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Plan of Evanston
will, exist without these. People won't go more than about so far to get their daily supplies, and what happens when this need is not recognized is simply the outcropping, here and there, to the speechless indignation of immediate neighbors, of little rows of buildings with store fronts.
No householder in any residence district has any security against having this happen to him, unless his district is adequately served by a business center. Therefore, it is of paramount importance in any city plan that natural centers of business activity should be organized-arranged in such a way as to give not only the highest efficiency through an area of high rents, but, where possible, a high attractiveness.
It is these three vital problems that are dealt with in the plan which is here offered. You will find the maps, drawings, and descriptions which follow worthy of your most earnest consideration.