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HAMILTON — Street construction on
Pleasant Avenue in Lindenwald is coming to a close, and the
Lindenwald Streetscape Improvement Project has made
progress.
Despite patch-up work on the recent watermain
project still in its finishing stages, it gives light to
street renovation that’s just begun, said business district
manager Gary Richards.
Within the last year, new curbs, gutters,
streetlamps and sidewalks have all been inserted. Linden
trees were also planted on the West side of Pleasant.
“The streetscape is not completed yet. We
still want to get some street furniture out there, meaning
park benches and trash receptacles,” Richards said. “But for
now, it’s just going to be for one block between Belle and
Williams avenues.
“The reason for only one block is because
that’s all we had money for,” he added. “It’s paid for by a
community development block grant, which is based on slum
and blight.”
Richards oversees Hamilton’s six business
districts — which all get to share a portion of the grant
dollars provided each year. Specifically in the Lindenwald
business district, Richards said the street renewal sets the
tone of what’s still to come.
“We’re setting the standard for the other
blocks on Pleasant Avenue. As more money comes in for the
future, we’ll continue to march down the street,” Richards
said. “I’d love to do 10 blocks in a row — it would be
better. But then the other districts would be complaining
because they didn’t get a portion of the grant money.
“It’s like remodeling your house — one year
we’ll do the living room and then the next, we’ll do the
kitchen, that’s how it’s going to work.”
In addition to the street renovation, special
projects manager Larry Pyle said the insertion of a north
gateway sign in Lindenwald is still in discussion.
The new location, the corner of Pleasant and
Williams avenues, may be a perfect fit for the expected
6-foot high, 4-foot wide triangle sign.
“We still have to talk it through with the
property owner of the land where we’d want to put the sign
at,” Pyle said.
The Hamilton Community Foundation has donated
$2,500 to help fund the project, which is estimated to cost
$4,700.
“This (project) involves getting the sign
made, having the site prepared and having the area
landscaped,” Pyle said during a Lindenwald Civic Association
meeting. “We’re wanting to keep up with ongoing landscaping
when this is done.”
Contact this reporter at
chris.vogt@lindenwaldledger.com
or by phone at (513) 258-3263. |