


Time for Preakness to move on, out
Unfortunately, that seems to be where we are headed with Pimlico Race Course, home to the Preakness Stakes, the second jewel in thoroughbred racing’s Triple Crown. Everybody loves the Preakness. Everybody seems convinced it
Of course, lots of folks also used to think that Memorial Stadium was an irreplaceable shrine or that it would’ve been wonderful for interstates to slash through Fells Point and across the Inner Harbor. Luckily, William Donald Schaefer and Barbara Mikulski made careers out of resisting such groupthink, and Baltimore is much the better for it. We need similar leadership on Pimlico.
Let’s start with the obvious: In a city where schoolchildren
To which the groupthinkers will sputter that that one day is enough — that it puts the city on a world stage, showcasing us in a way that is priceless. And to which the more rational should respond “just like the
And that is the less obvious, but more important, problem with wasting resources on this track: It actually hurts rather than helps the local economy. We have it backward: The neighborhood surrounding Pimlico is not decaying and poor
The foremost problem the racetrack causes for the Pimlico district was first identified by urbanologist Jane Jacobs in her classic “The Death and Life of Great American Cities.” She dubbed it “the curse of
Ms. Jacobs saw that big-footprint installations — not just expressways and railroad tracks, but sprawling convention centers, large hospital grounds and sometimes even excessively large parks — create dead ends for pedestrians and drivers, often leading to stagnation in adjoining areas. And stagnation then gives way to blight and flight. As she put it: A “running-down process is set in motion.”
If you doubt Ms. Jacobs’s wisdom on this, imagine: What if someone planned to drop a 93-acre racetrack into your neighborhood? A massive grandstand, a huge oval, plenty of asphalt for parking and fences all around to keep out the non-paying onlookers.
My guess is that you would call Barbara Mikulski out of retirement to rally the troops the same way she did to
The fact that this particular racetrack is already in place does not change this logic. Nor do claims that an upgrade would be done with an eye on “mixed uses” — a little residential on the fringe, an occasional event on the infield. None of that would change the fact that a project with a footprint and border of this size is simply incompatible with a successful, prosperous neighboring district.
So when the Maryland Jockey Club
Economic impact-wise, tourists will still come to town and stay in our downtown hotels (there are none to speak of in Pimlico anyway) during Preakness Week. And if we run enough MARC trains to Laurel from Camden station on race day, they’ll likely find the experience easier and more enjoyable.
More importantly, the 93 acres now inhabited by an economic albatross on that hilltop could be re-tasked into multiple uses that would truly contribute to the wellbeing of the good people of Pimlico. They deserve no less.