Better signs, better business?
Mayor Parker pleads with citizens to support shops & restaurants along lightrail construction
No matter which way you travel in central Houston, it's tough to avoid a light rail in some phase of construction — but some argue that Houstonians shouldn't try to detour around those construction zones in the first place.
As part of National Small Business Week and in partnership with METRORail, Mayor Annise Parker proclaimed Tuesday "Rally Around the Rails Day," urging residents to support the shops along future light rail lines.
"Let's be frank. Every time we do major construction projects in the city, it can be a real pain," Mayor Annise Parker said at a press conference on Tuesday.
METRO and the City of Houston have learned from past mistakes, improving signage and access in construction zones in these phases of light rail construction.
She went on to describe how, in the past, poor signage, messy roads and inconvenient construction detours affected her small business, a bookshop she co-owned along Richmond Avenue.
Parker claimed that both METRO and the City of Houston have learned from past mistakes, improving signage and access in construction zones in these phases of light rail construction. "Now it's up to Houstonians," she said, to frequent those businesses.
One of the small business owners affected by the construction is Arga Bourgeois, owner and chef of Sunshine's Health Food Store and Vegetarian Deli.
"It keeps me on my toes," Bourgeois told CultureMap of the evolving construction.
Though the street outside of her business is torn up, Bourgeois offers incentives (like free lemonade) to her customers for taking the extra step, and has taken advantage of the Business Assistance Fund during particularly tough times. And she's beginning to see the end.
Congressman Gene Green, Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee, METRO board chairman, Gilbert Garcia, and president and CEO, George Greanias, Downtown District executive director Bob Eury, Diane Schenke and Jason McLemore, executive directors of the Greater East End and Greater Southeast Management Districts, joined the mayor in imploring Houstonians to support the businesses along the rail lines.
Check out the full directory of those small businesses and do your part.