Will N.J. downtowns survive the pandemic? Coronavirus puts one town’s identity at stake

June 4, 2020

Still, urban centers may show more durability than big-box malls, since it is easier to socially distance on sidewalks and streets than on escalators and elevators, said Clinton Andrews, a professor of urban planning at Rutgers University. Across downtowns, the economic losses will likely be uneven, with an economically distressed township such as Irvington unable to bounce back as quickly as a Princeton, Andrews said.

“We are going to continue seeing this uneven patchwork,” Andrews said. “I won’t say some towns will disappear, but I will say some downtowns will fail to draw.”

NJ.com, June 3, 2020

Recent Posts

Bloustein Alumni, Faculty Take Key Roles in NJ’s Future

Over the last few months several Bloustein School alumni and faculty have been elected, or appointed to, key positions in New Jersey and elsewhere, underscoring the school’s longstanding role in preparing leaders who shape public policy across the state. “These...