shopstead
English
editEtymology
editVerb
editshopstead (third-person singular simple present shopsteads, present participle shopsteading, simple past and past participle shopsteaded)
- To buy and renovate abandoned shop facilities that are offered for sale inexpensively as part of an urban renewal policy.
- 1983, I-83 Construction from Gay St to I-95, Baltimore:
- Many of the previously vacant commercial buildings along Baltimore Street have been "shopsteaded" (the commercial equivalent to homesteading).
- 2011 Fall, Jennifer Ryan, “Beale street blues? tourism, musical labor, and the fetishization of poverty in blues discourse”, in Ethnomusicology, volume 55, number 3:
- The city offered businesses the option to “shopstead,” a program that rented storefronts for $1 per square foot per year, renewable for up to forty-seven years (Jordan 1986).
Noun
editshopstead (plural shopsteads)
- A commercial building that has been or is being renovated as part of a shopsteading program.
- 1978, “Carter Reveals New Urban Policy”, in Land Use Law & Zoning Digest, volume 30:
- The program is supported by merchants, who see abandoned storefronts in neighborhood shopping strips as hurting their business, and by neighborhood residents, who have been given a say in what types of businesses they want in the shopstead properties.
- 1994 January 30, Lorraine Mirabella, “Residents fought razing and created model of renewal Washington Hill's REBIRTH”, in The Baltimore Sun:
- While renovating shopsteads, residents and city officials discovered artists needed affordable housing they could adapt for large, open studios.
- 2010, Edward J. Blakely, Nancey Green Leigh, Planning Local Economic Development: Theory and Practice, →ISBN:
- This means that there must be an identifiable market for goods and services in the shopstead area.