Main Street Now Conference In Seattle 2019

National Main Street Center

We enjoy submitting panel presentations with clients who have done exceptional work for the annual National Main Street Center conference. This year our clients in Tacony and Roxborugh in Philadelphia, and Metuchen in Central New Jersey will talk about their work as panel members for “Catalyst Projects Yield Extraordinary Results for Downtowns" at the Main Street conference in Seattle on March 26th.

Here is what the panel discussion is about: Downtown organizations with a strategic plan, market data, and transformation strategies in place, can confidently tackle even the most intractable downtown problems. In this session, you’ll hear from two Pennslyvania and onw New Jersey Main Street organizations that are confronting seemingly impossible downtown projects they could never have contemplated even three years ago without all of this compelling data. The panel members will highlight three recently completed transformational projects, including an $850,000 pocket park initiative, five new or expanded food-based businesses, and a series of retail promotions that generated more than $500,000 in new sales at local stores in the last year. Come see us on Tuesday, March 26, from 9:45 a.m. to 11 a.m. in the Elwha A, room on the 5th Floor Conference Hotel.

We enjoy submitting panel presentations with clients who have done exceptional work for the annual National Main Street Center conference. This year our clients in Tacony and Roxborugh in Philadelphia, and Metuchen in Central New Jersey will talk about their work as panel members for “Catalyst Projects Yield Extraordinary Results for Downtowns" at the Main Street conference in Seattle on March 26th.

Here is what the panel discussion is about: Downtown organizations with a strategic plan, market data, and transformation strategies in place, can confidently tackle even the most intractable downtown problems. In this session, you’ll hear from two Pennslyvania and onw New Jersey Main Street organizations that are confronting seemingly impossible downtown projects they could never have contemplated even three years ago without all of this compelling data. The panel members will highlight three recently completed transformational projects, including an $850,000 pocket park initiative, five new or expanded food-based businesses, and a series of retail promotions that generated more than $500,000 in new sales at local stores in the last year. Come see us on Tuesday, March 26, from 9:45 a.m. to 11 a.m. in the Elwha A, room on the 5th Floor Conference Hotel.