![]() |
Quote:
|
Seriously that park is easy to access from the north or south, but the streets to the north and the south are hard to find lol. It's so bad.
|
Quote:
Im rarely for demolishing an older building, especially one by Lescher and Mahoney, but for the sake of Hance Park, this one should go. You can't see the park from Central fucking Avenue. Our main Street. You also can't see the park from the Roosevelt LRT stop. Add in the difficulty of adding certain amenities to the park because of the poorly designed deck (large trees, quality fountains, buildings for eateries, etc) and that parcel becomes the only logical place to put some of those things. The Southwest Center should've been given land somewhere else, with that space opened up for the park to have a real front door. Instead Southwest Center has moved in, won't hear it about reducing/eliminating their anti-urban surface parking (after all surface parking is a God given right in PHX), and designers will have to jerry rig some kind of half assed entry off 1st St. |
Quote:
I have become fairly educated about the city since moving here 5 years ago and Hance has been a mystery to me ever since I saw it highlighted on the Roosvelt LRT stop sign. I got off and just assumed it was a fancy name for the neighborhood because I definitely didn't see a park. To this day, I tell people (some born here) about there being a deck park every time I go over or under, and the majority are surprised to hear. |
The problem with Deck Park is not its design. It's the fact too few live close by, and as such, gives it an abandoned look. Ditto: Steele Park.This points out the ongoing issue with lollapalooza projects. You can't simply reinvent a city with imposed wonders like this one, or Arizona Center, Civic Space, or the Convention Center. A city either breathes on its own or it's embalmed. This is why our downtown is so anemic. After tearing down virtually everything that gave a hint of real people doing ordinary things, we were free to create a downtown that is a showplace of set pieces that neither interrelate nor nourish each other. Back in the '80s, the word for this magical thinking was "synergy". You don't hear that word much anymore but it still governs our thinking, including tearing down perfectly good buildings, supposedly for our own good.
|
Quote:
BTW, may your namesake rest in peace. A big loss to the valley and the world of architecture. I wish Paolo Soleri would have had a stronger influence over our city than FLW (urban v suburban), yet his legacy will surely leave a mark. |
Quote:
|
Has any work been happening on the Monroe Street Abbey? I know that Jones Studio is in charge of the restoration, should turn out nice!
|
|
‘topping out’ set for native american connections’ new multi-family project
Quote:
It's a good looking building in a neighborhood with a lot of potential. I just hope the whole area doesn't get filled with low income housing. |
Aside from the obligatory random nickname - this time "RoRo" (I guess CenPho didn't catch on?:slob:) - it's pretty cool to see downtown/Roosevelt make this list and get some attention as a destination for travelers:
http://www.usatoday.com/story/travel...d-yet/2078741/ |
Quote:
|
The turn lane creating the triangle at Roosevelt and 1st Ave is gone. Any news on the future "mixed-use project?"
http://i74.photobucket.com/albums/i2...readsfasdf.jpg |
Quote:
http://www.kjzz.org/content/1303/adv...line-hope-more "BRODIE: Pollack says that means the rail might lead to development right next to stations, but he doubts it’ll have that effect elsewhere along the line. And, he limits the radius around stations to a few hundred years. But Mesa’s Shea Joachim doesn’t buy that. JOACHIM: Generally, we look for walk sheds of a quarter mile, in some cases, upwards to a half mile from stations. BRODIE: It’s less of a walk than that to get from the station at Central and Roosevelt to Matt Seamon’s new project. He’s a partner with Metro West Development, which is planning a mixed-use project on First Avenue, just south of Roosevelt — it’ll include retail and restaurant space, as well as up to 70 housing units." Did Metrowest's other project, McKinley row, ever get built? This article mentions it breaking ground in 2008, but I can't find any other info on it online, so am assuming it stalled out: http://www.bizjournals.com/phoenix/s....html?page=all |
Quote:
|
There is a really big mural being done on Thomas and Central right now. It started to be painted a couple days ago, and it looks really great. I would venture to say that it probably is the largest mural in the city.
|
So I rode down central the other night, I was testing out my new wheels on my race bike, and made a point to look at the corner of 1st ave and roosevelt. There are definitely some things going on with that access road, barricades and dirt moving around. Of course, I'd been maintaining a 175+ heart rate since Missouri and caught every green light, so I wasn't exactly, um, able to see straight... sorry for lack of details.
Could it be something is actually going on there? |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
EDIT: I think they took out a couple of large trees for the mural. I'd rather have the trees. This city's treatment of the large trees we do have is pretty sickening (not to mention the lack of planting them in the first place). Any large cool tree we have seems to be over-pruned and eventually killed, hacked in half by the utility companies to get the limbs out of their lines, or just ripped out for some stupid reason. |
All times are GMT. The time now is 9:41 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2023, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.