Editing
San Angelo City
(section)
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Warning:
You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you
log in
or
create an account
, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
Anti-spam check. Do
not
fill this in!
=== El Núcleo de la Ciudad === The frenetic, fast-paced downtown and laid-back neighborhoods of Midtown constitute the core of the Golden City. ===== El Centro ===== The heart of San Angelo, downtown encompasses a profusion of diverse neighborhoods. Shining skyscrapers rise from the bustling financial nerve center of City Center to define the San Angelo skyline, while a few blocks away tourists crowd the streets of Chinatown hoping to experience a taste of the Orient. Five-star hotels, fine dining, theaters, nightclubs and other attractions add to the sparkle of the downtown, as do numerous statues, monuments and plazas celebrating the city’s past. And the shadows of the high-rises fall across a few neighborhoods in decay, places of fear and grim despair. San Angelo got its start in the area now considered downtown, and several of the oldest neighborhoods of the city are found there. In particular, the restored 1800s-era storefronts of Old San Angelo recreate the early days of the city for visitors and schoolchildren. Now the economic nucleus of San Angelo, the modern downtown is primarily a business district that attracts hundreds of thousands of suburban commuters each day. From the tallest office tower to the humblest old-fashioned grocery, the businesses found downtown play a vital role in the daily commerce of San Angelo. Residential neighborhoods are also part of downtown, though they tend to be overlooked by outsiders. The housing market consists chiefly of older apartment homes, second-story flats over storefronts and a scattering of houses. The people of downtown are as diverse as its neighborhoods, ranging from artists in hip Riverfront lofts to pensioners in cheap Armory rooming hotels. The homeless are a sizable, and very visible, component of the downtown population. The high concentration of people and businesses in downtown San Angelo gives rise to a booming crime rate, though only a few neighborhoods are thought to be really dangerous. City police have a strong presence throughout the area. ===== Armory ===== A gritty neighborhood of rooming hotels, shelters, liquor stores and soup kitchens, the Armory takes its name from the central National Guard Armory. The last stop for San Angelo’s down-and-out, the neighborhood has one of the highest concentrations of homeless people in the city. Despite complaints by Vietnamese and Laotian refugee families who have moved into the Armory, nothing seems likely to change. Dilapidated brick hotels, some nearly a century old, rise over Armory streets crowded by shelters, dining halls, missions and other charities. A handful of neighborhood stores, offices and cafes occupy age-worn commercial buildings, though many storefronts stand empty. The National Guard Armory, a blocky, concrete structure, and the San Angelo County General Hospital are the two largest buildings in the neighborhood. Seedy liquor stores scattered along the main boulevards, intermixed with an occasional greasy spoon diner, thrift store or gloomy bar, constitute the bulk of the Armory commercial scene. Back streets are home to recyclers, body shops and other light industry. Enterprising Vietnamese and Laotian newcomers to the neighborhood have opened a few small restaurants featuring Southeast Asian cuisine. There are few houses in the neighborhood, but some older storefronts have second-story flats. Rooming hotels, aging structures nearly a century old, offer long-term housing for those too poor to scrape up the deposit for an apartment. Most tenants of these dingy, pest-infested hotels are just a short step from homelessness. Cheap apartment homes near the looming San Angelo County General Hospital house recent waves of Vietnamese and Laotian immigrants, who are unhappy about the ever-declining state of the neighborhood and the large numbers of street people. Panhandlers are endemic in the Armory, and homeless people of all descriptions shuffle through the neighborhood in daylight hours. At night, many find refuge in doorways or alleys. A glut of dining halls, shelters and other charitable endeavors are found in the Armory, including the Golden Rule complex and the county-run N Street Shelter. Residents of nearby neighborhoods claim that the concentration of social services in the Armory serves as a magnet to the homeless, but have so far failed to persuade the City Council to force some of the shelters to relocate. City police are a regular sight on Armory streets, where they handle endless cases of public intoxication, disturbances, noise complaints and fistfights between derelicts. Reported crimes in the Armory tend to involve property thefts or trespassing, but crimes against the homeless are rarely reported to police. Assaults, robberies, rapes and even murders are not unknown among the down-and-out residents of the Armory.
Summary:
Please note that all contributions to RPGnet may be edited, altered, or removed by other contributors. If you do not want your writing to be edited mercilessly, then do not submit it here.
You are also promising us that you wrote this yourself, or copied it from a public domain or similar free resource (see
RPGnet:Copyrights
for details).
Do not submit copyrighted work without permission!
Cancel
Editing help
(opens in new window)
Navigation menu
Personal tools
Not logged in
Talk
Contributions
Create account
Log in
Namespaces
Page
Discussion
English
Views
Read
Edit
View history
More
Search
Navigation
RPGnet
Main Page
Major Projects
Categories
Recent changes
Random page
Help
Tools
What links here
Related changes
Special pages
Page information