I agree something needs to be done, and yeah the budget isn't there, but I'd rather have had a big monument put in somewhere that was a small but truly remarkable piece. Maybe something right downtown, rather than somewhere that 99% of people will never go.
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^Well anything Centennial related is obviously going to go in the Capitol Mall area and that makes sense. We should be looking at ways to make the Capitol Mall somewhere that 99% of people want to go, instead of a wasteland like it is now. The Capitol areas in most states are big tourist areas with lush vegetation and people enjoy them, ours ought to be the same.
EDIT: http://downtowndevil.com/2010/09/08/...on-determined/ Quote:
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Anyone know what their doing to the old Phoenix Union parcel on Campbell and Central? They razed a pretty cool building so they better put something on top of it.
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it was offices for PUHSD at one time
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I still don't know where "it" is.
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4570 N Central
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how many times can I make the same mistake? Thanks.
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That building is coming down for an affordable housing complex by Native American Connections. I think it's 5 stories are so. We talked about it several pages back.
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http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/show...&postcount=545
and the rendering is on AZCentral http://www.azcentral.com/news/articl...e-housing.html |
haha,, drug & alcohol free native american housing??? hahahaha
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My thoughts exactly
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Some good news!
http://www.azcentral.com/thingstodo/...estaurant.html Downtown Phoenix is getting conveyor-belt sushi restaurant 3 comments by Howard Seftel - Sept. 21, 2010 04:34 PM Republic restaurant critic Attention, downtown Phoenix: Are you ready for a conveyor-belt sushi restaurant? Ready or not, here it comes, in the form of Sushi Revolution, which will be occupying the spot next to Fair Trade Café on First Avenue at Roosevelt Street around Thanksgiving. Faster, more casual and less expensive than traditional sushi restaurants, conveyor-belt sushi is very popular in Japan. You sit at the counter and watch the never-ending offerings glide past. Nab whatever you like. Plates are color-coded, to indicate price. At the end of the meal, a staffer adds up your plates and totals your bill. (The Valley's first conveyor-belt sushi restaurant, Sushi Eye, opened in Chandler in 2007.) Chef/owner Antonio Chavira, 28, thinks downtown's business folks and students will appreciate the format at lunch, while everyone will go for it at dinner or after a downtown event. He plans to stay open until 1 a.m. on Thursday, Friday and Saturday. Although he will offer traditional sushi, Chavira, who calls himself an Anglo-Hispanic, promises "lots of fusion influences." You'll see a chile relleno roll, a duck confit and fig roll and a Maine lobster roll. Prices, he says, will range from $1.50 to $4. Sushi Revolution is downtown Phoenix's second sushi restaurant. Moira Sushi, at 215 E. McKinley St., opened about 18 months ago. Details: Sushi Revolution, 1024 N. First Ave., Phoenix. sushirevolutionphx.com (under construction). |
Conveyor belt sushi is awesome. I went to one in japan and I loved it. as long as they can keep it well stocked.....it will be an enjoyable experience. I think more restaurants should do food this way. Just a big conveyor belt and you grab what you want. Then again...our country has enough of an obesity problem and a conveyor belt restaurant with fried food would not help the cause. Sushi...definitely.
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First time I ever had sushi was at a conveyer belt sushi place in Seattle.. loved it!
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Mother fucker..... :(
Phoenix's newest skate park excludes bike riders by Connie Cone Sexton - Sept. 24, 2010 02:41 PM The Arizona Republic A new urban skate park has been approved for Margaret T. Hance Park near downtown Phoenix but it won't allow bike riders, as hoped by a local group. Although several bike riders urged the Phoenix Parks and Recreation Board on Thursday to have the design of the park allow for bike riders, they didn't discuss the recommendation. Jason Ryan, president of the Bike, Blade and Board Coalition, noted that other parks in the Valley allow for shared use between bikes and skate boarders. Phoenix has four city skate parks. None of the sites allows for bike riders. The Phoenix parks board voted for the development of the urban skate plaza on the east side of Hance Park, which borders Central Avenue, south of McDowell Road. Although the board didn't discuss the recommendation made by Ryan and the other bike riders, a parks official met with the group Thursday and suggested the city might consider a bike-only park in the future. |
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