Ave Prepares For Much Needed New Thai And Pho Joints
Posted 1st December 2006 by tomOriginally posted to Seattlest.com on November 29, 2006
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With the closure of yet more businesses, the Ave’s storefront streetscape is treated to more vacant storefronts. We’ve given up thinking that such things are harbingers of the end of the world or, more locally, the Death of the Ave. People in this town, or any town for that matter, love talking about and citing evidence for the Death of insert business district. We believe that commercial turnover is just another one of those cycles that happens. Unless the UW decides to up and move, the Ave will very likely remain the area’s “campustown” commercial and restaurant strip–through better and through worse.
Off The Wall was one of those cheesy head shops that sold pot accoutrements and incense to the masses. It was the place to go if, as a college kiddie, you wanted to show off your rebelious individuality by getting a Bob Marley poster or a t-shirt with the likeness of Che Guevara on it. As such, it always had slightly less character than the other, more cramped tobacco shops up and down the street.
This is a shame, since the physical store itself had a charming spatial configuration. It was one of those old-style storefronts in which the entry was recessed into the facade. The doors were centered on a U-shaped front window. As one turned off the sidewalk and headed for them, there was a 15-foot stretch of roofed, enclosed space transitioning between public sidewalk and the private property of the store’s interior. On either side of you, then, there was a windowed display area where, in the romanticized past, the merchant could show off his or her finest and newest wares.
More importantly, however, it was one of those nebulous semi-private or semi-public spaces–it was technically private property but it was open to the public and not really part of the store. It was an enclosure–a separate transition space. It was a place where a homeless person could reasonably and comfortably sleep out of the elements while offending nobody, visually or physically. It was also a space into which Chas. could duck out of the rain as he serendipitously ran into Hal, his chum, walking down the street the other way. The two would converse there for a few minutes without obstructing the sidewalk. During the conversation, Chas. would spy a piece of fine haberdashery in the display and then buy it after Hal excused himself to run off to an important appointment at 11:15.
Seattlest mourns the loss of such genteel public spaces.
So it was with a certain amount of nostalgic malaise that we looked on as the new owner of the space demolished the recessed entryway and proceeded with construction of a new, flat, characterless storefront. We certainly don’t wish to challenge the inviolable right of private property and the self-determination that comes with it, but we are apprehensive about these developments. Far too many times in recent years, we’ve watched a vacant storefront on the Ave re-emerge as Yet Another Pho place or Yet Another Thai place. Don’t get us wrong, we lovelovelove both pho and Thai. However, we’ve had it with the lack of culinary diversity we’ve begun seeing on the Ave. And we’ve already watched a decent Greek place, a sub shop, and a Creperie close up shop.
Some day soon, we’d like to dig into the new owner’s plans, so that perhaps we’ll get some indication of what will appear. In the meantime, there are two additional vacant storefronts on the street level of this building. Our greatest fear is that the Asian Hegemony will continue to squeeze the strained gut of the Ave.
If we’re lucky we might get another Starbucks. After all, there is not one currently on this end of that block– why bother when Sureshot is across the street and Trabant is just down 45th–and the only other one is down at 42nd–right across from Cafe on the Ave and Bulldog News.
On the other hand, what with the Ave’s commercial turnover, it’ll be just a few months before whatever opens here goes out of business and is replaced by that new WalBartRite that we so desperately need.


