Decades after serving as the functional capital of Antigua, St. John’s has fallen into a state of such severe disrepair that local observers argue it can no longer meet the basic standards expected of a national capital. What was once a thriving urban center has decayed into a maze of accessibility barriers, outdated infrastructure, and unaddressed maintenance failures that harm both long-term residents and visiting tourists alike.
For pedestrians, navigating downtown St. John’s has become a grueling, obstacle-filled experience rather than a routine task. Outside the limited, upgraded area of Heritage Quay, continuous, even sidewalks are almost impossible to find. Crumbling pavement, inconsistent step heights, and unmarked hazards force pedestrians to constantly weave and adjust their path to avoid injury. This is far more than an inconvenience: it creates a fundamentally exclusionary environment for people with mobility impairments.
The scope of this accessibility failure was laid bare in a recent firsthand observation: a visitor attempting to navigate the streets with a loved one in a wheelchair faced constant, insurmountable barriers. Onlookers described the scene as painful to watch, noting that any visitor experiencing these barriers would likely abandon their exploration of the city and return immediately to their cruise ship, cutting off potential revenue for local businesses. The incident makes clear that meaningful accessibility for disabled people is simply non-existent in St. John’s today.
Mobility issues are not the only pressing problem. Persistent, unpleasant odors permeate multiple neighborhoods throughout the city, traced back to open drainage systems and aging, overcapacity trash receptacles. What were once functional, practical infrastructure solutions for a smaller city have long been outdated by growing population and tourism volumes, leaving them to become public nuisance that requires urgent replacement.
The broader built environment of St. John’s tells the same story of neglect. Commercial and residential buildings show clear signs of structural deterioration, while many retail storefronts make little to no effort to create welcoming, appealing spaces for customers. Basic merchandising planning that draws in foot traffic is often an afterthought, if it is considered at all, further eroding the city’s ability to support local commerce.
Parking management adds another layer of frustration for anyone trying to visit or do business in the capital. Informal parking space claiming, enforced by traffic cones from business owners, local organizations, and individual operators including car wash services, has locked out the general public from most convenient spots. This unregulated system sends a clear message: visitor convenience is not a priority for stakeholders in the city. For potential customers considering a trip into the capital to shop or support local businesses, this barrier alone is often enough to discourage them from coming at all.
Even when municipal repairs are initiated, they often leave the city in worse shape for months. When the Antigua Public Utilities Authority completes road excavation work for utility upgrades, the excavated sections are regularly left unrepaired for extended periods of time, leaving roads partially or fully impassable. Community members argue these delays are entirely unreasonable and avoidable with proper project planning.
At its core, the crisis facing St. John’s boils down to a simple, unavoidable truth: no city can maintain itself without consistent investment, strategic planning, and regular reinvestment in infrastructure. Just as ongoing care is required to maintain any valuable asset, St. John’s has been starved of the consistent attention it needs to function, and the visible decline across the city makes that neglect impossible to ignore.
This critique is not an attack on St. John’s rich historic identity. Supporters of change emphasize that acknowledging the capital’s current collapse is not about dismissing the city’s past, but about being honest about its future. The current state of St. John’s is not sustainable, and continuing to pretend otherwise does a profound disservice to residents who rely on capital services, business owners who depend on visitor traffic, and tourists who come to the island expecting a functional, welcoming capital.
For proponents of dramatic change, the conclusion is unavoidable: St. John’s has deteriorated past the point of cost-effective rehabilitation. To give residents, businesses, and visitors the functional, comfortable urban environment they need, core commercial and government activity must be relocated to a new, properly planned urban center.









