About Meridian Main Street
The Main Street Approach is a community-driven, comprehensive
methodology used to revitalize older, traditional business districts throughout the United States. It is a common-sense
way to address the variety of issues and problems that face traditional business districts. The underlying premise of
the Main Street approach is to encourage economic development within the context of historic preservation in ways appropriate
to today’s marketplace. The Main Street Approach advocates a return to community self-reliance, local empowerment, and
the rebuilding of traditional commercial districts based on their unique assets: distinctive architecture, a pedestrian-friendly
environment, personal service, local ownership, and a sense of community.The Main Street Four-Point Approach™ is a comprehensive
strategy that is tailored to meet local needs and opportunities. It encompasses work in four distinct areas — Design,
Economic Restructuring, Promotion, and Organization — that are combined to address all of the commercial district’s
needs. The philosophy and the Eight Guiding Principles behind this methodology make it an effective tool for community-based,
grassroots revitalization efforts. The Main Street approach has been successful in communities of all sizes, both rural and
urban. Find out if the Approach is right for your community.The Main Street approach is incremental; it is not designed to
produce immediate change. Because they often fail to address the underlying causes of commercial district decline, expensive
improvements, such as pedestrian malls or sports arenas, do not always generate the desired economic results. In order to
succeed, a long-term revitalization effort requires careful attention to every aspect of downtown — a process that takes
time and requires leadership and local capacity building.
The Main Street Four-Point Approach™
to commercial district revitalizationThe National Trust Main Street Center offers a comprehensive commercial district revitalization
strategy that has been widely successful in towns and cities nationwide. Described below are the four points of the Main Street
approach which work together to build a sustainable and complete community revitalization effort.
Organization involves getting
everyone working toward the same goal and assembling the appropriate human and financial resources to implement a Main Street
revitalization program. A governing board and standing committees make up the fundamental organizational structure of the
volunteer-driven program. Volunteers are coordinated and supported by a paid program director as well. This structure not
only divides the workload and clearly delineates responsibilities, but also builds consensus and cooperation among the various
stakeholders.
Promotion sells a positive
image of the commercial district and encourages consumers and investors to live, work, shop, play and invest in the Main Street
district. By marketing a district’s unique characteristics to residents, investors, business owners and visitors, an
effective promotional strategy forges a positive image through advertising, retail promotional activity, special events and
marketing campaigns carried out by local volunteers. These activities improve consumer and investor confidence in the district
and encourage commercial activity and investment in the area.
Design means getting Main
Street into top physical shape. Capitalizing on its best assets — such as historic buildings and pedestrian-oriented
streets — is just part of the story. An inviting atmosphere, created through attractive window displays, parking areas,
building improvements, street furniture, signs, sidewalks, street lights and landscaping, conveys a positive visual message
about the commercial district and what it has to offer. Design activities also include instilling good maintenance practices
in the commercial district, enhancing the physical appearance of the commercial district by rehabilitating historic buildings,
encouraging appropriate new construction, developing sensitive design management systems, and long-term planning.
Economic Restructuring strengthens
a community’s existing economic assets while expanding and diversifying its economic base. The Main Street program helps
sharpen the competitiveness of existing business owners and recruits compatible new businesses and new economic uses to build
a commercial district that responds to today’s consumers’ needs. Converting unused or underused commercial space
into economically productive property also helps boost the profitability of the district.
Coincidentally, the four points of the
Main Street approach correspond with the four forces of real estate value, which are social, political, physical, and economic.