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Fresno Bee: Armenian Town project moves ahead in downtown Fresno.

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  • Fresno Bee: Armenian Town project moves ahead in downtown Fresno.

    Armenian Town project moves ahead in downtown Fresno.

    Fresno Bee
    Dec. 3, 2004

    The historic area of downtown Fresno that, decades ago, sheltered
    newly arrived Armenian immigrants is now moving toward a bustling
    future of gleaming office towers, shops, restaurants and cultural
    amenities. That's both welcome and vital for downtown Fresno's
    continued revitalization.


    The long-planned Old Armenian Town project took a leap forward Tuesday
    when the city and the developers - Richard Gunner and George Andros -
    reached an agreement on the sale of 7.8 acres of city-owned property,
    bounded by O and M streets, Ventura Avenue and Freeway 41.

    The development, to be built in several phases over the next decade,
    will ultimately include a new state appellate court building, three
    large office towers and an Armenian cultural center, plus two parking
    structures.

    A cultural center is planned for the corner of M Street and Ventura
    Avenue, across from the historic Holy Trinity Armenian Apostolic
    Church and next to the Valley Lahvosh Bakery, an icon of Armenia Town
    from its inception. The opportunity is there to make the center blend
    seamlessly with those beautiful old structures and tie them to the new
    ones.

    Standing alone, the Old Armenian Town project would be a great advance
    for downtown. But in fact it's only one of several ambitious efforts
    now under way. The area south of Grizzlies Stadium is being studied by
    Forest City Enterprises, a major national developer of the sort of
    mixed-use development that characterizes the most vibrant of
    downtowns. In Chinatown, Ed Kashian and Tom Richards are planning
    similar efforts.

    All of this comes on the heels of major projects such as the stadium,
    the Community Regional Medical Center and several government and
    private sector buildings that have sprung up in recent years.

    The best news is the prospect, now being seriously examined, of
    building new residential areas downtown, to bring back the sort of
    energy that can only come when people are living, shopping and
    relaxing there, instead of simply working all day and then heading to
    other parts of town at night.

    None of this comes easy, nor should we expect it to all happen
    overnight. It took many years for downtown to slip toward decay, and
    it will take years to recover.

    There are contentious issues along the way, as we have seen with the
    Old Armenian Town project. A decrepit old church was torn down - the
    facade has been saved - to make way for the project, over the
    objections of preservationists and many in the Armenian community.

    But the work advances, even at a price, and that's good news for all
    of us.
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