in the Name, and by Authority of the good People of these Colonies, solemnly publish and declare, That these united Colonies are, and of Right ought [...]

Sad, breaking news: Nicaro is closed.

I heard some disquieting news this morning: Last night was Nicaro’s last night of operation. The Georgia Avenue restaurant had been a hot spot of fine dining in Silver Spring for what seems like a couple of years now, attracting the likes of Lebron James. News reports have it that the business was sold, and [...]

This Place Matters

Or at least *mattered*. No, I’m not getting all historic on you. (Come on - you know me better than that by now.) Thayer Avenue lost its one gas station. The place I always went to refill the gas cannister for the mower. And nothing else. I heard it was because of an outrageous rent [...]

Putting the “Perp” in Perpetual

As I type this, there’s a man sitting outside the Perpetual Building at Georgia and Cameron giving people the finger and cursing at them. I never was really a fan of keeping the building after all the recent talk of tearing it down, but now it has a warm, special place in my heart. I [...]

Of Crawfish and Journalism

First of all, thanks to all who made the crawfish boil an unqualified success. And because of the work involved (and subsequent necessary sleep), I have neglected to address a recent story in the Post. Ahh, my beloved Washington Post. How I love to link to thee. I understand that the little “Where We Live” stories [...]

silverspringsingular blog

Par 3 for The Course?

Sadly, it doesn't look like the county is going to keep operating our poor little Sligo Creek Golf Course after this year. Many are holding out hope, putting up websites and starting Facebook groups in support of the course.

Meanwhile, all sorts of folks are coming out of the woodwork with grandiose ideas for alternative uses for the space. The Frisbee golf proposal previously mentioned here is apparently still in the mix, but who knows if anyone of import within the County is taking that one seriously.

Montgomery Soccer, which apparently has a lot more money than the county, wants to build a multi-million dollar soccer facility in the space, construction of which will no doubt be funded in part with our tax dollars. Didn't like the idea of traffic for a driving range, golf course neighbors? Just imagine what a soccer tournament would look like. Minivans as far as the eye could see. Personally, I think this is a crap idea, since quite frankly I don't get any benefit from it. Who does? Little kids who don't even pay any goddamn property taxes, that's who. Have them play on the muddy field across the street and let us adults have something of our own.

Now, I don't fancy myself a John Daly or anything, and my golf experience doesn't extend far beyond driving ranges and mini-golf. However, I can see myself picking the game up someday, and the Sligo Creek Golf Course Location is really convenient to my house.

Perhaps there is some way to preserve the space as a golf course without incurring the full weight of the financial burden the county claims they can't presently shoulder. I know - make it a par 3 golf course!

What's a par 3 course?
From the Encyclopædia Britannica:

Par-three golf courses, on which each hole measures 100 yards (90 metres) more or less and plays at par three, were developed as a result of the shortage of available open land in congested urban areas. Whereas a regulation 18-hole course may stretch to more than 7,000 yards, about 4 miles (6.4 km), an 18-hole par-three, or short-hole, course can be laid out in about 1,800 yards (1.6 km).
Why a par 3 course? Here's a few benefits:

- More accessible than a proper course to people that suck at golf. Namely, me.
- Less maintenance, presumably, as there will be fewer fairways to mow.
- More people can play at any time - the present nine holes could be expanded to many more par 3 holes.

Here's an article that more fully details the benefits of a par 3 course.




I've passed plenty of par 3 courses located in fairly dense urban settings, though not in the D.C. metro area. As best as I can tell, the closest course of this type to here is way up in Gambrills. I don't see why the county couldn't support a par 3 course, maintenance costs for which would be partially covered by revenue from fees, snacks, and a pro shop. (Also - mini golf???) I mean, Compton has one, for goodness sake. Are you telling me that they can support a golf course of this nature, but MoCo, one of America's richest counties, can't?

I wonder where a par 3 course falls under the onerous agreement that the county has with the Revenue Authority. Would it really be considered as competition to one of the Authority's 18-hole courses?

Lost Silver Spring: The Luau Hut



Have you ever wondered about this bright yellow, vaguely Asian-looking edifice on Ramsey Street that seems so incongruous with the drab gray transportation-related structures that encircle it? The building now sits boarded up and vacant, having most recently served as the home of the Caribbean Style Restaurant and Lounge, the proprietors of which are likely responsible for the building's current bright orange-yellow livery. You may recall that street outside was the scene of a 5:30 AM shooting last year, an event which I suspect may have been at least partially responsible for the restaurant's demise.

For many years, beginning in the mid-1960's, this building served as the home of the Luau Hut, which I assume had to have been Silver Spring's only tiki bar.

The Luau Hut was born when a group of employees from the Washington Trader Vic's held a party at Moon Kim's Ramsey Avenue Korean restaurant, the Moon Garden. Among the guests was Paul Malonson, a Trader Vic's maitre d', who suggested to Kim that she expand the cuisine and transform the the restaurant into Polynesian-themed restaurant and bar. In 1964, the restaurant began to serve pan-Asian and Polynesian cuisine while serving up a variety of strong, rum-based Polynesian cocktails. Malonson and Kim, who were married in married in 1965, eventually opened up a second Luau Hut location on F near Union Station in the building that is now The Irish Times.

Along with being a restaurateur, Kim, who recently passed away, was a talented singer who attended Juilliard and even put out three rock albums (!) on the RCA label. Eventually, the popularity of her singing led her to perform three sets a night at the Luau Hut.

Side note: According to a 1966 Washington Post article, Silver Spring had itself a bit of a live music scene back in the 60's. Most entertainers in Silver Spring appear to have been pianists, though a big attraction at the time was dance music performances by the Kenny Duca Duo at the Villa Rosa Restaurant. According to the article, "Duca [was] one of the county's foremost exponents of the cordovox, an accordion with attachments that give it half a dozen sounds." Those last two sentences right there just undid all the hard work two seasons of Mad Men has done to make the 60's seem cool.

The Luau Hut served up a variety of drinks bearing fabulous names such as "Virgin's Downfall", with the highlight of the bunch being the Zombie, the only drink on the menu restricted to two per customer. (Whatever bar ends up being Zombie Walk HQ this year needs to learn how to prepare these.) You could choose to get you drink in a "tiki tumbler", which was yours to take home as a souvenir. Many of these mugs from the Luau Hut are still floating around out there, and I've scoured the internet for photos of the different varieties the restaurant offered. (See the slideshow at bottom of post.)

Here's the Luau Hut's cocktail menu from 1968:


(click to enlarge)

The restaurant's trademark image was that of the hula girl, who appeared partially nude on the restaurant's mugs and menus, but more modestly clothed for appearances in newspaper ads. Can you imagine the scandal today if a respectable MoCo restaurant had the audacity to put a topless chick on the cover of their menu?

In the 70's, the Silver Spring Luau Hut was apparently a favorite haunt of Bullets star and NBA Hall of Famer Elvin Hayes. This would be kind of like Gilbert Arenas hanging out at McGinty's on weekends, but in an alternate reality where the Wizards were good and people gave a damn.

Eventually the popularity of Tiki Bars fizzled out, and like many similar establishments nationwide, the Silver Spring Luau Hut faded into oblivion.

Somewhat surprisingly, the structure appears to have survived unscathed through the long period where the county felt that areas surrounding Metro stations were only good for parking garages. I'd love to lease the space and bring back the Luau Hut with the slightly-modified moniker "Luau the Hutt". The hula girl on my custom-designed mugs would be clothed in a Polynesian interpretation of Princess Leia's metal bikini and I'd use them to serve secret new cocktail recipes such as the "Thermal Detonator". You'd always get your way when holding a Thermal Detonator.

Here's a slideshow of Luau Hut related images that I've culled from the Internet and collected in a Flickr Set. These primarily came from from online tiki resources Arkiva Tropika and Tiki Room. (A few of the images I've enhanced a bit through the magic of Photoshop.)



Thanks to MG, KR and JM for contributing to this post.

UPDATE: For those curious about the Kenny Duca Duo and the Cordovox, here's a little slideshow of Cordovoxes with music featuring Kenny Duca. The Cordovox jam begins at about 0:58. Yes, it's cheesy, but what else could I do with ten minutes and Windows Movie Maker?

Welcome to Xanadu - Plenty of Great Condos Still Available!

I've been thinking more about the fabricated names ("Ripley District", "Fenton Village") that have recently been assigned to different areas of downtown Silver Spring as a precursor to their planned redevelopment.

I don't know why it bothers me so much when these names are used in an unironic manner, but it does. Same thing with Penn Quarter, NoMa and SoFlo (!) in the District. I obnoxiously feel the need to educate D.C. noobs that these places don't really exist, much like the fictional "Reagan Airport". Nevertheless, I am pretty much resigned to the fact that neighborhood re-branding has become an undeniable fixture of urban redevelopment.

I've decided what bugs me is not so much the fact that these neighborhoods (term used very loosely) are being branded, but that they are being assigned such lame names as "Fenton Village" and "Ripley District". I mean, come on, Ripley District? Unless this is meant to honor the protagonist of the Alien Quadrilogy, it's a naming fail. And how is this a district? It's like two blocks wide and the existing "streets" really aren't much more than alleys. (At least the current plan will create the fabulously named "Ripifant Street", the evil bastard progeny of Bonifant and Ripley streets.)

What County rule mandates that the name of re-branded areas must incorporate the name of an existing street? I mean, look at Ripley Street today - is this really what you want your neighborhood named after?



This is a tremendous opportunity to name parts of Silver Spring whatever we want. As an alternative to the generic nomenclatures coming out of MNCPPC, we ought to assign fantastical names to these areas, such as Xanadu, Valhalla, or Strawberry Fields, for example. We could even rename Ripley Street "Diagon Alley". Why not? Kids'd eat that up - at least until J.K. Rowling sues our ass. Imaginative names would certainly create a lot more buzz to attract potential residents for all these condos and apartments that are supposedly being built.

What position at Park & Planning has the responsibility for christening these places, and where do I apply for it? And no, it will not be a "community" decision. I would be Naming Czar. Hell, I'll do it for free. Ike - call me.

Silver Spring News 'N Notes

- So the Big Greek Cafe is (almost) back. I wonder - will The New Big Greek Cafe have the same menu as the Greek Place (née The Big Greek Cafe), being that the people who presumably created the menu at the later now will run the former? Is there such a demand for Greek cafes that two establishments can survive within shouting distance of each other? If not, which will outlast the other and avoid the hair-salon-conversion fate that frequently befalls failed Silver Spring businesses? I look forward to the drama.

- Brock Parker, a Springbrook High graduate, just won $225K in the won the $2,500 Six-Handed Limit Hold'em event at the World Series of Poker. Of course, the first commenter on the post challenges whether Springbrook is actually part of the "Real Silver Spring". (I will abstain from providing my opinion on this matter.) I'm waiting on the obligatory "All of Silver Spring sucks" comments that are sure to follow.

- Greater Greater Washington has an analysis of the proposed Wayne Avenue portion of the Purple Line route. It pokes holes is one of the B.S. arguments of rail opponents that bugs me the most - the supposed additional noise these trains will create, as if the county were going to run CSX cargo trains down the street. Hell, I can't wait for the Purple Line. I could walk a few blocks and hop a train to Bethesda. At that point I imagine public transportation will be my only option, as odds are I'll be far too old to drive. Of course, they may have teleporters by then, so the train will be obsolete anyway.

- This blog has an interesting photo that shows what Silver Spring Avenue above Fenton looked like years ago before they tore down the houses to put in parking lots.

Now this area is being developed as part of the "Fenton Village" project. I still contend that "Fenton Village" is an imaginary place, existing only in the minds of marketers. Village of what? Surface lots? Doesn't the term "village" imply a primarily residential population?
vil⋅lage
–noun
1. a small community or group of houses in a rural area, larger than a hamlet and usually smaller than a town, and sometimes (as in parts of the U.S.) incorporated as a municipality.
It seems kind of ironic for the county to retroactively assign the label of village to an area years after they've torn down most of the houses. This doesn't look too village-y to me.

Friday News 'N Notes

- This Sunday from 10-5, Silver Spring will host the first ever Handmade Mart crafts fair, featuring over fifty craft vendors along with live bands playing throughout the day.

Last June, the Pyramid Atlantic Art Center in Silver Spring was the site of the first Crafty Bastards crafts fair outside of D.C. Not sure why they didn't repeat the event this year - perhaps the use of the word "Bastards" was just too much for our suburban sensitivities. The stalls of the Handmade Mart, an event that still seems to be loosely affiliated with Crafty Bastards, will occupy prime real estate along The Promenade. I can't say that I'm personally into crafts all that much, but I find these things interesting as you never know what kind of random thing you might find. I did pick up a Obama-supporting piece of tofu at Crafty Bastards last year.

A map of the vendors can be found here. (PDF) Also, check out the Handmade Mart blog for more info on the participants.

- It's a busy weekend on The Promenade, as Silver Spring will also host an outdoor chess tournament from 1:15-4:30 on Saturday afternoon. Hopefully violence will not break out. This event follows the regularly-scheduled farmer's market and will in turn be followed immediately by the Spirit of Silver Spring "dance party", which will feature an 80's cover band...

- No doubt to the great chagrin of frolf enthusiasts, the Park and Planning Department has decided to attempt to continue to maintain the Sligo Creek Golf Course as a golf course. The problem here, outside the apparent financial barriers, is the non-compete clause the county signed with the Revenue Authority. It will be interesting to see if the RA tries to hold the county to it.

Another proposal, submitted by MSI, is to convert the space into soccer fields. I'm not even sure how that would work based on the present hilly landscape. (Personally, I prefer frolf to this idea.)

I still contend that a miniature golf course could bring in much-needed supplemental revenue. The county already operates a course in South Germantown. Wait, there's a South Germantown? Based on the usual naming conventions in MoCo ("North Bethesda", "North Potomac", "North Chevy Chase", etc.), I'm surprised it's not called North Gaithersburg. Perhaps Gaithersburg's name doesn't carry the same cache. They should just call it Bavaria. Now that would be clever.

- Silver Spring: the "Docu-wood of the East Coast"?

- The City Paper: Love the Tastee Diner, hate the food.

- The NAACP is considering moving its headquarters to Silver Spring. More than likely, they plan to use us as a pawn for better leverage with the Baltimore government. Similar things have happened before.

silverspringpenguin Blog

Takoma Park celebrates the nation’s big 233

"The whole community spirit and interaction reminded me why I always love to come check the parade out," one local photog wrote.

This (Long) Weekend

My piss-poor math skills tell me that the United States is celebrating its 233 birthday this Saturday. But what gift does one give the country that seems to have everything?

Penguin TV: The chicken goes ka-BOOM!

Around this time each year, local governments produce videos warning of the dangers of fireworks. Not one to miss out, Montgomery County's fire and rescue services has filmed its own flick.

Red Line investigation to wreak endless havoc on daily commute

Commuters can expect train speeds to reach a mind-numbing maximum 35 miles per hour, even slower than that between Takoma and Fort Totten stations.

Speed-camera program gets green light to grow

With extra cash pumped into the speed-camera program, the fast and furious can expect to smile for an additional 30 cameras mounted all over the county.

Silver Spring Scene

Patriot Realty’s Portico can’t handle the condo market; but apts as much as a Silver Spring Condo

It’s been an uphill battle for the Portico located at 1203 Fidler Lane. It received heavy opposition from the Cameron Hill Homeowners, was sold by Patriot Group to Centex homes then sold back to them. For those who thought the prices at the new Veridian Apartments by JBG were out this world, wait till you set your eyes on the Portico by Patriot Realty Group.

Hook and Ladder, where art thou?

If you guessed that the planned Hook and Ladder Brewery and Restaurant wouldn’t make it in time for Oktoberfest then you guessed right. Silver Spring based Hook and Ladder Brewing Co. was suppose to open in the middle of the summer and those plans were pushed to October. With the month right around the corner it’s [...]

Today’s the big day, Discovery will ring NASDAQ opening bell

Almost a year ago the news got out that Discovery Communications would go public sometime soon, after a delay that pushed the IPO from the middle of the year to sometime during the end, Silver Spring’s “crown jewel” firm will finally trade publicly. But does this mean a set up for a takeover?

N.Virginia troubles won’t put a dent in Maryland National Capital Region but better safe than sorry?

The past year and half have been a perfect storm for Northern Virginia, losing several large private firms across different industries, including the largest in the commonwealth. The fallout of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mack is the latest is a case of major bad luck for Northern Virginia. On Sunday the Bush Administration publicly announced the [...]

Census consensus: State of Maryland continues as nation’s richest

While the Virginian counties of Loudon and Fairfax receive exponential praise from the Washington Business Journal and Washington Post for making the list of richest counties in the nation; more important news has conveniently slipped through their radar.

http://www.justupthepike.com/

a poem about just up the pike

I was an English major in addition to an architecture major in college, and have been known to write poetry or prose at one time or another (though it is always difficult to say that without sounding ridiculously pretentious). But I was very, very flattered to receive these verses from reader Cary H., who lives in zip code 20904 (represent!) You know what's difficult? Resisting the urge to make a pun out of "Reed" and "read." For that, Cary deserves a double thanks.

"An Ode to Dan Reed, Summer 2009"

Redoubtable Dan,
For locals you're the man!—
On East Mo County,
Your blog has the bounty . . .
If on my home turf I want the screed
I'll first check in with Dan'l Reed!

Mister Reed's blog is a MysterY to me—
He's got a full-time job and yet finds hours to see
The local news the others miss
And write it up for you and me!

Your daytime hard work's not enough,
You write so well, and it's not fluff!
And contentwise, your blog's so full
And thoughtful, you don't shoot the bull!

Thank you thank you Dan the Man
From a news-hungry neighbor fan!

-Cary H.

daily snapshot: auto park ansel adams

Photographing The American Flag, Montgomery Auto Park
Pretty much every blog is going to have some photo of a flag for the Fourth of July, so I decided to commemorate the people who take photos of flags. The American flag is not an easy thing to photograph: if it's windy, you'll never get a shot of the whole thing as opposed to a mash of stars and stripes that looks more like America just finished wiping the crumbs off her face. Location is also important. You don't want the flag to look lonely and forlorn, but rather strong and majestic. It's also good to throw some Americana in there for good measure: Moms and apple pies are nice, but nothing really says America like a car dealership.

That's why the fellow in my photo, presumably a dealer or just someone waiting for their car to get fixed, is himself taking a photo of the American flag planted in the middle of the Montgomery Auto Park at Briggs Chaney Road and Route 29.

what's up the pike: happy 233rd, america

Happy Independence Day weekend! Every Fourth of July since 2007, I've been disappointed that I don't have any protest marches to go to, but I guess fireworks are almost as good. Where are you going to watch the fireworks? (Our neighbors a street over used to set them off from their deck, but I think they moved. I have no idea who they were.) Anyway:

- Planning for the new Silver Spring Library at Wayne Avenue and Fenton Street continues with a charrette, or public workshop, next Thursday, July 9 from 7-9pm. The location is easy to remember - it's at the current Silver Spring Library, located at 8901 Colesville Road just north of Downtown.

- On July 16, the Department of Parks is holding a public hearing for what to do with the Sligo Creek Golf Course, which will close October 1st due to an agreement that prevents it from competing with other county golf courses. Possible uses for the 65-acre site, located at Sligo Creek Parkway and the Capital Beltway, include a preserve and nature center, a recreational park, or a sports complex. Interested parties can sign up to testify here.

- A recently-built house on Randolph Road is being advertised as "eco-friendly," despite the fact that the 11,000-square-foot manse is five times the size of the average American home - which actually shrunk last year, according to the U.S. Census. The nine-bedroom home's features include master suites on all four levels, a sixty-gallon water tank and, for good measure, an array of solar panels on the roof.

This house joins the "Eco-Estate" on Briggs Chaney Road as examples of "green" construction in East County. While it's commendable that local builders are being environmentally conscious, a large house with solar panels still uses more energy and materials than an "eco-unfriendly," smaller house. Not to mention that the slow real estate market's made luxury homes difficult to sell even in sought-after areas like Bethesda - there's no telling how a house on a major road surrounded by much, much more humble abodes will fare.

- Not that I watch TLC or anything, but if one of their most controversial reality-show stars is going to be seen dining out in this area, you think they could at least put her in Silver Spring, nearer their headquarters?

- I've still got a couple more columns left to write for the Diamondback, U-Md.'s independent student newspaper. Check out my latest here.

daily snapshot: ice cream truck

Ice Cream Truck, Alley Behind Severn Street
Go out to Maple Lawn in Howard County and you'll see people out on the streets, particularly around Looney's Pub, a new restaurant and bar in the planned community's so-called "Business District." But during the long, hot summer days, you'll only see the ice cream truck, weaving its way down half-finished streets every day around 2 p.m. or so. It doesn't stop for children as the sign suggests. (It may, but I have seen no children in Maple Lawn in my many visits there.) It pulls into the many dusty construction sites, so workers who fight the recession to put up pricey new homes can enjoy a snow cone or a fudge pop.

Presumably there are also sandwiches or pupusas like the other trucks sell, because it's not like these guys can swing hammers on sugar and food coloring alone.

will burtonsville have a town or a square?

Woman In The Empty Shopping Center
A visitor to the soon-to-be-redeveloped Burtonsville Shopping Center.

Two years after we first learned that the Dutch Country Farmers' Market would be moving from the Burtonsville Shopping Center, the HowChow blog reports that they'll be closing this Saturday, July 4 before reopening in "last August or September" at their new location in Laurel. The so-called "Amish Market" signed the lease for a space on Route 198 at the Prince George's/Anne Arundel county line in March of 2008, but stayed in Burtonsville while developer Chris Jones worked to obtain permits to rebuild the shopping center.

And as construction begins on what's now called the Burtonsville Town Square (at right), Jones finally announced this week that Giant and CVS Pharmacy will anchor the new shopping center at Old Columbia Pike and Route 198. This is more than a year after Jones published marketing materials (warning! PDF file.) listing them as future tenants, which we reported last June. (It's unclear to me whether he's building the shops-around-an-actual-square model first proposed in 2004 (plans for which went before the Planning Board as recently as last March) or the smaller strip mall submitted in 2008, which The Gazette usually refers to, as does BMC Property Group's website, which is out of date.)

I'm becoming increasingly wary about the redevelopment of Burtonsville, talk of which is marked by contradictions. The "village center" has been hit hard by the Route 29 Bypass, which directs traffic away from local businesses. It's most obvious in the Burtonsville Crossing shopping center, where eight of twenty-eight stores are empty - due in part, say shopkeepers, to rising rents. While a representative of owner Edens and Avant says they're "talking with the county" about what'll happen at Burtonsville Crossing, there's no doubt that losing Giant as an anchor store will deter even more people from going there to shop.

Boulevard In The Business District
Maple Lawn's mixed-use business district models itself on a small town.

At the same time, businesses on Route 198 continue to resist changes as minor as sidewalks and residents say the "village green" first proposed in 1997 will "attract undesirables," leading planners who drafted the Burtonsville Community Legacy Plan to make minimal recommendations for how the village center could be improved. But this week's article in the Gazette shows that what makes Burtonsville attractive isn't the shopping - it's seeing the people in your neighborhood.
Shopping trips can now be isolating and worrisome for Melissa Leone, a Burtonsville resident for 23 years. She said the center is not the same without the businesses that used to occupy the plaza.

"It gives you that empty feeling," said Leone, who used to patronize the Parcel Plus store at the center, which has gone out of business. "You don't feel comfortable sometimes."

Burtonsville resident Craig Atenidegbe still goes to the Giant supermarket at the center, where he often bumps into friends. The shopping center brings a sense of community, he said.

"[It's] a community center for [the area]," said Atenidegbe, who heads Network for Humanity, a Burtonsville-based nonprofit. "I see people and go, ‘Hey, that's John.'"
I strongly believe that the future of Burtonsville is not solely as a shopping destination but as a place to gather. Burtonsville's small businesses will never satisfy all the needs of shoppers who visit big-box stores like Target or Kohl's or malls like Montgomery, Wheaton or Columbia. And the ongoing development of Maple Lawn, a mixed-use community that markets itself as a "small town," shows that there's a demand for a real public realm in Burtonsville - not parking lots and highways, but village greens and yes, even sidewalks. And retail establishments like the Amish Market, which was called "the closest thing we have to a town square." It's ironic that they're being displaced by a shopping center that may be a town square in name only.
 
 

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