Part of the visit included updating my memory banks and comparing the SLC-That-Was to the SLC-That-Is.
I suppose noticing changes is a fairly common thing when people return to their old towns after being away. I can imagine people comparing how San Francisco or Oakland has changed in the past 10-15 years. In fact, I remember my high school history teacher bemoaning the changes to his small town of Roswell, Ga. after its population exploded during the 1980s.
I kidded with my family that I was catching up with what's new so I could hold my own in a conversation. In reality, my family and friends have been quite generous in sharing information about what has changed over the years.
There were all these little details -- oh, they opened up a new highway to Ogden; they shut down a historic building with a prominent nightspot; they're still working on that replacement for the old downtown malls; the city has a soccer team and it has a new stadium; etc.
Amid the changes, I also tried to remember items that had gone missing in the past few years (and before that). During my trip last summer, I noticed that there was only one Union Pacific shield on the old UP depot (which has been integrated into a mall). The other shield had been on the opposite side facing the freeway -- the holes for the mounting brackets seem to still be there.Because I'm a huge dork who wants to recall as many of these little details as possible -- here is a not-inclusive list of some of the changes to landmarks I've noticed in the past eight years:
- Three shopping malls have been demolished. Two of them were standouts in my memories of downtown -- the Crossroads Mall and the ZCMI Center. The other one, Cottonwood, was OK at the then-outskirts of town, but had a nice comic book store.
- The Gateway Center opened (which appears to have prompted the other closures/re-envisionings of shopping).
- The Hansen Planetarium relocated from a great old house across from ZCMI Center to the Gateway (and is now the Clark Planetarium)
- The large pale blue map of the Earth at the airport's Terminal One is still there, but now a TSA security line runs over it (no more rushing to mark where Salt Lake is and where our family is going).
- Rancho Bowl was torn down (I suspected, but my uncle confirmed it when we were driving on North Temple).
- Another bowling alley off of Redwood Road was torn down.
- Japantown looks so small among the other downtown developments (I also learned it's called Japantown).
- The communities of Bountiful and Centerville have changed a lot as well. Old landmarks are torn down (like Five Points) or completely renovated (like Slim Olsen's). New shopping centers too.
- Of course, the drinking laws have changed somewhat over the years.
Here are some things that changed before 2000 (when I still visited often):
- Derks Field was rebuilt into Franklin Quest/Franklin Covey/Spring Mobile Ballpark.
- The miniature golf course at Ritz Bowl was removed.
- The swimming pool building where my mom took me for water lessons in 1982 closed and apparently cleared to make way for the LDS Conference Center.
- The light-rail system, TRAX, opened (although I didn't use it until 2008).
- Man, I didn't realize how close the Delta Center was to the old Buddhist temple. I also didn't realize that the Salt Palace was also across the street.
- The skating rink/ice company in Sugar House burned down.
- Wasn't there an outdoor skating rink outside the KSL broadcasting center? I know it's now at Gallivan Center.
There are past and current realities, but I guess they will be different from the SLC of my mind.
Photo: I don't have a lot of digital photos of Salt Lake City, so this July 2008 photo of me in front of a giant poster of American Idol contestant David Archuleta at Murray High School in Murray, Utah will have to suffice.

Leave a comment