Maine
Where Is “Down East” Anyway?
By Will Grunewald
From our July 2024 issue
Driving over the Penobscot Narrows Bridge never fails to stir a certain hard-to-define feeling, a mixture of awe and calm and anticipation conjured up by the span’s swooping lines, the sight of its namesake river slowly unspooling seaward, and the impression, however foggy, of crossing a threshold. Coming from the south, the midcoast is all of a sudden in the rearview, and the down east region lies somewhere ahead. But exactly where down east begins has long been a source of disagreement. Some people contend it starts halfway across the bridge, upon entering Hancock County. Others exclude Mount Desert Island, on account of its seasonal crowds feeling contrary to the area’s otherwise quiet vibrations. Another point of view holds that only Washington County, the state’s easternmost, truly qualifies (the “real down east” is a familiar refrain). Ask however many Mainers to define the region, get as many differences of opinion.
The lack of consensus owes, at least in large part, to the fact that down east started out not as the name of a place but as an Age of Sail directional term. To reach Maine from Boston, a ship headed downwind and east, or down east for short. It was a purely relative concept (and that’s what inspired this magazine’s name almost 70 years ago). The notion of down east as a separate region within Maine seems to have developed both gradually and arbitrarily. But perhaps, finally, we can consider the debate over the boundaries settled. Last year, President Joe Biden signed legislation, supported by Maine’s congressional delegation, to designate a Downeast Maine National Heritage Area, which notably comprises both Hancock and Washington counties, in their entireties. So that’s that, right?
Going forward, the National Park Service will administer the new heritage area, though a heritage area is, unlike a national park, neither a federally owned nor cohesively managed unit. Rather, the designation primarily enables nonprofits and municipalities and other organizing groups within the defined area — and there are more than 60 such areas across the country — to tap into some federal funds and technical assistance for projects related to historic preservation, environmental conservation, and economic development.
The appeal of such an arrangement is clear enough, but it also begs a new question: What’s so uniquely heritage-y about this one part of Maine? Heritage, after all, is slippery — it implies something to do with history and culture, but history and culture exist everywhere humans have ever set up shop. There is something to be said for tight-knit communities, deep-rooted families, and traditional ways of making a living from the land and the sea. But is any of that particular to down east?
Maybe heritage is one of those sum-is-greater-than-its-parts, know-it-when-you-see-it kind of things, and you just have to discover for yourself whether the past is somehow more present down east. What follows here is hardly a comprehensive guide to the region but rather a sort of primer, an introduction with an eye toward sites with something to say about that nebulous idea of heritage. So point your car downwind and east, sail on up Route 1, and see if you think the membrane between then and now is truly thinner in Hancock and Washington counties. See if you experience another one of those hard-to-define feelings.
Where to Stay
You’ll find far more options for accommodations in the western half than the eastern half of the region, but there are options nonetheless throughout down east, and a number of them check some heritage-y boxes. The Queen Anne–style Pentagöet Inn, in Castine, was built in 1894 to capture the turn-of-the-century summering crowd, and it retains historic touches throughout. If 1894 isn’t old enough for your tastes, consider instead the Pilgrim’s Inn, on Deer Isle, which dates from 1793 and was originally the private home of a prominent gristmill and shipyard owner. Continuing eastward, there are too many offerings to count on Mount Desert Island, then a dry stretch until the Chandler River Inn, in Jonesport, which occupies a 1797 home high above its namesake river and leans into antique and vintage décor. All the way down east, in Lubec, the 1860 Peacock House Bed & Breakfast was built by a sea captain and was subsequently lived in by a family that owned a sardine cannery. In Eastport, a similar feel from a similar era comes in the form of the 1887 Kilby House Inn. Of course, if lodging that comes with historic vibes isn’t a priority, your range of options becomes considerably wider.
Where to Eat
Food, surely, is an important part of any heritage. Down east, that means lots of seafood, especially lobster, and lots of blueberries. For the former, there’s a high degree of futility in enumerating all the can’t-go-wrong establishments along the coast. The key test is to make sure you’ve got a view of the water. And Bagaduce Lunch warrants some special attention, since the James Beard Foundation conferred its America’s Classic award on the little takeout operation back in 2008 and it’s still going strong. Fried haddock, scallops, or clams all make for solid orders there too. Those seafood staples (along with heaping breakfasts and more) are also available at the hundred-year-old WaCo Diner, in Eastport, and if that doesn’t count as heritage, tough to say what does. As for blueberries, those always taste best straight from the grower, whether at a farmstand or a pick-your-own operation. Plus, if you stop during your travels to hike, say, Great Pond Mountain or Tunk Mountain, watch for freebie berries you can pluck fresh along the trail.
Blue Hill Peninsula
Soon after the Penobscot Narrows Bridge, the Blue Hill Peninsula juts south, forming the ragged eastern edge of Penobscot Bay. The rural roads that wind from town to town have a leisureliness to them, especially after driving on Route 1. In Castine, Maine Maritime Academy, itself a connection to the region’s centuries-old tradition of producing commercial seafarers, is home to the Bowdoin, a 1921 schooner and the official vessel of the state of Maine. Although the Bowdoin mostly spends its summers plying far-flung waters, it’s available for public day sails in the fall. On the other side of the peninsula is charming little Blue Hill, home to the Blue Hill Fair, a classic affair that got its start as an agricultural showcase in the 1800s — and helped inspire elements of Charlotte’s Web, by E.B. White, who lived in nearby Brooklin (Aug. 29–Sept. 2, 2024). Speaking of Brooklin, that’s where the Wooden-Boat School does its part to preserve traditional maritime ways, offering classes in boat-building and sailing — plus a gift shop if you’re just passing through. Heading all the way down to Stonington, on Deer Isle, you’ll find the most productive lobster fleet in the country hard at work. And up in Brooksville, the Good Life Center is situated on the Forest Farm homestead of Helen and Scott Nearing, who inspired legions of back-to-the-landers to settle in the area. Today, the center is open to visitors throughout the summer and hosts workshops on everything from composting to building stone walls, plus talks on everything from microplastics to presidential politics. While breezing through the Blue Hill Peninsula in a day is manageable, the easy rhythm of the place sinks in better with a night’s — or several nights’ — stay. Plus, it’s a good home base for forays farther down east.


Clockwise from left: Class at the WoodenBoat School, in Brooklin (photo by Tara Rice), and scenes from the Blue Hill Fair (photos by Jeff Klofft).
Ellsworth to Cherryfield
Leaving the Blue Hill Peninsula behind, Route 1 soon passes through downtown Ellsworth and then neighboring Hancock, where the Downeast Scenic Railroad departs on weekends and select weekdays through mid-October. The restored passenger cars run on a line that was built 140 years ago to carry well-heeled city folk to rusticate on Mount Desert Island. Nowadays, ducking south to Mount Desert Island to explore Acadia National Park, the heart of the region’s recreational history, requires traveling by car. Continuing farther east along Route 1, vestiges of the quarrying industry appear. In Franklin, a short detour leads to the Robertson’s Quarry Galamander, one of two rare stone-hauling vehicles known to have survived in Maine. In Sullivan, the Granite Art Garden, five minutes off Route 1, is part historical site, part outdoor sculpture gallery, part trail network around an old quarry, while the nearby Gordon’s Wharf, on Mount Desert Narrows has a few informational plaques that help visitors to imagine how the now-tranquil site was once a hotbed of activity, massive granite blocks being loaded onto schooners for shipping down the Eastern Seaboard. For even more granite, but in unhewn form, loop down through Acadia National Park’s Schoodic section and pull off at Schoodic Point, where huge ledges slope toward the ocean — and offer impressive views back across the water toward the main section of the park. Farther along Route 1, evidence of past industrial prosperity takes the shape of grand old homes. Cherryfield, once a shipbuilding hub, has quite a few, including the exceedingly well-kept William M. Nash House, a sprawling Second Empire mansion that’s perched on a hill above the Narraguagus River. It’s on the National Register of Historic Places, but take note: it’s a private residence, so don’t turn around in the drive as you continue making your way down east.
Clockwise from left: view from the Schoodic Peninsula (photo by Dave Waddell); Downeast Scenic Railroad (photo courtesy of Downeast Scenic Railroad); William M. Nash House (photo by Tara Rice), in Cherryfield; sculpture at the Granite Art Garden, in Sullivan (photo by Dave Waddell).
Deeper Ties
The Wabanaki can measure their down east heritage by millenia, not just centuries.
The most well-known and oft-visited museum in Maine dedicated to indigenous peoples is the Abbe Museum, a Smithsonian affiliate in the middle of downtown Bar Harbor. Its core exhibit, People of the First Light, provides a wide-angle view of 12,000 years of tribal history across what’s now Maine, while rotating shows tend to focus more tightly on certain elements of culture, contemporary life, and the arts. Nowadays, the Passamaquoddy are the only tribe with lands down east, split between reservations at Pleasant Point, near Eastport, and Indian Township, northwest of Calais. At Pleasant Point, also called Sipayik, the concise but thoughtful Sipayik Museum is managed by Passamaquoddy-language specialist Dwayne Tomah — one of few remaining fluent speakers — and displays traditional examples of clothing, tools, baskets, and canoes, among other artifacts. Hours at Sipayik vary, so it’s best to call ahead. In downtown Calais, the small Wabanaki Culture Center and Museum includes objects from both the Passamaquoddy and Penobscot tribes and has informational dioramas as well as a birch-bark canoe (39 Union St.). No experience of the down east region — no effort to understand what heritage means there — is complete without taking into account the past and present roles of Wabanaki tribes.
Clockwise from top left: a diorama and a traditional basket at the Wabanaki Culture Center and Museum, in Calais; examples of tribal clothing and tools at the Sipayik Museum; Dwayne Tomah, who runs the Sipayik Museum; a teepee reconstruction at the Wabanaki Culture Center and Museum. Photos by Dave Waddell.
Harrington to Machias
Eastbound from Cherryfield, the next two small towns you pass through are Harrington and Columbia Falls. Then, jumping off Route 1, a scenic loop can be made through the fishing village of Jonesport. Its harbor, best viewed while crossing the bridge to Beals Island, is chock-full of lobsterboats, whose now-familiar design got its modern shape from local boatbuilders. Outdoorsy travelers ought to continue along Beals to Great Wass Island, where a Nature Conservancy preserve provides several miles of trails through pristine, hushed coastal woods and bogs, reminding that conservation is a major part of down east’s past and present. All throughout this stretch of down east, too, is wild-blueberry country. Barrens of the scrubby low-bush plants line Route 1 — and turn brilliant red in the fall. In Machias, consider stopping for a slice of rightfully renowned blueberry pie at Helen’s Restaurant, especially during harvest season in late summer, for a satisfying taste of agricultural heritage. If you hunger for a history lesson as well, stop by the Burnham Tavern Museum. That’s where, in 1775, locals convened to discuss what to do about the arrival a British navy vessel and two merchant ships, looking to procure supplies that British troops needed in Boston, following the battles of Lexington and Concord. What ensued was the first naval engagement of the Revolutionary War, with Machias’s gutsy militiamen emerging the victors.
Clockwise from left: Burnham Tavern , in Machias (photo by Tara Rice); blueberry barren in the fall (photo by Benjamin Williamson); blueberry pie at Helen’s, in Machias (photo by Tara Rice); Jonesport Harbor (photo by Benjamin Williamson).
Cutler to Lubec


Something happens the farther down east you go: the fewer must-see sights around, the greater the sense you’re getting a real feel for the area. Heading toward Lubec, leave Route 1 behind and angle toward the tiny community of Cutler. The road skirts the shore for a time, then rolls along through bucolic scenery. A little farther, if you brought your hiking boots, find an excellent — but minimum-half-day — stop at the Cutler Coast Public Reserved Land (parksandlands.com). The trail there traverses the boldest section of a long stretch of shoreline known as the Bold Coast, combining some of the grandeur of Schoodic with some of the quietude of Great Wass. Is the hike instructive on the matter of heritage? Your mileage may vary, but here’s betting you’re a little more attuned afterward to what’s so special about the region’s terrain. The same can be said of Cobscook Bay, where the down east coastline’s massive tides are acutely felt, the basin emptying and swelling twice a day, many species of birds and other wildlife flocking to the marshes and grasslands. En route to Lubec, the Cobscook Shores network of parks provides a number of options for fairly quick strolls along the shore (cobscookshores.org). Then, in Lubec, consider what the waterfront would have felt like in the late-19th and early-20th centuries, when seafood canneries and smokehouses had their heydays, with about 50 such facilities in Lubec alone. Not a single one still operates there, although the McCurdy Smokehouse remains atop its pilings as a small museum that offers a glimpse into that defunct industry (mccurdysmokehouse.org). Ten minutes outside town is the sight probably most visitors come to see, West Quoddy Head Light, standing sentinel over the easternmost point in the contiguous U.S., with its iconic red and white stripes marking the entrance to the Quoddy Narrows (westquoddy.com). It might also serve as a reminder to travelers: follow the narrows, on toward Eastport.
Clockwise from top left: Lubec Landmarks now owns the McCurdy Smokehouse (photos by Dave Waddell); view down the Cutler Coast (photo by Tara Rice); Cobscook Bay at sunset (photo by Benjamin Williamson); lobsterboat off Quoddy Head (photo by Matt Trogner).
Eastport and Beyond


In Eastport, signs of a working waterfront are everywhere in the harbor-fronting downtown, from the fishing boats at their moorings to the tugboats that can pilot large ships into the deepwater port. At one point in the early 1800s, Eastport was the second-busiest trading port in the entire country, after only New York (although it’s far from that busy these days, and all the less so since the pandemic and the war in Ukraine threw global supply chains out of whack). While strolling around town, stop by the Raye’s Mustard gift shop. The museum and factory, with the country’s only traditional stone mustard mill still in operation, has churned out mustards since 1900 but is undergoing renovations and isn’t offering tours. After Eastport, you face a choice: either make the return trip the way you came (heading “up west,” one supposes?) or explore a little ways up the Saint Croix River, toward the border town of Calais. In the latter case, stop to check out the Saint Croix Island International Historic Site, where a French expedition landed in 1604. The group of settlers moved along after enduring a brutal winter, but French colonization in North America — and Acadian influence in Maine — was underway. Finally, head west via Route 9. Known as the Airline, it’s indeed a breezy way to travel — light on traffic, thick with woods. The relaxing drive is a good time to really absorb everything you’ve seen down east.


From top left: Route 9, aka “the Airline”; Scenes from around Eastport’s working waterfront (photos by Dave Waddell).
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Maine
Christmas wishes flow in for 7-year-old Maine girl fighting cancer
Dressed in a fuzzy chicken costume, a then-2-year-old girl — accompanied by her parents dressed as farmers — walked around their new neighborhood ringing doorbells and asking for candy. It was July.
That is how the Westbrook community first met and fell in love with Lucy Hanson five years ago.
Everyone in Lucy’s neighborhood is close, Sue Salisbury, her neighbor, said, but it’s particularly hard not to love Lucy. She trick-or-treats year round. She jumps into her neighbors’ piles of leaves as they’re raking. She rides around the neighborhood on a seat on her dad’s bike with a speaker playing music attached in the back.
“She’s got the whole neighborhood wrapped around her finger,” Joe Salisbury, Sue’s husband, said.
So when Lucy was diagnosed with cancer at the end of October, the neighborhood decided to flood her with love as she spends the next nine months, holidays included, in the hospital for chemotherapy treatment.
Friends, neighbors, strangers and even people from other countries have sent Lucy a deluge of holiday cards, donations, gifts and meals.
Lucy’s aunt, Juna Ferguson, shared Lucy’s story on social media and asked for donations and meals to help. She also submitted Lucy’s name to The Angel Card Project, an online charity that requests greeting cards for people in need, so Lucy would feel as much love as possible during the holiday season.
In just a few weeks, Lucy has received hundreds and hundreds of cards, letters and packages, including some from as far as Germany and Australia. On Meal Train — a website that facilitates meal giving to families in hard times — people have donated almost $22,000 for the Hanson family and sent dozens of meals. Lucy’s wish list sold out within five minutes — three separate times.
The Hanson family
In many ways, Lucy is just like any other 7-year-old girl from Westbrook.
She loves Harry Potter (she’s in Gryffindor, of course). She’s reading “Harry Potter and the Order of Phoenix,” but it’s a little scary for her. She just became a Brownie in the Girl Scouts. She wants to be a music teacher when she grows up. She loves to draw and sing and dance and do gymnastics and musical theatre. She has a best friend named Mallory who she has known since she was 6 months old. She’ll cry if there’s a snow day and she can’t go to school and see Mallory.
She’s witty and kind and bubbly and fun.
But in other ways, Lucy’s life doesn’t resemble that of other kids.
Last month, she spent more time in the hospital than at home. If she’s in the hospital, she has a robot she can drive around school to participate in her classes. (She dressed up the robot with a jacket, a hat and a sparkly backpack to make it look more like her).
Lucy is much smaller than most girls her age, as a genetic condition slows her growth. And she knows a lot more about cancer than most children.
She’s used to doctors and nurses and hospitals.
A few months after she was born in July 2018, she developed a rash on her face, which eventually spread to other parts of her body. After visiting three dermatologists and ruling out eczema, Lucy ultimately was diagnosed with Rothmund-Thomson syndrome type 2, a rare genetic condition that primarily affects her skin and bones and increases her chances of developing several types of cancer. Lucy is one of about 500 documented cases of RTS in the world.
For six years, Lucy was healthy. But in October, while she was attending a conference for families affected by RTS in Salt Lake City, she started to limp. She seemed to get better after a while, but a week and a half later, she couldn’t put any weight on her foot.
That’s when she was diagnosed with osteosarcoma in her right tibia. The doctors said Lucy will need nine months of chemotherapy and a below-the-knee amputation in February of 2026.
“How will we navigate the rest of Lucy’s life?” Staci Hanson, Lucy’s mom, thought.
Even though their lives had flipped upside down, Staci and her husband Jason decided to live as normally as possible.
They make sure Lucy does school work and takes walks. A school teacher checks in with her at the hospital and a child life specialist comes to play with her. Last week, they made slime together.
The nurses and doctors at MaineHealth Barbara Bush Children’s Hospital, where Lucy is receiving her chemotherapy treatments, have made magic in a very nonmagical situation, Staci said. In the hospital, Lucy got to pick out her own Christmas tree and ornaments for her room and even made a gingerbread house.
In the past month, the Hansons have spent just five days at home. Staci and Jason take shifts at the hospital. One night, mom stays with Lucy, the next it’s dad. They only live 15 minutes from the hospital, so it’s not a long drive to come home to get new things or do laundry, Jason said.
“It feels like a long time,” Lucy protested.
Her parents are honest with her about RTS, osteosarcoma and her approaching amputation in February.
“We try to lift her up and tell her, ‘Yeah, your world is going to look a little bit different, but you can still live a super normal life even with a prosthetic,’” Staci said. “So we’ve shown her lots of videos of people doing gymnastics and dance and just living fulfilling lives even though they have a prosthetic.”
Rallying around
Since Lucy met Joe and Sue Salisbury while trick-or-treating in the summer years ago, she has become part of their family.
“It’s like having a grandchild,” Joe said.
Lucy will often randomly call the Salisburys to invite them over for a movie night. No matter what they’re doing, even if they’re in the middle of dinner, they always accept.
“You don’t say no to her,” Sue said.
So they will stop what they’re doing, walk across the road in their slippers, and cuddle up with Lucy on the couch to watch whatever movie she wants.
Now, Sue and Joe hold on to those memories of her until they can resume that tradition.
In the meantime, the community is doing everything it can to help the family. The less the Hansons have to worry about, the more they can focus on Lucy and themselves.
Joe and Sue volunteered to receive the letters for Lucy, since the Hansons are rarely home to check their mail.
“This is Lucy’s fan following,” Joe said, pointing to two packages and a bag stuffed with letters.
The Salisburys collected at least 400 cards for her in three weeks. They go to the hospital about once a week to visit Lucy and give her the letters. They would like to see her more, but the visits are limited due to Lucy’s compromised immune system.
The Salisburys own the Daily Grind, a coffee shop in Westbrook. Customers come through all the time to drop off packages and cards for Lucy and ask about her.
Neighbors pick up the Hansons’ mail and plow their driveway.
Joe isn’t surprised by the response from the community. In Westbrook, people have always helped each other out.
“I think it’s just another example of how great the Westbrook community is that everybody is pulling together for Lucy,” Sue said.
The Hanson family has received so many letters and donations, it’s impossible to write enough thank you cards, Staci said. They are saving most of the cards to give to Lucy later, because she still has many more months in the hospital.
“I don’t know how we’ll ever repay our community for the love that we’ve received,” Staci said.
Lucy’s favorite card so far has a drawing of two ducks sitting in a yellow bowl of tomato soup with some crackers on the side.
“Thought some soup and quackers might make you feel better,” Lucy read from the card.
In another package, Lucy received fake snowballs. So Lucy did what any other kid would do —started a snowball fight in her hospital room with her doctors and nurses.
Those interested in sending gifts and cards or signing up to give a meal can visit mealtrain.com/trains/w4lwd0. The RTS Foundation accepts donations at rtsplace.org/. People can also join “The Lucy League” by buying merchandise at bonfire.com/store/bravelikelucy/. All profits go to the Hanson family.
Maine
Tell us your Maine hunting hot takes
Now that deer season has wrapped up, hunters across Maine are returning to their usual off-season routine: processing meat, watching football and passionately debating the “right” way to hunt and fish.
Anyone who spends time in the woods knows opinions run deep.
So, what’s your hunting hot take? Is camo really necessary, or do deer not care what you’re wearing? Can they really smell a Swisher Sweet on your clothing? Should hunting licenses be harder to get, or should crossbows be classified as firearms?
It’s not just about laws, either — it’s about ethics, tradition and your personal style.
Your hot take might spark a friendly debate — or a fiery one — but either way, we want to hear it.
Share your thoughts in the comments or email Outdoors editors Susan Bard at sbard@bangordailynews.com.
Maine
Portland greenlit its tallest building this month. Will more skyscrapers follow?
Portland’s skyline is changing.
First, the iconic B&M Baked Beans brick smokestack came down. Then the 190-foot Casco building went up. And soon, the city will add a sweeping new Roux Institute campus and an “architecturally significant” expansion of the Portland Museum of Art.
But perhaps no change will have as much visual impact as the 30-story, nearly 400-foot tower the planning board approved earlier this month.
The proposal has ruffled feathers, with many bemoaning what they say sticks out like a sore thumb (or middle finger) on the city’s idyllic skyline. They fear if more high-rises pop up across the city, Portland might slowly morph into a northern version of Boston.
So will this project usher in an era of skyscrapers for Maine’s largest city?
Experts say that’s unlikely.
“We’re not expecting a windfall of 30-story buildings,” said Kevin Kraft, the city’s director of planning and urban development.
Under new zoning laws, only a small section of downtown along Temple, Federal and Union streets allow buildings as tall as the tower. That means even if there was an appetite for more high-rises, there simply isn’t much undeveloped space.
Furthermore, much of Portland ‘s peninsula is covered in historic districts, and “contributing buildings” can’t be torn down, Kraft noted.
Chapter 14 Land Use Code – Revised 12-3-2025 (PDF)-Pages by julia
GROWING UP
Vertical development, experts say, is a sustainable way to squeeze more housing into a smaller footprint, something cities have been doing for decades. And Portland needs housing in spades.
Last year, city leaders updated its zoning laws with the goal of allowing growth while preserving character. The overhaul included an increased maximum height for buildings in some of the city’s major corridors, permitting buildings up to 380 feet in a section of downtown.
That part of the city has always allowed the tallest buildings, but until last year’s recode, the maximum height was 250 feet. And that height cap was in place for nearly 30 years before it was even remotely tested when Redfern Properties built the 190-foot Casco in 2023, currently the tallest building in Maine.
The new proposal from Portland developer East Brown Cow Management LLC, tentatively called Old Port Square tower, would be twice that tall. It would include more than 70 residential units, commercial space, an 88-room hotel and a restaurant at the top, and is just one piece of a development project that could fill an entire city block.
Whether any other developers follow suit with similar proposals could depend more on market conditions than Portland’s updating zoning.
“People aren’t going to build speculative high-rises,” Kraft said.
If the building ends up being successful, though, it could be an important “proof of concept” for other developers in the area, said Tim Love, assistant director of the Master in Real Estate Program at Harvard University.
Love is generally supportive of the project, which he said is in a great location.
“A lot of these proposals don’t happen because at the end of the day, the financing doesn’t work or the numbers that were plugged in for rents aren’t supported by the underwriting,” he said. “So I think it would be good for Portland if this project is a success,” because it could lead to additional residential development downtown.”
And more people living downtown is exactly what the city needs, he said.
“I hope this is a model for more residential mixed-use development at densities that can extend the kind of not 24/7 but 18/7 life of the city all the way to the museum,” he said.
If Portland is going to get an influx of high-rises, it won’t be for some time, said Jeff Levine, a former planner for the city of Portland who now divides his time consulting and teaching urban studies and planning at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
“I don’t think you get instant results in anything,” he said.
Real estate is complicated. Beyond just zoning changes, there are building regulations, financial restrictions and even simply individual personalities that impact whether a building will go up, Levine said.
FEAR OF CHANGE
Nancy Smith, CEO of GrowSmart Maine, a nonprofit that helps communities grow in sustainable ways, says the Old Port Square tower will certainly be symbolic for the city, but it’s not a “game-changer.”
Game-changers, she said, were the Franklin Arterial and the demolition of Union Station — projects that transformed the city (though arguably not for the better) and made a statement about what Portland wanted to be in the future.
But some feel like the tower could do that, too. It just might take time.
“We’re not (just) trying to capture the current moment, we want to anticipate the growth we could see in the next 15, 20, 30 years,” Kraft said. “We want to accommodate that growth (and) be more proactive than reactionary.”
Cities are constantly changing and evolving, he said. At one point, the Time and Temperature building on Congress Street seemed to dwarf those around it, including the Fidelity Trust building, which was once known as Maine’s “first skyscraper.” Now, they blend in.
Additionally, Smith said, the uses intended for the proposed tower area already commonplace downtown: a hotel, restaurant, apartments and shops.
Still, a big element of early opposition to the tall tower is fear of change, and that’s natural, she said.
“The challenge is moving beyond that deeply personal response to actually consider what you’re looking at,” she said. “This building has a lot of symbolic value. Portland is changing, but stopping the building isn’t going to stop that change.”
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