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Planners complete study on Algonquin

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Planners also recommended the village start designing directional and gateway signs for the downtown and evaluate the possibility of having a recreational paddling and white water park.

To help pay for some of these improvements, Algonquin could look into transportation and infrastructure grants, or even into setting up tax increment financing districts or special service area districts, among other things, Lanz said.

A TIF district is not something the village has done traditionally, but it might be an option to consider to be competitive with other municipalities, Lanz said.

“Don’t just set one up to set up one,” Lanz said. “Make sure you have a developer ready to go.”

Planners also recommend keeping the parallel parking on Main Street to encourage pedestrian traffic. Angle-parking spots would require reducing the width of sidewalks, Lanz said.

The village should enhance the informal connections that connect parking lots to buildings on Main Street and connect Towne Park to the river. Also recommended was completing sidewalks from neighborhoods to downtown, and putting in bike lanes in the downtown, said Stacey Meekins, a planner for Sam Schwartz Engineering.

“That’s going to calm the traffic, when you put bike lanes on the streets and narrow ... the space for cars. It slows cars down,” Meekins said. “It’s also going to provide connection to existing facilities to the north ... and primarily the [bike] path.”

View the study

To see the study results, visit www.landvision.com/algonquindowntownplan

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