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Old Posted Dec 13, 2005, 7:11 AM
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SALT LAKE CITY | Development Thread

Ok, I've neglected this thread, but there really hasn't been much news to report. Now it appears Salt Lake is about to see some exciting growth downtown, so I thought I'd retool this thread.

Oh and there is no map (I know, I know!)

Possible new tallest

30+ stories
Unknown height (over 420 feet)
Groundbreaking unknown



Hamilton Partners Tower

21 stores
316 feet
Groundbreaking finally set for August





Unnamed Residential Tower

30-31 stories
Unknown height
Groundbreaking set for next year




City Creek Condominiums

20 stories
Unknown height
Groundbreaking set for possibly next year



Global Exchange Place

23 stories
300+ feet
Groundbreaking unknown



Vantage Tower

12 stories
100 or so feet
Groundbreaking either fall of '07 or early '08



Federal Courthouse

10 stories
100 or so feet
Groundbreaking unclear, design may change



Radi8 Condos

6 stories
Groundbreaking has begun, or will begin shortly



Metro Condominiums

7 stories
Currently under construction



Broadway Park Lofts

7 stories
Groundbreaking expected to start next year







Metro Park West

Groundbreaking could come next year




Last edited by Comrade; Aug 23, 2007 at 3:20 AM.
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  #2  
Old Posted Dec 13, 2005, 7:17 AM
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Yeah but that Wasatch Block thingy fell through, so who cares about the rest of this stuff?
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Old Posted Jul 22, 2006, 7:10 AM
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Interesting.
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Old Posted Mar 25, 2007, 3:39 AM
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What a old thread. Salt Lake has a lot more going for it now. This needs to be updated.
I will have to get to work on this and update it.
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1. "Wells Fargo Building" 24-stories 422 FT 1998
2. "LDS Church Office Building" 28-stories 420 FT 1973
3. "111 South Main" 24-stories 387 FT 2016
4. "99 West" 30-stories 375 FT 2011
5. "Key Bank Tower" 27-stories 351 FT 1976
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Old Posted Mar 26, 2007, 3:54 AM
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Here's a short update of projects in salt lake city.


Let's add some highrises to the list...


City Creek Condo Tower 1.....26 stories






City Creek Condo Tower 2.....32 stories





City Creek Condo Tower 3.....10-12 stories




World Trade Center Utah.......25-28 stories





222 South Main Tower....21 stories





Cowboy Partners Tower....30+ stories





Frank Moss Courthouse Expansion Tower...10 stoires




Remodel of the Walker Tower....18 stories
Upgrading this office building into class A offices space.
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1. "Wells Fargo Building" 24-stories 422 FT 1998
2. "LDS Church Office Building" 28-stories 420 FT 1973
3. "111 South Main" 24-stories 387 FT 2016
4. "99 West" 30-stories 375 FT 2011
5. "Key Bank Tower" 27-stories 351 FT 1976
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  #6  
Old Posted Mar 30, 2007, 2:39 AM
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The City Creek Center project in downtown salt lake city is underway. The Mall is coming down to make way for highrise Condo Towers, Outdoor retails and office space.

Demo of the Mall.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MMs7S6EF04o
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1. "Wells Fargo Building" 24-stories 422 FT 1998
2. "LDS Church Office Building" 28-stories 420 FT 1973
3. "111 South Main" 24-stories 387 FT 2016
4. "99 West" 30-stories 375 FT 2011
5. "Key Bank Tower" 27-stories 351 FT 1976
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Old Posted Apr 11, 2007, 1:27 AM
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Thumbs up You know your Sh**

You've got everything nice and concice, but it will take until 2015 to complete this. The 30-story Cowboy Partners Bldg is a "maybe," the "Utah World Trade Center" is a "lets talk this thing up..." Let's hope Salt Lake gets everything that's being talked about.

It sucks about the 600-foot building, the Zion Social Hall(http://www.emporis.com/en/wm/bu/?id=...akecity-ut-usa), The Eagle Gate Plaza (original plans were 39 stories), The Twin 40-Story Towers (to be built by Kashogi), The American Towers (why didn't they just build ONE BIG 52-story Bldg?). And so on and so forth.

I do love SLC, I just liken it to the Rodney Dangerfield of cities - No Respect!
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Old Posted Aug 23, 2007, 3:20 AM
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Ok, I updated it. A lot has changed since the original one.
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  #9  
Old Posted Aug 23, 2007, 5:44 AM
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Where's the map?
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  #10  
Old Posted Aug 24, 2007, 12:31 AM
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As I said in the original post, there is no map. That was from the old project lists and I haven't made one for this updated version.

Anyway, here are construction pics of the HP site:



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  #11  
Old Posted Aug 29, 2007, 3:04 PM
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..................................

Central Metro - Upper West Project @ Jordan Valley Station - Phase I Completed


UPPER WEST is a modern, multifamily community being constructed in Jordan Valley Station, a 40-acre master-planned, transit-oriented development less than 20 minutes from downtown Salt Lake City in West Jordan, Utah.
Its ultra-sleek design offers luxury finishes coupled with extraordinary community amenities. The luxury resort-inspired Courtyard pool and spa are adjacent to relaxing indoor community areas. A covered deck on the rooftop
spans the corner of the top floor and is designed to offer year-round enjoyment. It features magnificent views of the Wasatch Mountains, intimate fire pit and gathering areas. This remarkable community allows residents to
stylishly live where their lives are.



Photo Gallery of Completed Project: https://www.upperwestliving.com/photogallery

Site on right, pre-construction. On left, recently completed 'Rooftops' apartments project.

https://bvdincorp.com/wp-content/upl...Station-10.jpg


https://bvdincorp.com/wp-content/upl...-Station-1.jpg


https://bvdincorp.com/wp-content/upl...-Station-5.jpg








Photo Gallery of Completed Project: https://www.upperwestliving.com/photogallery


.

Last edited by delts145; Apr 23, 2024 at 1:22 PM.
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  #12  
Old Posted Nov 6, 2007, 5:38 AM
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Somethin goin on

It's good to see that there's stuff going on in Salt Lake, as far as the skyline growth goes. But I think that much taller buildings need to be built. Buildings taller than 450 ft. Salt Lake isn't all that impressive compared to a lot of well-known cities in the country. And I think that if Salt Lake wants to become the "heart of the Intermountain Empire," we'll need to start impressing people.

We need a mix of quality AND quantity.
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  #13  
Old Posted Nov 19, 2007, 5:03 AM
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A list of new tower possibilities.
List of towers in Salt Lake City, Lehi, Pleasant Grove and Provo that we could see within the next 10 years or less.


1. Mystery Glass Tower 35-40 stories
2. Frank Ghery Lehi Hotel Tower 45-stories at 450 FT.
3. Wasatch Partner Tower 33-stories
4. Cowboy Partner Tower 1 or Social Hall Tower 40-stories at over 375 FT.
5 World Trade Center Utah South Tower 25-30 stories
6. Viper's 40-story Condominium Tower The tower Viperlord's uncle was talking about. 40-stories
7. City Creek Center Condominium Tower 1 32-stories
8. Market Station Tower 27-stories
9. 222 South Main 21-stories
10. 22-story Condominium Tower ( Note this might be the same as Number 11. )
11. Lehi Condominium Tower 1 around 20-25 stoires
12. Lehi Condominium Tower 2 around 20-25 stories
13. City Creek Center Condominium Tower 2 19-stories
14. World Trade Center Tower North around 10-15 stories
15. Cowboy Partners Tower 2 17-stories or shorter
16. Embassy Hotel in Pleasant Grove 14-stories
17. City Creek Center Condominium Tower 4 14-stories
18. RDA State Property Towers 180 FT around 13-stories?
19. Salt Lake City Federal Courthouse Tower 10-stories
20. Provo's Zions Bank Financial Center 10-stories
21. City Creek Center Condominium Tower 6 10-stories
22. City Creek Center Condominium Tower 7 10-stories
23. City Creek Condominium Towers on Main 8-stories
24. Sugarhouse Mix-use Towers 6-7 stories


I know there's more projects but I ran out of room.
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1. "Wells Fargo Building" 24-stories 422 FT 1998
2. "LDS Church Office Building" 28-stories 420 FT 1973
3. "111 South Main" 24-stories 387 FT 2016
4. "99 West" 30-stories 375 FT 2011
5. "Key Bank Tower" 27-stories 351 FT 1976
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  #14  
Old Posted Dec 5, 2007, 3:22 PM
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................................

[IMG]
Updates East Bench - Misc. - University of Utah


Health Sciences garage, roadway and connector



Construction of a new 1,400-car parking garage and the road realignment on North Medical Drive is underway. The garage, located between the IJ & Jeanné Wagner Jewish Community Center and the Kathryn F. Kirk Center for Comprehensive Cancer Care and Women’s Cancers, will feature a lowered roadway entrance and a pedestrian connector to University Hospital so people on foot can avoid the traffic on North Medical Drive. The road realignment will raise North Medical Drive, allowing for better access into the North Medical Garage and the new parking garage. Additionally, two new roundabouts will be added at the entrance to University Hospital and the entrance to the new parking garage to improve traffic flow.

June 18, 2023




Photos By Paniolo Man

.[/IMG]

Last edited by delts145; Mar 19, 2024 at 12:40 AM.
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  #15  
Old Posted Dec 7, 2007, 4:55 PM
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......................................











Last edited by delts145; Yesterday at 1:44 PM.
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Old Posted Dec 19, 2007, 3:55 PM
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......................

Last edited by delts145; Apr 14, 2024 at 3:20 PM.
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  #17  
Old Posted Dec 20, 2007, 8:38 PM
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Hopefully the natural scenery won't be completely obliderated by "urban" development.
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Old Posted Dec 22, 2007, 2:51 PM
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....................

The high-traffic corner near Sugar House Park that drew community attention last year over nixed plans for a Kum & Go gas station remains in play for development.

A Malad City, Idaho, company applied in November on behalf of the property’s owner to demolish the former Sizzler restaurant that has stood empty for years on the northwest corner of the park at 2111 S. 1300 East.

Records show the permit is nearing approval. Fencing has gone up around the 0.82-acre property and rigs are poised to help raze the iconic eatery and haul its guts off to the landfill. The empty building has seen incidents of trespassing, according to a real estate agent representing the owner, a family company in Salt Lake City called Romney Farr Properties.


The choice spot by the park just off Interstate 80 is considered one of the more commercially desirable locations in and around Sugar House’s rapidly growing central business district.

The site got re-marketed to other potential developers over the summer after the city planning commission vetoed plans in April for a Kum & Go convenience store and gas station there, citing environmental and traffic concerns. Few recent developments in what’s often dubbed Salt Lake City’s second downtown have drawn that much public opposition, with hundreds of residents weighing in.

The Iowa-based Kum & Go chain has since been bought by the parent company of Maverik, the Salt Lake City-based convenience store chain, but Kum & Go is still obligated to a 20-year lease it signed on the property adjacent to the popular park, according to broker Kip Paul of Cushman & Wakefield.

Maverik is said to have a new developer interested in building a hotel on the property, according to Paul. Attempts to reach officials with FJ Management, Maverik’s parent company, were not immediately successful.

The notion of returning the property to some kind of hospitality use has come up before. Past efforts, though, have hit challenges over a lack of available parking space, getting additional building height approved under the property’s existing zoning and the thorny prospect of obtaining a state-authorized liquor license in proximity to park grounds.

The planning commission’s 9-1 vote to reject Kum & Go’s application for a conditional use permit there also cited potential impacts on the park, air quality and secondary water supplies in nearby Parleys Creek.

Since then, city planners have also drafted a new set of minimum distances that newly built gas stations can be from rivers, streams and other bodies of water, as well as parks and open spaces.

The Sugar House Community Council, meanwhile, has seen several ideas for the property since the gas station was turned down, including the prospect of new apartments, but those options are severely limited, according one key member.

“You can’t build a luxury apartment building if you don’t have parking,” said Judi Short, chair of the council’s land use and zoning committee. Going underground for parking, she noted, is precluded by a nearby earthen dam.

A proposal to preserve the space through a land swap involving property closer to Highland High School fell through, Short said. The city has also sought to purchase the property, without success.

For now, the site’s future after the Sizzler goes remains a question mark.

.

Last edited by delts145; Mar 30, 2024 at 11:48 AM.
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Old Posted Jan 6, 2008, 6:36 PM
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...................................

No doubt the seismic upgrade and rejuvenation of Salt Lake City's iconic Temple Square Campus is huge by any standard. Tradesmen in the know continue to try and guess as to the cost of such a mammoth project. While no exact dollar amount has been officially released to the general public all agree the sum total is in the multiple billions.

Recently, one of Salt Lake's two preeminent newspapers, 'The Salt Lake Tribune' delved into what comes after this latest round of Temple Square redevelopment. Here are excerpts from that article which confirmed many common rumors circulated widely throughout the religious and secular community for many years now. Keep in mind that many of the redevelopment ideas will undergo several reiterations. However, many of the forward-thinking proposals that were presented were a solid foundation upon which Salt Lake City's northern downtown sector will likely undergo a continued major renaissance over the upcoming decade leading up to the 2034 Olympics.

Current Temple Square setup. Note in upcoming plans how the structures fronting the Historic Temple at the north and south will be demolished and replaced in different positions in their relationship to the Temple itself. The more modern structures that previously fronted the Temple on both north and south sides will be removed and new structures with a more historic vibe will be constructed and mover further toward the east and west ends of the Temple. This will open up from the main throughfares the architectural beauty of the historic structures approach. Landscaping and water features will also be redeveloped, again affording the historic Temple improved outward embracing site lines.

Note, a significant part of the redevelopment is subterranean structures and seismic upgrades.

In this aerial below notice the mostly empty 20 acres of parking immediately to the west of the Temple Campus. That is the area that will see most of the major upcoming redevelopment spoken of by the Tribune article as soon as the current focus is completed. Even though loathed in recent years by the community itself those parking lots serve a valuable overflow purpose for the multitude of special events involving the Convention Center, the NBA arena, millions of annual tourist and pilgrim visits, and the L.D.S. Church's myriad of special events. However, if Salt Lake's past and recent history is any indication, the valuable parking space will move underground two or more levels


Rendering of sightline improvement views from the street perspective to the north. Compare renderings below to pre-redevelopment blocked street views of the pre-construction photo of Temple Square above.

Rendering of sightline improvement views from the street perspective to the south. Street views of the prominent historic Temple itself were formerly blocked by a solid wall and modern-day structural additions.












.

Last edited by delts145; May 7, 2024 at 3:19 PM.
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Old Posted Jan 6, 2008, 6:53 PM
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..............................................Proceed to most recent pages for updates

Eastern Metro - Grand Hyatt Announces Brand Expansion Into The Park City Ski Area.




Under construction and Slated for completion in late 2024.
The previous development working title of 'Morele Hotel' will now carry the brand of 'Grand Hyatt Deer Valley'.


Hyatt has announced the planned expansion of its Grand Hyatt brand in the vibrant resort market of Park City, Utah. Grand Hyatt Deer Valley Village will mark the debut of the Grand Hyatt brand in Utah and will be located at the Deer Valley Resort. Uniquely designed as a captivating destination within a destination, the property will open as the first luxury hotel within Deer Valley Resort’s new forthcoming expansion at Deer Valley East Village.

Exterior view of Grand Hyatt Deer Valley as seen from the road in front

Image credit: Hyatt Hotels

Hyatt International Press Release: The hotel will offer 387 expansive guestrooms, inclusive of 40 suites, 55 private residences, and 3600 square meters of indoor event space, including a 1000 square meter grand ballroom. Guests will be able to enjoy world-class dining options, including an après ski bar and grill, a signature bar and restaurant, and a coffee bistro. The property will feature an outdoor event terrace with panoramic mountain views, a heated year-round pool, and a whirlpool and fitness center.

“Strategically positioned to meet increasing demand in the Park City resort market, Grand Hyatt Deer Valley is a testament to the deliberate expansion of Hyatt’s luxury brands in sought-after destinations,” said Kimo Bertram, Vice President of Development, Americas. “The Grand Hyatt brand celebrates the iconic in small details and magnificent moments for guests, World of Hyatt members, and customers. Grand Hyatt Deer Valley will deliver on this brand promise by providing a luxurious retreat for group and leisure travelers alike after a day of exploration and taking advantage of all the resort has to offer.”

The hotel’s convenient location within the Deer Valley Resort will provide easy access to the slopes and the resort’s many winter and summer attractions, including various restaurants, retailers, a children’s center, and one of the largest ski beaches in the world – the ideal gathering spot to lounge, soak up the sun and enjoy breathtaking mountain views. The hotel will be part of the planned expansion of Deer Valley Resort that will more than double the resort’s skiable terrain to 5700 acres, expanding the Park City ski area itself into the largest lift serviced ski area in the North & South American Continent. The new Deer Valley Village expansion will feature 16 new ski lifts and a state-of-the-art 10-passenger gondola; such a network of chairlifts will offer efficient access to over 235 ski runs across 10 mountain peaks. Additionally, the hotel will be located a few short minutes' drive from Park City’s historic main street, as well as access to hiking, mountain biking, golf, horseback riding, and various watersports during the summer months.

Expected to open in time for the 2024/2025 ski season, Grand Hyatt Deer Valley will mark another milestone in Hyatt’s intentional growth strategy.





Eastern Metro, Park City - New Name Brands Created
Mayflower will become Deer Valley East Village & The under construction working titled Morele Hotel will be branded 'The Grand Hyatt'.



Central Metro, Sun approaching the magic hour over Salt Lake Metro's Mountainscape.
Fall slips into first snow dusting, raising winter sports enthusiast's anticipation of a new season.



October 26th - Fall transitioning to Winter Sports at one of the many lodges at the Deer Valley Ski Resort.


One of Deer Valley's many welcoming skier/visitor lodges




Summer 2023

Flurry of development activity continues at Deer Valley Resort's new East Village Sector

Construction Activity continues this past Summer at the now-branded Grand Hyatt Hotel site, one of the village's many planned developments
Photo By David Jackson for the Park Record - https://www.parkrecord.com/news/utah...-base-village/



As previously posted Deer Valley Resort announced that it will be amalgamating Extell’s Mayflower Mountain Resort to form one of the largest ski resorts in North America. Deer Valley's expansion now titled 'Deer Valley East Village' had been in negotiations about operating the Mayflower project for the last couple of years. The Deer Valley East Village sector is currently under construction and is adjacent to the existing Deer Valley Resort itself.

Super Developer Extell famed for its Manhattan developments, is behind the project and will continue to build hotels, a range of luxury ski-in-ski-out homes as well as a commercial downtown area that is envisioned to be similar to adjacent Park City’s Historic Main Street. The resort was initially planned to open in 2021/22, but Covid and the grand scope of combining the Mayflower area and Deer Valley under one umbrella have delayed the launch. Now with Deer Valley handling the ski terrain side of things, the new ski area is slated to open in the 2025/26 season. Once completed, the new ski area will add 16 chairlifts, 135 ski runs, and an additional 3700-plus acres of skiable area to the Deer Valley Resort. Like Deer Valley, the Mayflower side will be operated for skiers only. Note: Adj. Park City/Canyons Village allows snowboarding.


Looking West across The Jordanelle State Park toward the Deer Valley East Village Mountain Resort development



https://www.chooseparkcity.com/blog/...ts-march-2022/

The new Deer Valley Resort after the expansion into the Deer Valley East Village area. | Picture: Deer Valley Resort Company





Winter 2024

Construction Continues on the newly branded 'Grand Hyatt Hotel'


Deer Valley Resort on Monday attached a new name to the planned expansion off U.S. 40, effectively retiring a moniker that harkened back to the Park City area’s silver-mining heritage.

The name is Deer Valley East Village and it refers to the base village that will be developed there as well as the portal to skiing. It is a nod to the eastern locale of the Wasatch County land.

The land had been known as Mayflower for decades. The Mayflower moniker alluded to a historic mine. Park City was founded in the 19th century as a silver-mining camp and mining drove the economy until the middle of the 20th century. There are numerous architectural remnants and references along with places and streets nowadays named after locations that were important in its mining heydays.


The Deer Valley East Village name joins the widely used Silver Lake Village moniker for the mid-mountain development at the resort. The Snow Park base, meanwhile, is sometimes called Snow Park Village. A major development is planned at the Snow Park base, with some references to the project using the word “Village” as part of the name.

There have been efforts to rebrand places over the years in the Park City area with varying degrees of success. City Hall has largely removed the Osguthorpe name from the iconic white barn and open space along the S.R. 224 entryway, replacing it with the historic name of McPolin...

...Park City Mountain, meanwhile, has largely succeeded in recent years in dropping the word “Resort” from the end of the name, as well as moving away from the abbreviated “PCMR” that was widely used in referring to the resort, particularly locally, starting in the 1990s.

Deer Valley revealed the name of the expansion in the months after the announcement of an agreement that brought the terrain into the resort. The ground prior to the agreement was expected to be developed as a standalone resort next to Deer Valley. The standalone resort had previously been referred to as Mayflower Mountain Resort.

Deer Valley owner Alterra Mountain Company and Extell Development Company, the developer of the base that will be at Deer Valley East Village, negotiated a long-term operations agreement that folded the terrain into Deer Valley. The land will boost Deer Valley’s terrain by 3,700-plus acres and bring the total acreage at the resort to 5,726. The first lifts and trails at Deer Valley East Village are expected to open for the 2025-2026 ski season. There will also be skier services, retailers, and dining at Deer Valley East Village.

The development benefitted from the Military Installation Development Authority involved. The authority is a state economic development entity designed to advance projects with a military component. There will be a hotel developed within the project for the benefit of military members.




[COLOR="DarkRed"April 2, 2024[/COLOR]

Extell looks to Thanksgiving for soft opening of Deer Valley Grand Hyatt


David Jackson for the Park Record - Full Article @ https://www.parkrecord.com/news/exte...y-grand-hyatt/

The nearly 400-room luxury Grand Hyatt hotel overlooking the Utah Military Installation Development Authority’s project area next to the Jordanelle Reservoir will probably ready for guests this fall, according to Extell Development's Resort Development Vice President Kurt Krieg...

...“All the subcontractors have made great headway this winter on the Grand Hyatt Deer Valley,” he said. “You’ll really start to see it come to life, as substantial completion is slated for early September.”...

...Further preparations, Krieg said, have taken place in conjunction with MIDA staff members to keep the military up to speed “as that’s a major part of this project and moving forward at opening.”

Since the beginning of the hotel’s development, 100 of its nearly 400 rooms will be reserved with reduced rates for military members who otherwise would likely find it difficult to afford a vacation spot in an area with so many recreational opportunities.

On the less rate-reduced side of things, Krieg said Sotheby’s International Realty — the company that’s acted as the hotel’s broker — has contracted out 49 of the building’s 55 condos that “sit on top of the hotel itself.”

The primary focus, he added, remains opening in time for next ski season.


Extell Development says Deer Valley Grand Hyatt should see "substantial completion" in early September of this year. David Jackson/Park Record

Krieg also talked about how Extell is beginning to shift its focus to an additional 660 units of workforce housing.

“We are on track to provide a site plan to MIDA by July, which is part of the interlocal, and proceed forward on that,” he said.

He also referred to the board’s closed session immediately following the public portion of the meeting, which he said would be about Building D of the project area’s recently approved Pioche Hotel, which he said the development company “hopes is a public-private partnership to further workforce housing in the region.”


.

Last edited by delts145; May 13, 2024 at 11:38 AM.
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