really that is fantastic. Remember the 70's and the 80's when billboards and mass commercialism was the thing in Lafayette. I thought Johnson street was going to continue all the way to Abbeville.
really that is fantastic. Remember the 70's and the 80's when billboards and mass commercialism was the thing in Lafayette. I thought Johnson street was going to continue all the way to Abbeville.
Just read the plan and its good except for the part about keeping the existing billboards. It will take years to get rid of that clutter. The ordinance should require all businesses to take them down now.
If you look at one of the pages on the site, it morphs the current billboards with monument style signage. Nice to visualize Johnston St. that way with the buried utilities.
Back on subject, I think the arrival of Pixel Magic to the LITE Center is huge! And I dare say that the LUS Fiber initiative will, and already has in many respects, foster growth in the high-tech sector where super-computing and massive bandwidth is a must. We are ahead in that game folks! Other cities have been watching if Lafayette, LA can pull this off.
We have.
So in addition to the oil and medical industries thriving here, we officially have a third one that I predict will grow beyond what we could have envisioned ten years ago.
Oh yeah, I can't resist saying:
Enter the GEEK!
To a neighborhood near you.
Sorry but have to give the nod to Austin on this one. that is a beautiful city. Too bad its in Texas.
Actually, there has always been a LOT of money in Lafayette. But before River Ranch, nobody flashed it. You couldn't tell who had it.
There are a lot of misconceptions about the Lafayette economy. One is that we are an oil town. But look at the census numbers:
http://ultoday.com/node/329
Lafayette was hurt by the oil bust as reflected in the 1990 census. But we kept growing nevertheless.
But look at the oil BOOM, the decade before. That isn't even one of our largest growth spurts. The oil boom-- and bust-- had less impact on the Lafayette economy than most people imagine.
Lafayette has grown consistently for over 180 years (only exception: when they cut Vermilion Parish from Lafayette Parish, our population "shrank"). Remember, we become the Hub City in 1836. Since then, through the Civil War, two World Wars, several depressions including the Great Depression, hurricanes, the Flood of '27, the oil bust, it doesn't matter. Lafayette always grows. And that is independent of how the leading industries are doing.
Medicine is a large part of our economy, but it does not explain our growth. The fact is, Lafayette is a highly diverse economy that is recession resistant. We are growing right now, and real estate prices are higher here-- as they have been for a couple of decades-- than in Houston.
Elliot Stonecipher says as much. All growth in Louisiana has been along the Interstates. Except for Bossier & Lafayette, all of it is white flight.
Bossier's growth is Barksdale.
According to Stonecipher, the only city that has done it right, by diversifying, is Lafayette.
And Stonecipher is from Shreveport...
Entertainment Dollar is the key term here. People who go to Baton Rouge are entertained with an electric atmosphere, great tradition, a great product on the field, great tailgating, great facilities, and big-time football (you can agrue against that, but let's face it, LSU is one of the top programs in the country with one of the greatest followings). In comparison, going to a UL game before 14,000 fans with no game atmosphere, no tradition, a losing program, average facilities, lower level competition in the SBC, a history of alienating fans and donors, and no marketing is not an appealing product except to us diehards who are starting to wane. While tailgating is good, it alone isn't enough to get people to our games. When we have a winning streak (which for UL is 2 or more games), we get a spike in attendance. A few rain drops and they stay home. When we do we get people out to a game, we lose (like HC). So, we start over trying to win fans again. It is a vicious cycle with no end in sight.
So, why do we lose fans to Baton Rouge or who even prefer to stay home and watch LSU on tv than go to a UL game? UL need only look in the mirror. We give fans nothing to get excited about or take pride in our university's athletic accomplishments because they are few and far between. People become successful in business and in their family life and want their success to extend to other areas including entertainment. They are tired of supporting losing athletics at UL, especially when there is no evidence that the university gives a damn one way or the other.
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