SLO’s downtown needs to appeal to residents, not just tourists

January 31, 2022

OPINION by ALLAN COOPER and DAVID BRODIE

Should our downtown serve only tourists rather than residents? Believe it or not, years ago, San Luis Obispo had all the necessary ingredients to make this happen. These so-called ingredients included easy pedestrian access to our open spaces, views of our surrounding hills, easy and free parking, a plentiful supply of necessity goods shops and an interesting array of historic buildings which became way-finding, focal points within our community.

The downtowns of cities are the signatures of a community. However, downtowns that no longer appeal to its residents, that the residents can no longer claim as a badge of a successful and thriving focus of the community, will lead to apathy. Disinterested residents will no longer recognize their special responsibility of maintaining and protecting this place.

So what has changed? Unfortunately, our city fathers have capitulated to what they saw as increasing and inevitable growth. City planners and out-of-town developers, unlike the residents, didn’t feel the need to preserve those positive attributes which we once had downtown.

At the same time, satellite shopping enclaves, such as the University Square/Foothill Plaza, Madonna Plaza/SLO Promenade, Laguna Village, Marigold Center and Irish Hills Plaza centers sprouted up. This promoted urban sprawl and gave our residents the opportunity to completely avoid our downtown should they choose to do so.

As if this wasn’t enough, there emerged five major challenges to the success of our downtown which we had never before confronted.

  1. When responding to climate change, we should acknowledge that our downtown is precariously located within a major flood plain. The reoccurrence of extreme weather events should require us to reassess better evacuation plans in the event that our downtown is flooded. We should also reassess the current policy of densifying our downtown.
  2. When responding to pandemics, we should acknowledge that increasing urban density only exacerbates our social distancing policies. Low-rise, as opposed to high-rise, buildings can be accessed without forcing residents into confined lobbies and narrow corridors.
  3. When responding to the steep growth in e-commerce we should know that our downtown can no longer sustain itself on tourists window shopping for items that can be found elsewhere. Instead, our downtown must offer unique goods and services, preferably those that are locally-sourced. Attracting tourists is not enough. We need the reliable, year-long economic cushion that our residents can provide.
  4. When responding to affordable housing we should know that the cost of constructing a building from scratch is only recovered through increasing rents that are much higher than the market average. There needs to be more cost effective ways to provide affordable housing such as through adaptive reuse of existing buildings.
  5. When considering the increasing presence of the homeless in our downtown, we should find ways to humanely relocate them. We could place them in city-financed tiny home developments. These developments would lie outside our Downtown and in locations that are not prone to flooding.

We must not allow alienation to thrive anywhere in our city. Alienation stems from remote work, decentralized shopping, empty storefronts, anti-social bar activity, a concentration of highly transient populations, fear of crime and transmissible diseases and increasing income gaps though gentrification.

Much of this could be remedied through the increased presence of residents in our downtown. But that won’t happen until our city planners decide to:

  1. give remote workers and residents a reason to visit our downtown by introducing easy access (i.e., free parking) to quiet greenspace amenities;
  2. curb the growth of satellite shopping centers;
  3. provide incentives for adaptive re-use of our vacant stores and office buildings;
  4. begin curbing the high concentration of bars downtown;
  5. stop relying on increasing our transient occupancy taxes through the proliferation of hotels and Airbnb’s;
  6. minimize introducing cramped, highly transmissible spaces such as elevators, stair cases and entry lobbies; and,
  7. prevent gentrification by slowing down the construction of high-rise housing blocks.

But we mustn’t rely exclusively on initiatives taken by our city planners. We need designers, architects, artists and other creative people to take this moment in time to test themselves and make a significant, if not revolutionary, contribution to our downtown. Many of us would be very willing consultants in undertaking these various projects. Retirees, of which there are many, could once again be more involved in generating new ideas putting to good use their long time spent in various careers.

Our first and most pressing task is to address the urban decay resulting from the presence of many vacant store fronts and office buildings. We should explore how office space can be adapted into live work units. For example in taller buildings mix in alternating floors of residences with floors of work space. Take empty shop spaces and utilize them to address community needs. Empty stores and offices could be used as meeting rooms, educational facilities or even medical offices.

We can follow the lead set by the City of Los Angeles where it has the nation’s largest number of conversion projects in the pipeline for vacant office buildings. In fact, LA prides itself on having the highest number of future residential conversions overall, with more than 4,300 apartments set to be redeveloped as of 2022.

In conclusion we must not let the developer’s desire to make even bigger profits prevent us from creatively addressing this important issue.


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The hell is an anti-social bar?


Oh grasshopper’s. R I C H A R D S O N and the like are responsible for what downtown has become. The writers of this piece have obviously not been around here for very long as evident in them lumping every development outside of dwtn. into one category. I appreciate their opinion piece. It is NOT this simple. Adam Hill. Former Mayor Harmon. Thank Aaron Gomez for the bike lanes. Gomez who has cut bait on his downtown biz (he got from his parents, not from hard work) and is now up in the Lopez hills, growing from rumors I’ve heard. What did folks expect from people who have never had to work for anything? These good ole boys have always treated SLO as their personal playground.


The employment opportunities, wages and benefits for the City of San Luis Obispo depend on what’s best for the tourists. Since government seems to be exempt from conflict of interest challenges, the City of San Luis Obispo Incorporated will do what’s best for the share holders, yes the employees. Oh sure there are city lawyers, some on contract and yes there are laws that protect the general public but let’s not sugar-coat reality, the residents will do without until the slush fund can afford the promised community park, etc. There are examples, the most recent is the Righetti housing project, pocket park, as show on the development plan. Houses built, people inside but there is no park and the people are waiting, for what and why? Maybe there should be a local ordinance requiring local amenities before the investors get their first house permit? That would be a start for the locals.


I actually AM a tourist when I am in SLO anymore, having left decades ago ( and hoping to return some day ) yet everything which Mssrs Brodie and Cooper suggest are the very things which are – besides being vital to a health, active, vibrant downtown – increasingly attractive to tourists – especially the younger, increasingly “experiential” tourists of today. Hopefully there are some developers “out there” who understand this.

Most people want to feel connected with the interwoven fabric of a place, the “sense” of a place and as far as I’ve ever known – San Luis Obispo has had that in spades, in its charming neighborhoods and especially downtown. The community of people fortunate enough to call San Luis home is where the loom to weave that tapestry is kept, and maintained, and where the yarn that keeps it intact is spun.

A mix of work-live space creates a vibrant after-hours presence to any downtown.

I worked one summer in Downtown LA in the 70s when they “rolled up the sidewalks” at 6 PM and now it is an incredibly vibrant and exciting place full of neighborhood bodegas and pedestrian traffic. I tell my 90 year old father who worked there for decades that he wouldn’t recognize the place.

Creative adaptive re-use of under utilized space is absolutely another means to create a visually stimulating and interactive environment. Pop-up art galleries, musical jam sessions, yoga flash mobs ( is that a thing? – perhaps it could be ) are fun lively community building happenings.

The quality of a downtown core can not be legislated, regulated, or over manipulated/designed into being. There is a certain amount of circumstance and chance which is the magic ingredient. Luck, however, is often merely opportunity meeting preparation.

Return on investment is never completely a $/SF computation and creative, insightful, passionate makers of the built environment have to be able to convince their developer clients of the intrinsic value of becoming a contributing partner/member of the community through their actions cast in steel, stone, glass, and open / community ( non built ) space. On this I agree with the Authors.

Also HEY DEVELOPERS there is a vast and vital well of decades of talent, experience, and first-hand direct knowledge of this town contained in the minds, hearts and hands of retired Architects, Planners, Engineers, Landscape Architects, Sculptors, Glass Blowers, Craftspersons, and others who are worth their weight in gold on any project you think you may like to undertake in that City.

More than that, though, it takes an active, ( and activist ) lively and engaged community of neighbors, families, friends, not-so friends but locals, ( and maybe even impassioned tourists ) to continue to work to make their voice heard.

It’s easy for me to pound this into my computer from 200 miles away about a place that is near and dear to my very being.

It is much harder and more taxing for you good folks of SLO to schedule to attend those Planning Commission and City Council meetings, Town Halls, etc. but I pray you do.

No one knows San Luis Obispo better than the good people who live there, and no one has more to risk by not getting involved, and by not making it “your problem.”

So, I’ll continue to be active in my little suburban bedroom community without a physical soul or a cherished downtown core, because it’s where I currently live and pay my taxes, and where I can use my brain, my heart, and my hands and voice to try to make a difference.

I trust as many of you who can to make a difference in your village, and I’ll be sure to try to visit soon !


How about the lovely lane changes brought to us by these people, dumb bike lanes and concrete curbs and I do not see any bikers in those expensive lanes, Higuera street down to two lanes so now the delievery trucks are stopped in a lane and traffic has now only one lane to get around them, then you have pedestrian cross walk signs that don’t work correctly so they step out in front of you when you can’t see around the stopped trucks, the circle around the Marsh and Higuera Chevron station is now a joke as they have made Marsh into two lanes that merge into the lane that started the third lane next to the station, you can’t see around parked vehicles to make the turn into or out of side streets.

Also how about those taxpayer space using parklets that these people want to keep downtown, that just rubs me the wrong way, the problem is over get those off the streets, half the resturants are only open at night and some just a couple days a week nut those eyesores are still there, yeah we really want to go downtown for this crap.


I can’t remember the last time I willingly went to downtown San Luis. Parking is a nightmare and really have no need or desire to return. Money owns your city council and they don’t care about you. The open corruption is so blasé it’s mind boggling. This is what you voted for, this is what you got. Take Paradise put up a parking lot.


Right on. Not much reason to go downtown these days. Other than library and post office, I rarely go. Used to go there all the time for life’s necessities — hardware, car tires, auto repair, general shopping, the funky old Network, and cute unpretentious homegrown restaurants. None of that exists any more. Where I might disagree with article is to ask whether downtown’s worth saving. Perhaps it’s too far gone. Maybe we need to let it decay to teach greedy landlords — and the greedy politicians and city staff who support them — a lesson or two about the fruits of greed.


Everything this! I mostly avoid downtown these days. That said, my wife and i and our dog love Giuseppe’s so we do that at least a couple times a month. I was thinking maybe i’m just old and don’t want to bother…but this article appealed to me in that…huh yeah i’m not a tourist and don’t need tourist stuff.


Something that would help immensely would be to ELIMINATE downtown parking fees for EVERYBODY.


The parking hassle is highly annoying and drives people away. They even took Free Sunday away some years ago, the fools on the council are a real drag.