Texarkana Gazette

Changing lanes

Historic Santa Barbara street is now so popular it’s scary

- By Christophe­r Reynolds

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. _ If you haven’t seen State Street in Santa Barbara lately, brace yourself. It’s gone car-less. The empty lanes are filled with young and old people eating, drinking or wandering on foot, on cycles, on scooters. Expect a big, happy crowd on a Saturday night.

And maybe mask up. “It’s so wonderful, isn’t it?” said Ruth Marshall, who was walking her dog and wearing a face mask with a wide smile printed on it. “It’s like one big party.”

For decades, Santa Barbara’s main commercial artery has been pretty but problemati­c _ a handsome street, full of tall trees, Spanish Revival architectu­re, stylish restaurant­s and boutiques, its sidewalk sometimes blocked by people in need of homes or mental health services or both.

For years, many Santa

Barbarans have suggested that banning cars might help. It would create more room for foot traffic and outdoor dining, they said, and add a

European feel.

“I have been asking since 2000, 2001,” said bar owner Dan Baha. “But they rejected the idea, saying it would be Mardi Gras.”

The city did try a threeblock, two-day test in 2019, but officials weren’t ready to make a bigger move.

Then in late May, after two months of pandemic and restrictio­ns threatenin­g to drive many restaurant­s, bars and shops out of business, the Santa Barbara City Council voted unanimousl­y to make about a mile of State Street into a pedestrian promenade.

The experiment allows restaurant­s and bars to add seats and tables on the sidewalk and in streets and parking lots, reclaiming some of

the capacity lost when social distancing requiremen­ts were imposed. The new move also takes advantage of rules loosened by the state’s Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control.

The change began May 22. City workers added barricades and planters, liberating eight blocks from automobile rule, except for intersecti­ons. The number of restaurant­s with sidewalk seating has jumped from 15 to about 30. Last Friday, bars without food service reopened, as did many major downtown hotels, whose guests can walk to the new promenade.

“They’ve been trying to liven up State Street, and this does it,” Marshall said.

Last weekend was the experiment’s busiest so far, surpassing Memorial Day weekend.

City officials say this is a work in progress and acknowledg­e that they may need additional steps to safely accommodat­e both cyclists and pedestrian­s.

But the result is a street scene that may remind some of the carless portions of Calle Sierpes in Seville, Spain, or Las Ramblas in Barcelona.

In a full day of interviewi­ng Santa Barbara locals and visitors on the blocks between Haley and Sola streets, I couldn’t find anyone who didn’t love it. Everyone

wanted to make it permanent _ a dramatic change for a thoroughfa­re that got its name in 1850.

For a city that has always prized its indoor-outdoor living, “this is a logical next step,” said Nina Johnson, senior assistant to city administra­tor Paul Casey. “But it took the urgency of the public health measure to make it happen.”

But will success spoil State Street?

People aren’t wearing masks. In a few minutes at State and Haley at 6 p.m. last Sunday, I counted 69 adult pedestrian­s and cyclists without masks, 25 with them.

There was nothing illegal about that; Santa Barbara County’s health order requires that you wear a face covering when entering a restaurant or other business, but not while on the street. Rules are stricter in Los Angeles

County, which requires face coverings whenever people are interactin­g with others who are not members of their household.

Health officials say they are still discouragi­ng leisure travel, but state and local leaders throughout California have permitted the reopening of hundreds of hotels. This leaves California­ns to sort out for themselves what they can do and what they should do.

The many bare-faced people on State Street “is a problem. It’s hard to figure that out,” said Johnson. “We are trying to monitor and make observatio­ns. We can send more messages to hotel guests or residents to encourage them to wear masks.” However, she noted, “we don’t have a technical method to measure mask-wearing.”

On the promenade, Reed Loose and Sarah Broad, both masked, both recent University of California, Santa Barbara grads who live downtown, said they had hoped to see more face coverings.

“It’s an easy thing that might help,” said Broad.

“Most people, a couple of weeks back, had masks on,” Loose said. The new influx of tourists could be the problem, but “I can’t tell,” he said.

On the 500 block of State Street, where the greatest number of bars and restaurant­s is concentrat­ed, music leaked from the Red Piano and O’Malley’s bar.

Farther up the street, near the Lobero Theatre (on “intermissi­on” since March), folk musicians had settled in to play some Irish music. All wore masks.

“We’re kind of old, some of us,” explained fiddler Eliot Jacobson, 62, drawing a laugh from Richard Ellsworth, also a fiddler, age 25.

As for the car-lessness, “we’ve been wishing for this for decades,” said Diane Soini, 55, holding a modified mandolin.

The city is still far from its old self. Many of State Street’s prime attraction­s, including several theaters and museums, are still closed. So are playground­s, nightclubs and spas. So is the Mission Santa Barbara. The Santa Barbara Botanic Garden is open only to members with reservatio­ns.

“It’s amazing how much you can cut through the red tape right now,” said Daryl Takehara, general manager of the popular sushi restaurant Arigato.

Nearby strolled Leila Avant (no mask) with her young son and husband (masked). They were from San Bernardino and had come to stroll and browse for a restaurant.

“I’ve been off and on” with the mask, Avant said. “I’m kind of living dangerousl­y right now. He’s better than me.”

Her husband, who is in the military and declined to give his name, said he’s afraid the pandemic will worsen in fall. But in the meantime, he said, “this is a spectacula­r place.”

The promenade will stay carless until at least Sept. 8, Johnson said. Then it’s up to the City Council.

As Johnson and others acknowledg­e, the promenade doesn’t fill retail vacancies, nor does it solve housing or mental health issues. But it does keep more money and people in motion.

And the city continues to get busier. The Santa Barbara Zoo is due to open Tuesday (reservatio­ns required).

On Monday morning in State Street’s La Arcada Building, the barber shop had reopened.

At O’Malley’s, Dan Bahan was about to open for the day.

“Look,” he said, pointing out the young and old passersby. “There are strollers on the street . ... I know you’ve already got this in Santa Monica. But you’re going to start seeing these pop up in a lot of cities.”

 ?? Christophe­r Reynolds/Los Angeles Times/TNS ?? ■ Santa Barbara, Calif., turned eight blocks of State Street into a car-free promenade in late May, a pandemic-prompted move that's getting praise all around as tourists begin to return. Face coverings are optional outdoors there, and many do without them.
Christophe­r Reynolds/Los Angeles Times/TNS ■ Santa Barbara, Calif., turned eight blocks of State Street into a car-free promenade in late May, a pandemic-prompted move that's getting praise all around as tourists begin to return. Face coverings are optional outdoors there, and many do without them.
 ?? Christophe­r Reynolds/Los Angeles Times/TNS ?? ■ Ruth Marshall, a lifelong Santa Barbaran who hopes the State Street promenade becomes permanent, dons a mask that always draws compliment­s.
Christophe­r Reynolds/Los Angeles Times/TNS ■ Ruth Marshall, a lifelong Santa Barbaran who hopes the State Street promenade becomes permanent, dons a mask that always draws compliment­s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States