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Can
our community become more than the sum of our neighborhoods?
"Great things are not done by
impulse but by a series of small things brought
together.” - Vincent Van Gogh
We use the terms neighborhood and community interchangeably,
yet these two words have distinctly different feelings
and meanings. Neighborhood refers to a shared physical
place, whereas community signifies a psychological
place where individuals share common goals and values.
Community
members interact frequently, feeling ties of connection
binding them together. This emotional closeness
among community results in shared experiences, and
it is these shared experiences that create a general
feeling of belonging, ownership, and an emerging
collective spirit. Members feel part of a united
entity larger than one single self.
When members of a community feel an emotional connection
to one another and their shared identity, they experience
a collective sense about what is desired, and will
unite with a sense of solidarity and cohesion. Through
the sum of these unique members, they find strength
to engage and work together to act for the good
of the community.
Can Downtown’s neighboring projects get together
to create a community spirit, shared identity, and
ultimately a sense of solidarity? Can an emotionally
charged issue such as the train horns unite and
create a sense of cohesion? Can a series of small
things create the synergy necessary to bring our
neighbors together to form the community we all
desire?
I consider…Can our community
become more than the sum of our neighborhoods?
Gregg Maslak (Kettner
Row) spearheaded the "keep kids alive - drive
25 " program in Little Italy, benefiting school-age
children as well as all pedestrians. He was instrumental
in the placement of new stop signs by Washington
Elementary School as well as increased police patrol
of the area to slow speeding cars.
Tom Ryan (Renaissance)
publishes a monthly newsletter for his neighbors.
His May edition included information on how to quiet
those blasted train whistles.
Pat McArron (Marina
Park moving to Pinnacle Towers) created the Pinnacle’s
website and emails construction updates to his future
neighbors.
Todd and Marie Ruth
(Marina District) launched SD-FUN for parents and
their children to socialize and take on serious
civic activity. They believe involved parents make
Downtown more kid-friendly.
Dave and Sandy Gonzales
(City Walk) are working with social chairs from
other condominium associations to “Get-Together”
and meet their neighbors, creating a community where
everyone knows your name.
When Ted Etsell moved
into Columbia Place and none of his neighbors stopped
by to introduce themselves, he took action and formed
the building’s social committee to create
a community with a sense of belonging. Now, the
Social Committee welcomes new residents when they
move in and makes them feel part of a large “family.”
I believe great things are beginning to happen in
Downtown. I witness it each and everyday, through
small things such as emails, telephone calls, and
meeting my neighbors on the street. Together, I
believe we will create a community where everyone
knows your name.
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