For the last decade I have been documenting the NIZ storm which has destroyed Allentown's former mercantile district, just like a tornado in Kansas wipes out buildings. In addition to photographing the demolition, I attended city hall meetings with the former merchants, where they were bullied into relinquishing their dreams. I'm sorry to report that none now remain in business, not even on 7th Street.
Yesterday, in regard to the imminent sale of the PPL Tower, fellow blogger Bernie O'Hare recapped the 2012 Business Matters debate covered by the Morning Call's Bill White. White dismissed the possibility of the PPL leaving the tower as hysteria. Myself and another critic, Steve Thode, were accused of making wild claims. As critical as we were then, it never occurred to me that almost all of the NIZ, with only a few exceptions, would be owned by one man. That man even came to own the Morning Call building itself, which now warehouses cigarettes. His NIZ allows him to collect the state taxes on cigarettes, which formerly went to CHIP, the Children's Health Insurance Program.
While photographing the demolition of the former Rialto property, I took shelter from yesterday's rain under the overhang of the former Park & Shop deck on 10th Street, which is now the police garage. I remembered that when I was a boy my mother would park there while shopping. In Hess's she would have to go up to the 5th floor to get her parking ticket stamped. There was a lot of merchandise to view on the way up for that free parking validation. There were a lot of stores to pass on the way back to the garage.
shown above demolition of former Rialto property











































