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  #6061  
Old Posted May 13, 2020, 11:21 AM
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Salt Lake City & MSA/CSA Rundown

Creating Quality Of Life, Urban Public Spaces - La Caille Gardens



La Caille Gardens, Salt Lake City's Central Metro - East Mountain Bench - https://digitalmarketing.blob.core.windows.net



Red Butte Gardens and Arboretum, City Proper, East Mountain Bench - https://a.travel-assets.com/findyour...Arboreteum.jpg



Red Butte Gardens and Arboretum, City Proper, East Mountain Bench - https://a.travel-assets.com/findyour...Arboreteum.jpg



Ashton Gardens at Thanksgiving Point - https://assets.simpleviewinc.com/sim...375063678f.jpg


Ashton Gardens at Thanksgiving Point - https://i.pinimg.com/originals/fa/42...af83fe0fe2.jpg




Downtown Construction - 95 S. State on the left & Liberty Sky to the right


.........

Quote:
Originally Posted by Atlas View Post
Great shot of 95 State and Liberty Sky from u/chaunceton on the subreddit:
https://i.redd.it/8frevmuolex41.jpg



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Last edited by delts145; Jun 19, 2020 at 12:01 PM.
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  #6062  
Old Posted May 14, 2020, 1:59 PM
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Atlas, Please send me an elementary tutorial recipe (steps 1,2,3) on how you managed to size that pic so that it fits comfortably within the forum frame. I noticed that those IMGUR images are always waaaay oversized for just cutting and pasting.

Last edited by delts145; May 14, 2020 at 2:31 PM.
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  #6063  
Old Posted May 14, 2020, 2:43 PM
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Ritzy Rentals: America’s 10 Priciest Neighborhoods for Apartment Dwellers

Loads of software engineers are moving from high-priced tech hubs like Silicon Valley and Seattle to work in smaller, more affordable Salt Lake City. And the lower prices means they can splurge on a swanky pad in the quieter, primarily residential, old-money neighborhood of Capital Hill.

“A lot of younger professionals are moving here and making decent money, but they are renting because they don’t know yet if they’ll be here long-term,” says Trey Leonard, a global real estate adviser at Engel & Volkers Park City.

That’s created a boom for upscale neighborhoods near the city center like Capital Hill and Greater Avenues. This area is squeezed between downtown and the Wasatch Mountains north of town. There are some large two-bedrooms units in recently built luxury condo buildings with pools and rooftop lounges that rent for around $3,500.

“Many of these homes have simply amazing views of the city skyline and the mountains,” Leonard says.

Allison Underhill contributed to this report.

The post Ritzy Rentals: America’s 10 Priciest Neighborhoods for Apartment Dwellers appeared first on Real Estate News & Insights | realtor.com®.

Written by Lance Lambert on April 8, 2019. Posted in Aspen CO, data journalism, Los Angeles CA, Miami Beach FL, Montauk NY, Naples FL, New York NY, Salt Lake City UT, San Francisco CA, Scottsdale AZ, Trends, Washington DC


For approximately 100 almost seamless miles north to south the eastern neighborhoods of Salt Lake City's greater CSA are built on the sides of the Wasatch Mountain benches. This Topographical feature allows for developers to get very creative when it comes to view lots for both single-family residential and multi-story apartment/condo dwellings. Pictured in the foreground, a portion of The Federal Heights District. Further background, The Olympus Cove District.


Capitol Hill/Federal Heights District - Among one of the previously aforementioned 10 priciest rental neighborhoods in the U.S.A.

https://cityhomecollective.blob.core...d-1600x900.jpg




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Last edited by delts145; May 18, 2020 at 12:33 PM.
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  #6064  
Old Posted May 15, 2020, 11:02 AM
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Downtown Update - The Exchange


Covering more than 2 acres of prime downtown real estate... The Exchange is a joint venture between Giv Development, a local development firm, and Domain Properties, a New York based real estate firm. Both organizations focus on building and enhancing the surrounding community, in addition to the physical development. It was designed by KTGY Architecture + Planning. As part of the City's Civic Campus, this mixed-use development will sit just east of the Salt Lake City Public Library. The Exchange is planned to include 216 market-rate and 196 affordable residential units, which will add much needed density to the area. The number of units will total 412 units. Current plans have more than 20,000 square feet of street-front retail space. This ground floor space will be anchored by an international food hall and marketplace in partnership with the International Rescue Committee’s Spice Kitchen business incubator program. Other notable features of the development will include “The Shop at Salt Lake City”, Domain’s innovative co-working and business accelerator platform. The 30,000-square foot space will offer amenities and programming aimed at stimulating entrepreneurship, small business development, and community engagement. The proposal highlights the use of art and green space and commitment to energy efficiency and will be a great addition to the Civic Campus.

With commission approval both phases of The Exchange move forward

Rendering of the north face of the five-story building in the Exchange development as designed by KTGY Architecture + Planning. Image courtesy Salt Lake City public documents.


Rendering of the Northwest Corner of The Exchange. Image courtesy of BuildingSaltLake.com


Rendering of the northeast corner of The Exchange. Image courtesy Salt Lake City.


Rendering of the southwest corner of The Exchange and People’s Way a city-owned private street. Image courtesy Salt Lake City.




Quote:
Originally Posted by scottharding View Post

Took my dog for a walk yesterday, and snapped a few photos of The Exchange:







Pics By ScottHarding



April 15th


The Exchange project, a 412-unit mixed-income, mixed-use project by Giv Development is really taking shape on 400 South and 300 East. Photo by Luke Garrott.


The Exchange looking west, photo by Luke Garrott.


April 30th Update



Pic By Atlas

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Last edited by delts145; Jun 19, 2020 at 4:33 PM.
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  #6065  
Old Posted May 15, 2020, 11:14 AM
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Downtown Update - Liberty Sky

“We’re excited to see residential on State Street, which is a fairly new addition to the ecosystem,” said Christian Harrison, the Downtown Community Council chairman.
“It is a good sign that State Street is turning a corner. We do hope it spurs more development farther south along State Street.”

“Offices are daytime [operations] and don’t create vibrancy or activity in the evenings. In downtown, they create dead zones,” Planning Director Norris added. “Apartments put eyes on
public spaces basically all day long. Those residents tend to go out at night and walk around the neighborhood. It enlivens downtown.”



(Artist's rendition courtesy of Cowboy Properties) Cowboy Properties and Boyer Co. are looking to build a 24-story apartment building on the east side of State Street between
the Federal Building on 100 South and the Maverik headquarters building on 200 South. The $90 million project is being praised for its prospects of bringing more residents to downtown Salt Lake City.

The Salt Lake Tribune - By Mike Gorrell - Convinced that downtown living is increasingly desirable, real-estate developers Cowboy Properties and Boyer Co. are building a 24-story apartment building on State Street between 100 and 200 South...

...The $90 million high-rise would include roughly 300 apartment units and a rooftop swimming pool. A five-story parking terrace would be built on its east side, hidden from street views by surrounding buildings.

Although rent levels would vary, Cowboy Properties President and CEO Dan Lofgren said most would cost near the “top of the market in today’s market. We’ll have studios to very large two bedrooms, units that
go for under $1,000 [a month] while some of the largest will be several thousand.”...

...“As the downtown residential market has evolved, and as we massaged what we thought was the best option, this residential tower emerged,” Lofgren said. “Downtown Salt Lake City has become an amenity-rich environment.
It’s become a great neighborhood. The pieces that were missing 10 years ago — not that it was bad then — are now filled in.“

First and foremost: the Harmons City Creek market at 135 E. 100 South. “The grocery store makes it a neighborhood,” Lofgren said. “For many household configurations, the option of living downtown has become the
preferred option. These are households hoping to live without a car, households looking for the convenience of being close to work, households energized by all the activities downtown,
households attracted to this notion of a high-rise and the views and lifestyle it offers.”

At the projected rent levels, he sees these apartments appealing to people working at high-tech and financial-services companies, law firms and banks. Retirees also are likely renters, Lofgren added,
“drawn especially by the arts downtown — the symphony, the ballet, Eccles Theater. That’s a pretty full basket of offerings.”...

...Planning Director Norris said the shift from office tower to residential high-rise is “certainly consistent with our master plan policies, which try to increase the number of people living downtown.”



April 30th

Pic by Atlas

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Last edited by delts145; Jun 19, 2020 at 12:03 PM.
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  #6066  
Old Posted May 15, 2020, 10:43 PM
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Downtown Update - The Olive 120

Taylor Anderson Reports, Full Article @ https://www.buildingsaltlake.com/dow...-in-the-depot/ Downtown’s housing boom continues, as C.W. Urban recently began construction on its next housing project: a six-story, 120-unit for-sale condo building on Broadway, just north of Pioneer Park.

C.W. Urban recently broke ground on the building, named The Olive in the Centerville-based company’s now-familiar naming mechanism. The company continues rapidly building mid-density, multi-family buildings across Salt Lake City.

The Olive will complete the corridor of mixed-use buildings moving toward the historic Rio Grande Depot, an area that is likely to see a development boom in the coming years. The Olive will add more ground-floor retail to the northwest corner of Pioneer Park.

Construction on The Olive has already replaced the office space that once housed the digital agency Underbelly, which moved north of Pioneer Park. The D-3, Downtown warehouse zoning calls for either the adaptive reuse or replacement of warehouse space with mixed-use, multi-family spaces.

“Some notable features about the building are a podium level outdoor garden area, rooftop urban lounge, ground floor commercial, high-end designer finishes and a City Lyft Parking Solutions system,” said Abbie Wardle, the company’s senior marketing coordinator.

C.W. Urban is underway on 400 townhomes and podium-stye condos and apartments in neighborhoods across the region.

The Olive will be the company’s first for-sale project Downtown, with studios through penthouse



Quote:
Originally Posted by Blah_Amazing View Post

So, I'm guessing it is this building that will be replaced? Project looks good and I bet the views of the park from the top floor will be amazing. Really excited about this, especially because that area has really been progressing lately.

https://i.imgur.com/rpsxqOX.jpg


April 26th

Excavation work proceeds on The Olive 120 condos at 400 S and 400 W just north of Pioneer Park.

Photo By StayingInformed


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Last edited by delts145; Jul 14, 2020 at 12:39 AM.
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  #6067  
Old Posted May 16, 2020, 10:57 AM
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A few of the infill updates around town - April 26th - Photos By StayingInformed


Phase 2 of apartments at 500 W and 400 N now complete.


'The Row' Townhouse project under construction at 450 W 500 N.


The former Biomat Building on 600 W North Temple being repurposed into condos/apartments. I am glad this building is being reused.
It was the old Horsley Grocery store and housed an early library branch.



The new boys and girls club.

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Last edited by delts145; May 16, 2020 at 11:36 AM.
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  #6068  
Old Posted May 16, 2020, 11:26 AM
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Downtown - Back Alley/Parking Garage Access Regent Street now a downtown destination

SALT LAKE CITY — A few short years ago, Regent Street in downtown Salt Lake City was little more than an access road for business deliveries and the entrance to a multi-level parking garage for a few nearby companies.

Today, the once off-the-beaten-path thoroughfare is now one of the primary connectors between Gallivan Center to the south and City Creek Center on the north, placing it right in the middle of downtown's main entertainment district.

When the much-heralded George S. and Dolores Doré Eccles Theater opened in the spring of last year, civic leaders hoped it would be the next jewel in the crown of the downtown business and entertainment hub — complementing City Creek Center, the 111 Main and 222 Main office towers, along with the new Broadway-style theater venue.

Thus far, the Eccles Theater has not disappointed, exceeding expectations and helping to generate residual prosperity for some its nearby roadways, such as Regent Street...



A pedestrian walks down Regent Street in Salt Lake City on Thursday, April 19, 2018. Kristin Murphy, Deseret News

... said Paul Kuhn, executive chef and co-owner of Last Course Dessert Studio, 115 Regent Street.

"It's a great location as far as foot traffic," he said. "We're already seeing great results from folks going to the shows at the Eccles Theater and people coming in at lunch. "We're confident with what we have and we know the area," Kuhn explained.

He and his partner are familiar with the local restaurant and catering market, so they considered this foray to be one of great potential opportunity.

"I liked what (the city) did with (downtown). It was a good look," he said. "They're just trying to make it a nice area. We're very pleased with the look and approach they're taking and what we see in the future."

Kuhn said Regent Street has space to grow and is slated to add more new dining options in the coming months. It could become one of the top family gathering spots in downtown, he said...

...The Regent Street reconstruction project was born of many public meetings discussing what would soon become the spectacular new Eccles Theater, said Danny Walz, chief operating officer of the Redevelopment Agency of Salt Lake City....Noting the project is nearing the completion stage, Walz said the last piece of the revitalization effort is currently in the works. "The commission of a public art installation for Regent Street is the final element of the reconstruction, and is already underway,” he said. The city is currently in the final stages of its artist selection process for the public art piece...



Jordan Gaddis and Mike Phillips eat lunch at Pretty Bird on Regent Street in Salt Lake City on Thursday, April 19, 2018. Kristin Murphy, Deseret News

The driving force behind this newly completed portion of Regent St. is the recently completed Eccles Theater. Pictured below, Main St. front of Theater. Regent St. rehab runs directly parallel to the rear of the Eccles Theater.

https://www.skouttravel.com/wp-conte...heater-2-2.jpg

http://www.111mainslc.com/wp-content...bbyWindows.jpg

http://www.111mainslc.com/wp-content...ionOfSpace.jpg

https://farm4.static.flickr.com/3824...b3d9c1c9_b.jpg

https://i.ytimg.com/vi/xU2fZQZKuw8/maxresdefault.jpg


The northern anchor of Regent St. is it's newly resurrected portion at the City Creek Center. Formerly, this portion of Regent St. pictured below was non existent, buried by the confines of an indoor 70's style mall.

https://cdn.crtkl.com/wp-content/upl...ty-creek-6.jpg


Southern Anchor to Regent St. is the newly remodeled/enhanced Gallivan Plaza

http://mediad.publicbroadcasting.net/

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  #6069  
Old Posted May 16, 2020, 12:47 PM
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Sugar House District Update - Dixon Place

Original Copy By Isaac Riddle @ BuildingSaltLake.com Sugar House’s building boom looks like it will hold steady over the next few years, including in the immediate area surrounding the
Fairmont S-Line Station. Developers, Lowe Property Group, are building Dixon Place, a six-story, 59-unit residential mixed-use development at the southwest corner of Elm Avenue and McClelland Street.

The project will replace a 0.5-acre surface parking lot and will have a mix of one and two bedroom apartments that will range in size from 562 square feet to 1,263 square feet. The development will have five floors of residential above a
two story-parking podium with 61 parking stalls. Each unit will have a balcony and floors two through six will be setback at the podium level which will allow for roof decks fronting Elm Avenue and McClelland Street atop the podium...The
project will be less than a half-block away from the Fairmont S-Line Station and Fairmont Park and will be on of many projects under construction in the streetcar station’s immediate vicinity...





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Last edited by delts145; Jun 22, 2020 at 9:55 PM.
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  #6070  
Old Posted May 16, 2020, 1:21 PM
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Sugar House District Update - The Sugarmont


Original Copy By Isaac Riddle @ BuildingSaltLake.com - The Sugarmont Apartments residential project to be completed in the Sugar House Business District will be one of the largest residential projects in the Sugar House District. Boulder Ventures’ eight-story 352-unit project is fully framed out and exterior work has commenced. The project replaced the former Granite Furniture warehouses. The first phase of this project, 2100 Sugarhouse, saw the conversion of the former Granite Furniture showroom into smaller retail spaces.

This large residential project will contain a mix of 34 studio apartments, 206 one-bedrooms, 93 two-bedrooms and 19 three-bedroom townhome units. The project’s two buildings sit between Elm Avenue and Sugarmont Drive along McClelland Street. The project wraps around a parcel on the southwest corner of Elm Avenue and Highland Drive.





April 30th

Photo By Atlas

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Last edited by delts145; Jun 22, 2020 at 12:24 PM.
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  #6071  
Old Posted May 16, 2020, 1:40 PM
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FORBES - Pandemic Recovery


Ranked: The 10 US Cities Best Positioned To Recover From Coronavirus - https://www.forbes.com/sites/laurabe.../#49895cd7de92


Salt Lake City's Central and Southern CSA Metro Among Most Prepared For Economic Recovery


By Ladd Egan for KSL TV - SALT LAKE CITY — A new ranking from Forbes put the Provo and Salt Lake City metropolitan areas among the best-positioned regions in the country to recover from the pandemic.

The Forbes article said that Moody’s Analytics came up with the list using population density, workforce quality and educational attainment. The authors listed the top 10 and bottom 10 cities alphabetically — not in a ranked order.



Salt Lake City/Provo, Utah

Alphabetical Order: Boise, Idaho

Denver, Colorado

Durham, North Carolina

Madison, Wisconsin

Raleigh, North Carolina

San Jose, California

Tucson, Arizona

Washington, D.C.


Zions Bank senior economist Robert Spendlove said the Wasatch Front areas were in such a good place because of a diversified economy and all the right building blocks that businesses need.

“That’s kind of our secret sauce that we’ve got a really good workforce,” Spendlove said. “We’ve got great employers and we’ve got good conditions for success.”

Spendlove cautioned it is important not to sugarcoat the severity of the pandemic’s economic damage.

“In some sectors, it will be years before they fully recovery,” he said. “If you think about travel and tourism, if you think about entertainment or retail trade or bars and restaurants, it’s going to be a while and it’s going to be difficult.”

Spendlove said he is encouraged by Utah’s response to the pandemic and that the state has the fundamentals in place that are strong enough to weather the storm.

The article said cities that were growing quickly before the pandemic will continue their ascent as they exit the economic shutdown caused by the coronavirus pandemic.

“Denver and Salt Lake City are well-positioned to retake their crown as two of the fastest-rising metro areas in the U.S.,” Moody’s senior regional economist Adam Kamins told Forbes...






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Last edited by delts145; May 16, 2020 at 2:20 PM.
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  #6072  
Old Posted May 16, 2020, 5:28 PM
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Great stuff as usual.
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  #6073  
Old Posted May 17, 2020, 1:29 PM
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Thanks Darius, especially on behalf of the many photographers in the SLC area who are also urban development enthusiasts. Always great to have you checking in.
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  #6074  
Old Posted May 18, 2020, 10:52 AM
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Sugar House District Update - Sugar Alley


Sugar Alley is a 186-Unit mixed-use development located in Salt Lake City’s prestigious Sugarhouse District. Class A amenities will be accompanied with 17,332 square feet of ground-floor retail.


Rendering of the Eastern side of Sugar Alley as seen from Highland Drive. If you look in the upper right corner, you can see their other proposed project, Dixon Place, though in real life it wouldn't be visible from this angle, as the under-construction Sugarmont Apartments would block that view.


Rendering of the Eastern side of Sugar Alley as seen from Highland Drive.


Rendering of the Eastern side of Sugar Alley as seen from Highland Drive and the corner of the soon to be continued Wilmington Ave (will separate Sugarmont Apartments and Sugar Alley). I like that they included the Sugarmont Apartments in the background of this image.


Rendering of the Sugar Alley 'Residences at Sugar Alley's entry/ lobby interior for the apartments.


Rendering of the Sugar Alley 'Residences at Sugar Alley' entry/ lobby for the apartments. Eastside as seen from Highland Drive.


Rendering of the Sugar Alley pedestrian walkway and street cafes/ restaurants separating Sugar Alley and 'The Vue at Sugar House Crossing.' Northeast corner of Sugar Alley as seen from Highland Drive.


Rendering of the Sugar Alley pedestrian walkway and street cafes/ restaurants separating Sugar Alley and 'The Vue at Sugar House Crossing.' Northwest corner of Sugar Alley.


Currently a staging area for Sugarmont and The Dixon Place. Upcoming Sugar Alley Construction Site

Photo By Atlas

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Last edited by delts145; May 22, 2020 at 11:49 AM.
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  #6075  
Old Posted May 18, 2020, 12:48 PM
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Downtown Update - Aerial Drone Video & Updated April Photo - The Broadway Cottonwood Apartments


Latest Drone Flyover - May 14th - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Cv83YZT-_o

Renderings, Cottonwood Broadway Apartments


PROJECT DATA
Located on the east side Salt Lake City’s vibrant downtown and iconic buildings like the Salt Lake City Public Library, the Leonardo Museum, and Salt Palace Convention Center, Cottonwood Broadway is well positioned to give residents access
to all that the City has to offer. The Studio PBA project consists of one 7-story building, with units ranging from studios to 2-bedrooms. Residents will have covered parking options located on the first two floors of the building, while the
top 5 floors are reserved for amenities and residential units. The contemporary building design provides sweeping views of the Wasatch Range from the roof top pool and residences, an expansive multi-level fitness center, and other amenity
spaces such as a cyber cafe, mail center, and full service leasing center with conference rooms.


MORE ABOUT THE PROJECT
Client: Cottonwood Residential
Completion: 2021
Units / Density: 256 Units / 148 DU/ACRE
Program: Multi-Family Residential



200 South Street Engagement

https://i0.wp.com/www.buildingsaltla...4%2C1042&ssl=1




Quote:
Originally Posted by SLC PopPunk View Post
I walked by there the other day and saw a development company banner up and thought something may be happening soon. That Makes The Birdie, The Exchange, The Broadway,
The Magnolia and the nearly complete Quattro all going up in just a couple blocks of each other.

Plus The Morton is about 1/3 full and Moda Luxe appears to preparing the buildings for demo in the near future. Lots of infill in that area.
Quote:
Originally Posted by delts145 View Post
That's fantastic for downtown density's sake to have so many new feet on the ground. I know what a huge difference it makes having witnessed the seemingly sudden transformation of downtown L.A. these
past ten years. All of the new mid-rise and high-rise residential has transformed downtown Los Angeles from partially dead at night and on weekends to incredibly vibrant and full of activity both days and evenings, especially on weekends.

300 South Street Engagement

Studio PBA for Cottonwood Development - http://www.studiopba.com/cottonwood-broadway-apartments


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Last edited by delts145; Jun 3, 2020 at 9:46 PM.
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  #6076  
Old Posted May 19, 2020, 12:51 PM
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Update, Sugar House District - Park Avenue Project

Sugar House Park

https://i.pinimg.com/originals/e9/ca...6ce0a255d4.jpg


This enthusiastically welcomed development was formerly the giant parking lot of the big-box retailer Shopko. We all love getting rid of big parking lots.
Both the 80 and 60 Park Ave. structures are now completed. The 40 Park structure is progressing rapidly as you can see in the ABIDrone flyover


https://redirectdigital.com/wp-conte...rk_ave_slc.jpg


Park Avenue Apartments Construction - Latest ABIDrone Flyover: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f9rDvjYkTgE

https://i0.wp.com/www.buildingsaltla...ng-1.jpg?ssl=1



https://cdn.vox-cdn.com/thumbor/mXjN.../1221591.0.jpg



Park Avenue Developments

The buildings are replacing 9 acres of underutilized land near the heart of Sugar House. There are two new east-to-west streets to the north and south of the
development that will connect Highland Drive to 1300 East. The development will also include two new north to south throughways connecting Ashton to Stringham.



Aerial of projects as seen from the I-80 and 1300 East Interchange


Rendering of the clock tower looking southwest from Stringham Avenue. Image courtesy Dixon Architects.




University of Utah Medical Extension Rehab Center


By SLCLvr



Rendering of I-80 facing view of new Office Building



Street facing view by SLCLvr



Rendering of the Park Ave. apartments and how the completed street frontage will appear


By SLCLvr - Commencment of Construction


By SLCLvr - Newly completed neighbor, The SpringHill Suites
[/QUOTE]
Above Pics By SLCLvr




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Last edited by delts145; Jun 27, 2020 at 1:47 PM.
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  #6077  
Old Posted May 20, 2020, 11:59 AM
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Downtown Update - The Zephyr Lofts - Downtown warehouse district continues its transformation


Luke Garrott Reports - Full Article @
https://www.buildingsaltlake.com/dow...d-use-project/



The Zephyr Lofts, 360 W. 200 S. in west Downtown, Salt Lake City. Rendering by VCBO Architects, courtesy Clearwater Homes.

Clearwater Homes of Utah and Watt Investment Partners of Santa Monica, CA, will start construction in late summer on a 138-unit market-rate apartment project at 360 West 200 South in the heart of Salt Lake City’s warehouse district.

The project aspires to be “iconic, remarkable, and aesthetically enduring” – “a source of pride for the local community” according to the local developer, Clearwater’s Micah Peters.

Peters has developed Paragon Station on the same block, and also is under construction with the Paperbox project with PEG Development just behind the Zephyr Lofts site...

...The name “is homage to the depot district and the historic Zephyr engine/line that steamed into Salt Lake City on the Union Pacific rails,” Developer Micah Peters told Building Salt Lake.

Infilling surface parking lots between the historic Westgate Lofts on the east and the Dakota Lofts on the West, The Zephyr will rise eight stories to 85 ft. Sitting on D-4 zoning, the developers have entered the design review process in order to exceed the zone’s nominal 75 ft height maximum.

The Zephyr’s 138 units will be a combination of 70 studio, 55 one-bedroom, and 13 two-bedroom apartments.

It’ll be parked at a 1:1 ratio (140 stalls), with the upper floor of the podium parking incorporating 3 car city parking stackers.

Street frontage will consist of gyms, a leasing office, and a small bar/restaurant space. Clearwater’s Peters says he’s in conversations with a local artisan operator that has several food + beverage businesses in the neighborhood. The retail space offers 1800 sf and a 20-seat outdoor patio.

It will provide a public walkway from 200 South to the midblock right-of-way that skirts the Paperbox development.



The Zephyr Lofts, 360 W. 200 S. in west Downtown, Salt Lake City. Rendering by VCBO Architects, courtesy Clearwater Homes.


The Zephyr Lofts, 360 W. 200 S. in west Downtown, Salt Lake City. Rendering by VCBO Architects, courtesy Clearwater Homes.


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Last edited by delts145; Nov 14, 2020 at 5:27 PM.
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  #6078  
Old Posted May 20, 2020, 12:13 PM
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The above posted 'Zephyr Apartments': Enlarged photo for materials detailing perspective.


https://i0.wp.com/www.buildingsaltla...0%2C1265&ssl=1
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  #6079  
Old Posted May 21, 2020, 12:52 PM
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Downtown Update - Salt Lake City To Reconstruct 200 South


Quote:
Originally Posted by blah_amazing View Post

Quote: SALT LAKE CITY — One of Salt Lake City's most consequential east-west corridors is set for a major facelift in the coming years, and officials are asking for public feedback on the project as it gets off the ground.

200 South will be reconstructed between 400 West and 900 East beginning in 2022, officials said in a Facebook presentation Wednesday morning.

Salt Lake City transportation engineer Kyle Cook talked through a slideshow on the project, along with Kimberly Feldbauer and Jodi Pearson of AECOM, a Los Angeles-based engineering firm. They explained the beginning phases of a plan to — as one project fact sheet puts it — "create an iconic corridor where businesses thrive, residents feel comfortable and safe walking, transit users navigate easily, and visitors build lasting memories."

Practically, this means repaving the streets, creating better transportation options and accessibility, and building a multimodal transportation hub on the route, Cook said.

"Because the pavement on 200 South has reached the end of its useful life," he said, "it's in rough shape, and it needs attention."

Cook said the 200 South Corridor Plan is "building on a foundation of work that's already been done" in the Salt Lake City Transit Master Plan. 200 South was the highest-priority corridor of the master plan, he said.

Cook said the project could be financed by the 2018 Funding Our Future bond, sales tax revenue, county funds and "other state and federal resources that we continue to explore."

"We know this corridor is more than just a street," he said. "It serves so many homes, and jobs and destinations. 200 South, in many ways, is the focal point of Salt Lake's cultural and economic engine."

Feldbauer talked through potential options the final design could incorporate — "floating" bus stops that don't require curbside pull-ins, dedicated bus lanes and "creative" crosswalks among them.

The proposed transit hub, she said, would include access to multiple transportation options and give residents a reason to gather there with attractive landscaping and possibly live events.

The presenters gave multiple ways Salt Lake City residents can submit feedback on the 200 South Corridor Plan. A comment line has been established at 855-752-2007 and residents can reach project planners via email at 200South@SLCGov.com.

The project website also has space to submit comments or take a survey, which will gather information about how locals utilize the corridor.


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  #6080  
Old Posted May 21, 2020, 4:54 PM
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Just backtracked all the way to page 300 and wow, SLC is moving along with so many projects! I can't wait to see the new airport once it's all done. As I mentioned before, my best friend lives there so it's cool to see how much this place is growing! My last visit was in Dec 2017 so I'm sure it's totally different now than before.

Cheers delts145!
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