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Couldn't find anything on that but I did run across this while searching..
Application #: ZA-101-11-8 Existing Zoning: DTC-Ware Location: 411 South 2nd Street Quarter Section: 9-28(F8) Proposal: Use permit to allow a farmer's market. Use permit required. Ordinance Sections: 1204.Matrix Applicant: Michael A Levine Phoenix Seed & Feed Capitol Warehouse Representative: Michael A Levine Phoenix Seed & Feed Capitol Warehouse Owner: Michael A Levine Phoenix Seed & Feed Capitol Warehouse |
I like Michael Levine in general from what I know, and he owns a lot of cool properties in the warehouse district, but do we really need another farmers market? The Downtown PHX Market isn't even that impressive yet (but its growing and coming along strong), seems bizarre to try to split the market.
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Here's just a thought I had yesterday... not development news exactly... but sometimes we Phoenicians have an inferiority complex brought on by years of reading this forum. We want everything to be as dense and lively and urban as LA or NY, which obviously will never happen. However, there are a ton of areas that we can be proud of:
Yesterday I drove home from the DT YMCA, something I've done hundreds of times, but I really stopped and looked at what I was passing. Heading from a busy cool historic multi-story YMCA building I turned onto north Central. I passed the valet at a nice new Westin on the right and came up to the renovated 1920s AE England building and the beautiful new Civic Space Park on my left. It had a grandiose art piece and a bunch of students playing soccer in the grass. Speaking of students, to my right was downtown ASU and the pedestrians and multitude of bikes locked up to the racks, along with the modern Cronkite building with ground floor restaurants/retail that had students out on the patio eating in tables and chairs. Next on my left came a sweet historic post office followed by an amazing historic high-rise, the Westward Ho. I'm thankful for buildings like these. Instantly on my right was the downtown Phoenix market, busy with shoppers, but not only that, a gravy train of cool food trucks were parked in a line serving students, shoppers, couples their dinners. Next came a corridor of street fronting retail buildings for the next couple of blocks. There were more restaurants, offices, and boutique shops housed in renovated buildings, or in buildings just waiting to be restored. Finally I crossed Roosevelt and came upon more offices to my right (a couple in cool modern retrofits of old brick structures), and a soon-to-be modernized mid-rise hotel, and the Irish Cultural Center to my left. I drove up and over the Hance Park bridge... to my left was the old streetcar museum, a couple old historic mansions, one of them serving as a restaurant, and a condo building with ground floor retail/restaurant, and to my right was the beautiful modern Central library. Finally, I forgot to mention, the whole drive had light rail trains passing along side me and I drove by three light rail stations with passengers waiting to ride. Sometimes we all need to stop and smell the roses. :cool: |
Nicely said, phx31
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Glad you like our cowtown
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moooooooooooo
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get busy living, or get busy dying.
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Quote:
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Phoenix's Civic Space Park made #4 on Top 10 Urban Parks according to Sunset...
http://www.sunset.com/travel/outdoor...0418000071346/ |
Looks like things are moving forward which is a big plus
[IMG]Plans for downtown medical lab advance 1 comment by Emily Gersema - Apr. 7, 2011 12:00 AM The Arizona Republic A construction company experienced in building hospitals and medical facilities is in talks with Phoenix officials to rent a vacant part of the Phoenix Biomedical Campus so it can build a laboratory complex. Read more: http://www.azcentral.com/business/news/articles/2011/04/07/20110407biz-laboratory0407.html#ixzz1IuLM2QQa[/IMG] Good public-private relationship. Developer gets the land for basically chump change, while Phoenix gets what more lab space for a burgeoning biotech industry. This needs to happen so before the momentum disappears. |
General tree statement about just the trees at the Civic Space Park and Cityscape. The trees are really filling in well. It is awesome what planting real trees does for a city. The trees at the park are impressively big, They have grown a lot faster than I anticipated. They look like they have been there for 5 years and not just 2 1/2 years.
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My God. That park is 2.5 years old??
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If i remember correctly those trees went in about 1 1/2 years ago. The park officially opened a little after they went in.....I think. Time plies doesn't it?
But head over, you won't believe how big the trees have already gotten. |
I hope those trees can withstand monsoon storms pretty well. Hate to a bunch in one storm.
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They are mostly Fan Tex Ash which I believe do quite well in high winds, I don't recall ever seeing one blown down.
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Quote:
http://blogs.phoenixnewtimes.com/jac...covered_in.php Quote:
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god damn they have shitty food.
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Holy crap... talk about a city full of people. Sold out Suns game, sold out Arcade Fire (they were amazing), and a diamondbacks game all going on. Before that you had the farmers market/food trucks/etc.
Wish downtown could get some type of small all ages venue again (Brickhouse and Modified were powerhouses during their times). Then you have Cityscape which has new Comedy club. And the weekends have been slowly getting better. Sorry for the optimism but I just can't wait to see this city grow up. BTW- I officially submitted my job offer last week and will be staying here for the foreseeable future. Working in mid-town area but hoping to grab a place at Roosevelt Square or Alta Phoenix (trying to stay below the 800 mark not including utilities). Also... go check out Payton Curry at the Welcome Diner (roosevelt and 10th-ish street). He is amazing and is what I would consider a destination restaurant. Give him an ear full because we need chefs like him (along with Nubuo, Bianco, and Chu) staying downtown because these are true game changers in the culinary world. |
Postino owner opens Windsor and Churn in Phoenix
by Howard Seftel After years of planning - and a delay because of a recent burglary - Postino's Craig DeMarco is ready to roll out his two, much-anticipated midtown Phoenix enterprises, Windsor and Churn. The side-by-side concepts share space in a restored 1940 building on Central Avenue, just north of Camelback. Windsor is the restaurant, offering an all-day menu of what DeMarco calls "glorified bar food" that's "casual, accessible and family friendly." (There's a kids' menu.) The goal, he says, is "a good price point, fast execution and recognizable items that we make a little better than our competition." Look for starters like corn dog poppers ($6), pozole ($5, bowl) and cheddar fondue swished with pork, apple, sausage, pretzel and caraway bread ($11). You could make a light meal out of salads, which include a kale Caesar ($9) and Waldorf chicken salad ($10). But the sandwiches sound a lot more tempting, like the banh mi halibut ($13) and porkwich, layers of pulled pork, braised ham and bacon topped with cole slaw on a buttermilk bun ($12). And DeMarco is particularly fond of the crab cake BLT ($15). Sandwiches come with a choice of two sides. Among the options are fries, kale chips, fried okra and macaroni and cheese. Look for daily specials, too: Sunday through Tuesday, casseroles; Wednesday and Thursday, pot pies; Friday and Saturday, ribs. Windsor is hoping you'll hang around for desserts, like right-out-of-the-fryer donuts with chocolate fudge and homemade jam ($6), and a milk chocolate tart with a peanut and pretzel crust ($6). As you might expect from a DeMarco restaurant, beverages are a key component. Along with an attractive list of cocktails and beers, Windsor offers eight boutique wines, trendily served on tap out of stainless steel kegs. Meanwhile, Churn is all about homemade ice cream, as well as pastries, cookies and coffee. DeMarco describes it as an "old-school soda fountain" whose white Carrara marble gives it what he calls an "emergency-room" gleam. The eight ice cream flavors will stick to the basics, such as vanilla, chocolate, butter pecan and marble fudge. Opening day for Windsor and Churn is scheduled for Monday, April 25. Details: Windsor, 5223 N. Central Ave., Phoenix. 11 a.m. to 11 p.m., daily. 602-279-1111, windsoraz.com Churn, 5223 N. Central Ave., Phoenix. 6:30 a.m. to 10 p.m., daily. 602-279-8024, churnaz.com ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The little strip center in which this went in was stripped so far back that I can't imagine it had any 1040s architecture left. Having said that, it looks much better than the storefront did before. That area will be very cool once they tighten up Central Ave and get past the contamination on empty lot next door. |
That intersection is becoming a real hotbed for restaurants and life. I wonder how long it will be before that nasty strip mall where the Prime and Four Kings are will be rehabbed, and that empty parcel in front of the train station is developed... hmmmm someone should grab Beefeaters up soon too I'd suspect.
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