The developers doing the los olivos lot are one hearing away from obtaining variance to 96du acre. It's 1.3 acres so roughly 120 units and Max height gives them 8 stories. They will build concrete for sure.
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I'm freaking loving this construction boom in Phoenix! It's exciting and I am having a hard time keeping up with it on most days. This city is so much better than the naysayers think it is. I attribute most of it to people that just don't visit other cities much. I am planning on joining the Downtown Phoenix crowd in the next year or so. I have my sites set on the Stewart...but Link is looking pretty awesome! :yes: |
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8 stories would be great, so hopefully my math is wrong, which is quite possible, or I'm missing something about the proposal. :shrug: |
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Either Illuminate or Linear are that density, and both are woodframe.
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It will be concrete.
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(https://m.tuftandneedle.com/if-you-r...y-a7505318cd45) What the city needs is more natural startups and VC to follow it. That's slowly developing - and with ASU evolving as a very strong engineering school - we have everything we need. Lower cost of living and proximity to the bay area goes a long way for a lot of companies. And this is on top of all the semiconductor factories, data centers, and 'back office' enterprise jobs that are here (Discover, Amex, Charles Schwab, Wells Fargo, PayPal, etc) - jobs that have been here for over the past 30 years. Tech is very strong here. |
I was trying not to comment on this given my biased experiences in the field outside of urban design, but the conversation kept going.
I wouldn't call tech "very strong" in Phoenix, but it's certainly made measurable improvements over the years. In 2012, when I left Arizona, there were basically no jobs in startup technologies that I do in Phoenix that the Bay Area is known for. There were hundreds of jobs there, which is why I left and have been there since. In 2017, if you go on dice.com and search job openings for devops, ruby, or python, you'll see that Phoenix is at best a 3rd, more like 4th tier city for startup tech compared to eg, Portland or San Diego. SF and NY are supreme, followed by Seattle and Chicago and Los Angeles and Atlanta (that I searched) followed by everyone else. Startup tech seems to have made a lot of improvements in Phoenix, but to call it a #2 city after Seattle doesn't reflect who's actually hiring for those coveted tech jobs. |
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I'm from Columbus and occasionally make it back to visit. I'll have to say that I'll pick Phoenix over that place all day long. :yes: |
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As I have said before the 2008 crisis was probably a good thing in the long run for Phoenix because instead of being just call centers, old people care and Construction we have expanded immensely into tech and financial services and our manufacturing and logistics sectors have grown immensely. We also have a decent bio-tech and healthcare industry and our traditional Agriculture and hospitality. Phoenix and Arizona has a much more well rounded economy than it did in 2007 |
Developer entering Arizona market with Class A Biltmore project
https://www.bizjournals.com/phoenix/...h-class-a.html
Houston-based real estate developer Morgan Inc. is entering the Arizona market and will build a five-story, 474-unit apartment complex near 24th Street and Camelback Road in Phoenix. That is one of the most sought-after areas in the state and Southwest. Morgan and Mesirow Financial are developing the Pearl Biltmore apartments at 24th Street and Highland Avenue. Morgan also has Class A apartments developments in California, Texas, Florida and Missouri. The multifamily project is being designed by CCBG Architects, and CBRE broker Bert Kempfert helped Morgan and Mesirow acquire the property. Morgan bought the site, which currently is vacant, for $30.59 million from a group called Biltmore 24 Investors. The Pearl Biltmore will sit on five acres with construction slated to be completed in early 2019. “Morgan is bullish on the population and job growth outlook in Phoenix, and we are excited to be entering the Phoenix market,” said Development Senior Vice President Philip Morgan. “This urban location is perfect for our upscale Pearl brand. Pearl Biltmore will be surrounded by premier office space, restaurants and retail, including grocers like Whole Foods and Trader Joe’s. This convenience, coupled with our best-in-class Pearl amenities, will be a win-win for Pearl Biltmore residents.” The Phoenix market continues to see interest from apartment developers and investors via new projects and property sales. “We look forward to partnering with Morgan on their latest endeavor. The upscale surroundings of the Camelback Corridor make it the ideal location for this exceptional property, said Alasdair Cripps, CEO and co-chief investment officer of Mesirow Financial’s Direct Real Estate business. |
Phoenix Suns' arena overhaul faces opposition from key city leaders
Probably the first time we've heard some concrete news on what the plan is for TSR Arena. Sarver is demanding over $250M for a complete renovation. Renovation would only require a city council vote where a new arena would require tax approval. He knows he probably won't get taxpayer approval so seeking the renovation route. I would be okay with the renovation or new approval if it was re purposed to accommodate the 'Yotes but Sarver is an asshole and won't do that.
http://www.12news.com/news/politics/...ders/490421506 |
Worst case scenario we could lose the Yotes, Suns and Dbacks over stadium issues.
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Coyotes could leave though. |
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I'm sure the taxpayers would be more up for spending the money on the renovations if Sarver would quit being a selfish jackass and bring the 'Yotes in along with it. |
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