We are the DowntownABQ MainStreet Initiative, and we are a community redevelopment organization, State designated since 2008. Our mission is to promote and support Downtown’s economic, social, and creative vitality through community-driven projects and programs. A revitalized and vibrant Downtown is a symbol of community economic health, local quality of life, pride, and community identity. We #LoveABQDowntown and we want you to love it, too!

If you want to stay informed of Downtown news and events, email news@abqmainstreet.org and we’ll get you signed up for the Weekly e-newsletter, which goes out every Thursday afternoon to Downtown stakeholders, businesses, and others interested in all things related to Downtown.

If you have news or an event to share, or a great Downtown photo, email news@abqmainstreet.org and we’ll include it in the next issue. Submissions should be received no later than noon on the Tuesday prior to publication. Content should be relevant to Downtown, events no more than two weeks away, and we may edit down for size and clarity. Any images should be sent as a jpeg with your email.

Our Board list is located here.

#LoveABQDowntown

Why do you #LoveABQDowntown? Is it the coffee shops? The people? The awesome breweries? The historic Hotel Andaluz? Civic Plaza? We asked this question to attendees of a TEDxABQ event and had them write love letters to Downtown and postcards to their favorite businesses. You can do this, too- and we’ll deliver the letter to the business for you. Fill out the form below, or email love@abqmainstreet.org and your love letter will get sent off! (Just be sure to let us know which business or person you’re sending it to!) Share your #LoveABQDowntown. (Thanks to Michelle Negrette for making these amazing postcards possible!)

Here’s a “Love Letter to Downtown”, courtesy of Tim Trujillo.

“Dear Downtown,
I know who you really are. You’re a young neighborhood, akin to an adolescent, still trying to figure it out and I’m just fine with that.

We’ve all been through adolescence and can empathize. Everyone wants you to be something and someone, but you are just not ready to say exactly who or what that is quite yet. You’re evolving. On one hand, you are home to over 15,000 jobs that provide employment for citizens from the entirety of a metro area nearing one million residents. On the other, you are the entertainment center of the state hosting several of the best performance venues offering an array of live local, national, and international acts as well as the latest blockbuster movies. You offer culinary experiences that range from downright thrifty to flavors and complexity that rival the best of Nob Hill and Santa Fe. You provide the hub for the region’s transportation network, offering service to and from every corner of the metro and places beyond. You are a growing education center, soon home to Innovate ABQ and CNM’s STEMulus Center. You even host a farmer’s market that is as good as they come. Whatever you do, don’t feel sorry for yourself, downtown. You have so much going for you whether others see it or not.

As someone who grew up in the 80’s and 90’s, I have seen you change and it is certainly for the better. Back then, you were merely an office park. Sure, you provided more jobs than you do today, but you’re much more dynamic these days for all the reasons that I listed. You are also rapidly becoming a true urban neighborhood, soon to be home to thousands of residents. The media makes it sound as if you are limited in your demographic, suggesting that you only attract residents to your so-called low-income housing. What they don’t understand is that your housing is not low-income, but is instead mixed income. From the affordable Silver Moon Lodge and Silver Gardens Apartments to the market rate Anasazi and 100 Gold Lofts, you are drawing all demographics of income earners because they are attracted to you for who you are and what you promise to be. That makes you more exciting than any single neighborhood around. You are one of the first two neighborhoods to fully rebound from 2007 prices. Obviously you’re doing something right.

I have witnessed so much change and improvement. Several residential projects either started or restarted. Recently, you lost a few sandwich shops, and maybe a donut shop here and there, but gained a wider variety of options in return. This transition has not been easy, but you’ve managed to achieve this while the economy has remained largely stagnant and without a dime of public investment.

We all know you are not like your brothers and sisters of downtown Denver, Portland, or Austin, nor should you try to be. Those are unfair comparisons when you consider their downtowns are the centers of metro areas two to four times as large. But you are not unlike them some 15 to 20 years ago when they began to receive investment from their citizens. You might not believe it today, but in a few years you will attract press from all over the country asking what you did and how you became so popular. Soon, everyone will be asking you to go to the prom. Ultimately up to the citizens of this city and state to invest in you to help you be your best.

Love,
Tim