
I went in the door of the old Belk building the other morning and met three workman continuing to clear out the cavernous space. It is in need of a buyer. I somehow refrained from hugging the guys after they took time to chat and confirmed some research I have been doing on the block. THEY REMEMBERED.
Standing out front again, I wonder what a developer sees when they first experience Main Street, not what we no longer notice because of familiarity. What does an outsider see when deciding whether Rocky Mount is worth the risk.
The Belk building sits like a question mark because no one has yet answered what comes next.
This is exactly where Rocky Mount finds itself today, trying to answer that same question.
After the recent audit and the millions of dollars gone missing, those headlines traveled fast. Developers and investors read these stories. That kind of news and negative publicity stifles incentive to check us out.
People recognize instability.
Banks notice it.
Developers notice it.
Investors notice it.
Before we ask developers to believe in Rocky Mount we have to show them that we can take care of ourselves.
Please don’t stop noticing….. the neglected awnings, the empty upper windows, the buildings with no visible plan, The darkness after five o’clock.
Because visitors notice.
Developers notice.
Thank goodness some see the positive things. They see the architecture. They see the train station., The Imperial Center. They see Rocky Mount Mills. They see restaurants filled with people.
They see historic brick buildings that would cost a fortune to recreate today.
We want them to see possibilities too.
