Defining downtown: Various groups draw different boundaries
He attends the Paul Mitchell cosmetology school in Holladay, but he wanted to be near clubs, restaurants, shopping and people. "I didn't want to live all the way out there," says Gillespie. "There was nothing to do."
He turned his attention toward Salt Lake City and found an apartment at The Gateway, which he describes as the perfect downtown locale: a mix of retail, office space and housing.
Gillespie is hardly alone in his belief that The Gateway blocks, once considered "west side," are part of downtown Salt Lake City.
"Historically, it's been the other side of the tracks," says Brenda Scheer, dean of the University of Utah's College of Architecture and Planning. Even so, because of the area's proximity to the blocks traditionally considered downtown, "it never really was a big stretch for people to say, 'Well, Gateway is downtown."'
The way Utah residents define Salt Lake City's downtown is evolving beyond the blocks around Main Street and Temple Square. These days, downtown depending on who defines it can span as far east as the University of Utah, as far west the Jordan River, north to Temple Square and south to 1300 South.
Try getting a business or political leader to wax philosophical, and they'll say downtown has no geographical boundaries. It's a mind-set, they'll say, that involves certain landmarks, rather than distance from the city's traditional center.
"If you look at the library, for example, it's farther away from Main Street and South Temple than The Gateway," says Scheer, a specialist in downtown and urban design, and the library is considered an integral part of downtown.
Scheer describes a pattern over the years of the location of downtown shifting. "I always tell people not to worry about the boundaries, but where it is centered and what will take form," she says.
Downtown of the past
In the 1960s, downtown Salt Lake City featured angled parking on Main Street. The heart was 300 South, also known as Broadway, between State Street and West Temple. People shopped at stores such as Auerbach's and the Paris, both of which are now long gone.
The 300 South area was developed at the turn of the 1900s, during a large influx of Jews and Irish Catholics to the city.
"It was actually built as an opposition to the Temple," Scheer says. "It was built by someone who was not LDS. It was kind of an interesting counterpoint to the northern part (of downtown)."
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