I'm quite sure that I am more impressed than most over what Phoenix has accomplished over the last decade.
Denver had its office boom in the early 80's and despite constant efforts to make Denver more than a 9-5 downtown it generally accomplished little. In fact it was even worse when boom turned to bust and a lot of the oil & gas companies moved out and went back to Houston or to Calgary. For Denver, Coors Field was the catalyst that brought some excitement and change to downtown. Then add light rail and a new convention center and hotel.... Denver got on a continuous roll. Visualize the area in downtown Phoenix that is south of the tracks. In Denver it was to the north and is now becoming the new transit hub. You can see a drive-thru rendering here: http://www.unionstationdenver.com/ With apartment development now the next wave (all over the country) there are several positioning to break ground next year in this new "neighborhood." http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/show...postcount=8775 http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/show...postcount=8852 http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/show...postcount=9207 While Coors Field opened in 1995, it has only been the last half-dozen years that have brought development to the Ballpark Neighborhood. This project recently broke ground: http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/show...postcount=8020 It's also worth noting that Zocalo's recent project just sold for over an incredible $308,000 per unit and $340 per square foot. It looks like this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RZjjSq4b_E8 All that is happening in an area just like south of the tracks Phoenix. It took three decades of effort. Phoenix having gotten this far will start "growing up" a lot faster sooner than you think.... in hindsight. |
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Summit has some dirt cheap places now! I think they'll sell...I'd love to live there.
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Northeast Corner of 7th Ave and McDowell
I walked through the alley behind the building yesterday and took this pic. Progress is being made. It looks like there will be parking behind the buildings accessible from the alley. That renews my hope that the entire east lot doesn't get turned into a surface parking lot.
http://i40.tinypic.com/mhynwm.jpg |
That's nice and all, but the SEC looks fucking craptacular. Suburban strip mall facade FTL.
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Well, what does the site's permitting say? Isn't that the sure fire way to figure out what's going to happen on a site?
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Phoenix Irish center library begins taking shape
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Does the Arizona Republic even own a camera? The article is great but why not show pictures of the progress (aside from the one of the architect looking through scaffolding)? |
TAR are too cheap to a) hire a competent photographer and then b) post said photos in relation to an article, in a logical fashion.
--don |
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The street is 3 lanes one way, 2 going the other plus a turn lane! Its crazy how oversized that thing is. They probably out to pair it down to at most 2 lanes each way, with no turn lane. A lot of the road already has large landscaped areas abutting the single family homes, but the landscaping is horrible. If they could create a unique desert greenbelt that would connect to the wash near Acoma, some of the nearby desert/mountain trails maybe they'd have something...but that seems like too big of thinking for that area. Most of the section is lined with empty or partially empty strip centers that would be better off being torn down and replaced with street fronting retail over the next quarter century. There are also lots of suburban style neighborhoods that have built fortress like walls facing 32nd St, at the very least they need to add murals, foliage or something to liven up those blank walls. |
haven't you been to a parking lot lately? People will circle for 5 minutes to save 20 feet of walking. If they have to walk more than 50 feet in to a business, then there clearly isn't enough parking for their cars.
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Architects' Own Homes Tour 3 (Nov 11-13).
http://i1119.photobucket.com/albums/...shometour3.png
Architects' Own Homes Tour 3 is a valley-wide tour of homes that 10 Valley architects have designed for themselves to live in. This full-weekend event includes: Friday, Nov 11 - Opening reception and panel discussion at Taliesin West Saturday & Sunday, Nov 12-13 - Self-guided tour of 10 architects' homes throughout the Valley Sunday, Nov 13 - After-Tour Party at Design Within Reach To buy tickets for access to all three events ($65 / $50 for students), please visit: www.GnosisLtd.org/projects-events or go to Design Within Reach (Scottsdale). Thank you. I am helping the nonprofit Gnosis Ltd. get the word out about this fantastic event. Gnosis Ltd. is a nonprofit organization that helps preserve significant creative works. A portion of the money raised from ticket sales will benefit the Frank Lloyd Wright School of Architecture. |
Thinking about the 7th Ave/McDowell renovations and this article I wrote a while back...
It would be nice if each of the corners there had some kind of monument sine noting the adjacent neighborhoods. Four very well establish historic neighborhoods meet at that intersection, which is interesting/unusual in my estimation and that should be noted. If each corner had some kind of vertical monument sign that said "FQ Story", "Willo", "Encanto Palmcroft" and "Roosevelt" I think that would be nice. Though it is funny that the fanciest neighborhood of the four has the shittiest thing on its corner (a Circle K). |
On the topic of neighborhood signage, I know the idea has been proposed at the Story neighborhood meetings to install monument signs at some of the entrances to the neighborhood. The ideas range from shitty hanging metal signs to larger metal sculptures like the ones throughout the neighborhood.
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I'm thinking something along the following lines*: (dunno how well you can read these images so I'll do captions) http://img228.imageshack.us/img228/962/dsc08662s.jpg Facing into the intersection I'm imaging something like this. The bottom portion could be weathered Corten metal with cacti, flowers, succulents, etc growing in it. For the vertical/obelisk portion maybe stained concrete. Each neighborhoods name and year of founding would be in large, prominent letters (each 'hood could have a different font or color, etc). I figured the bottom part should have the City of PHX emblem on it to keep it clear that these are neighborhoods within PHX, not their own municipalities. http://img526.imageshack.us/img526/6247/dsc08665x.jpg The signs would have to be oriented so that the main portion with the name faced the middle of the intersection. http://img217.imageshack.us/img217/3467/dsc08667a.jpg The other 3 sides of the square-ish obelisks could have more information. I'm thinking maybe one side would have a timeline of the neighborhoods history as well as a few paragraphs about the 'hood. Another side could have a collage of pictures from throughout the neighborhoods history. The side opposite the main sign (the side facing into the retail) could have a portion for a Map of the neighborhood. It could also have a place for residents to post events, sales, piano lessons, etc. It could also have a section for neighborhood wide events like Home Tours and the like. *Keep in mind I am not a professional Public Artist, Architect, am mediocre at drawing, etc and I just drew this real quick while sitting on the couch and was too lazy to scan it so I just took a picture. Its just a random idea/jumping off point...but its a thought... Quote:
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