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ASU Diablo Mar 12, 2024 8:43 PM

I guess we wait and see what happens with Astra...

dillsquad Mar 12, 2024 9:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ASU Diablo (Post 10163097)
I guess we wait and see what happens with Astra...

What’s the latest on this ? this project has been talked about for years….

CrestedSaguaro Mar 12, 2024 9:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dillsquad (Post 10163126)
What’s the latest on this ? this project has been talked about for years….

Nada :tumbleweed:

Sepstein Mar 13, 2024 4:37 AM

Astra
 
Astra always felt like a pipe dream!

combusean Mar 13, 2024 5:00 AM

New tallests are often signs of irrational exhuberism. SF built theres and is absolutely creamed right now.

phxjack Mar 13, 2024 3:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MMDelon (Post 10163029)
I did not know we were over building downtown. That concerns me that other projects will be pushed back or not happen at all.

One thing that has not been talked about enough is how we still have not hit critical mass of density in downtown to justify more urban shopping. The more people that move downtown the more businesses will follow. There's still a high percentage of downtown students that leave for summers. Until we have enough year round residents to support downtown shops - we will have to wait.

Other cities have downtown targets, whole foods, aldis, and upscale boutiques. We have not hit this tier yet but hopeful the next round of apartments will level supply and demand and encourage more residents to live downtown.

MMDelon Mar 13, 2024 5:35 PM

I’m hopeful that Astra will still happen but if we are over building and waiting for demand to catch up then I don’t see the demand for a project like Astra at the moment.

MMDelon Mar 13, 2024 6:25 PM

It just sounds like things are evening out at the moment. Instead of seeing 3 to 4 projects going up like we have been seeing, we may see one or two so that demand catches up. We have Central Station (two towers), Sol Modern, X Roosevelt, Saiya, Vela, and X Phoenix Phase 2 when it starts back up under construction. This doesn’t include AVE Phoenix and Skye, and Palm Tower that are finishing up. I am still optimistic about Astra but no way it breaks ground the second quarter of 2024 as planned.

ASU Diablo Mar 15, 2024 9:45 PM

Phoenix wants to hire national consulting firm to work on DT entertainment district
 
https://www.bizjournals.com/phoenix/...-advisors.html

Quote:

The city of Phoenix wants to hire a national consulting firm to help establish a new entertainment district in its downtown.

Phoenix City Council will consider a one-year contract worth $529,000 with HR&A Advisors Inc. for a proposed district at its March 20 meeting.

HR&A has offices in several major markets such as New York and Los Angeles and has worked on entertainment districts in Cincinnati, Detroit, Philadelphia and Toronto, Canada.

It focuses on real estate, economic development and public infrastructure projects and has worked with universities, private owners and investors, hospitals and government.

In the Valley, HR&A has worked on major projects including the design concept for Mesa City Center and the master plan for Margaret T. Hance Park in Phoenix.

The scope of the city of Phoenix agreement, which has two one-year renewal options, includes project management, studies, public participation, feasibility reports, growth analysis, boundary maps and recommendations.

HR&A will be partnering on the project with architecture firm Multistudio, which has a Phoenix office and has worked on a number of projects in the Valley such as Central Station.

Phoenix has been looking for ways to bolster its downtown area and compete with other major markets with more hotels and the establishment of an entertainment district around the Phoenix Convention Center. This would create an area for visitors and residents to walk in a vibrant and safe pedestrian area with amenities such as restaurants, bars, attractions, street performers, art, lighting and transportation options, according to the city.

In September, the city of Phoenix posted a request for proposals for consulting services and subsequently received five proposals, one of which was from HR&A Advisors. A panel evaluated the proposals and selected the winning bidder in December.

The city's economic development and housing subcommittee recommended approval for the contract at its Feb. 14. meeting.

Following a City Council vote, the project will begin in the spring with community outreach and analysis scheduled for the summer. The city expects a draft plan to be delivered by the fall and for the final plan to be completed near the end of 2024.

Phoenix is also in the process of a major expansion of its central business district boundaries in the downtown area, which could help create more development opportunities in the area. City Council is expected to vote on the central business district boundary at its April 17 meeting.

combusean Mar 15, 2024 11:03 PM

Waste of money. Get the convention center activated and redeveloped with a well capitalized and willing partner like Hines and stop f'n around with pointless studies.

CrestedSaguaro Mar 15, 2024 11:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by combusean (Post 10165831)
Waste of money. Get the convention center activated and redeveloped with a well capitalized and willing partner like Hines and stop f'n around with pointless studies.

Agreed. Phoenix could've most likely had one by now if they would have worked with Hines when approached several years ago.

ChaseM Mar 15, 2024 11:30 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CrestedSaguaro (Post 10165836)
Agreed. Phoenix could've most likely had one by now if they would have worked with Hines when approached several years ago.

Agreed, they keep circling the wagon, how many more times is the city going to keep doing this failed song and dance.

Obadno Mar 20, 2024 4:58 PM

https://www.bizjournals.com/phoenix/news/

Nice to see development pushing west of 7th ave. Grand has basically become what Roosevelt was 10 years ago. And now the city has RFP's for the lots on the Northwest and Southwest corner of 7thave and Washington.

Plus they will be selling/developing the old Police HQ across the street once they finish the update to the former wells Fargo building.

Despite how phoenix RFP's usually go im hoping the downtown momentum will carry projects through.

MiEncanto Mar 20, 2024 7:55 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Obadno (Post 10168843)
https://www.bizjournals.com/phoenix/news/

Nice to see development pushing west of 7th ave. Grand has basically become what Roosevelt was 10 years ago. And now the city has RFP's for the lots on the Northwest and Southwest corner of 7thave and Washington.

Plus they will be selling/developing the old Police HQ across the street once they finish the update to the former wells Fargo building.

Despite how phoenix RFP's usually go im hoping the downtown momentum will carry projects through.

CoPs insistence on the iron grip approach to downtown is so tedious.

Why not increase the value of the land by preemptively increasing the entitlements and zoning to what the city wants and then sell it at auction. The entitlements will drive a higher price and force out unserious bidders.

Their insistence on control at every phase simply isn't working. The City simply doesn't have the market knowledge they claim to possess. See for example, the parking lot at Central and Adams. They went with a *LOWER* offer on the parcel because that project supposedly would drive higher city TPT. Of course, city TPT seems to drive many or most city decisions. Years later... we still have no progress on that lot.

combusean Mar 20, 2024 11:20 PM

The City doesn't solely rely on "TPT" (i'm assuming that means transaction privilege tax) but like 3 or 4 categories and scored appropriately. There is a slight issue of building to the RFP that gave us the Central Station proposal rather than the more interesting Davis proposal, but the City doesn't and shouldn't consider visual impact because it's entirely subjective. Some jagoff could just as easily think 500' on that parcel could have been too tall.

And Central Station is getting BUILT, unlike Davis which has sent a number of pie-in-the-sky renderings for *unserious* projects. If I seem to recall the Davis proposal hardly considered the RFP to begin with and didn't propose some key element(s) like student housing the City was really wanting to see on that lot.

The Central and Adams lot has always been challenged by its small size. Period. It is incredibly difficult to get a taller project to pencil out there. If the city just sold it off, it would have languished and horse traded and eventually maybe something like Cambria would have developed there. I think most people would prefer ~225' than seven or eight stories.

The RFP process is imperfect but it's about as good as we can get. Sure, it can be tweaked to ensure performance guarantees but that adds uncertainty to projects that should be shoe-ins. The slow growth of RFP projects is likely because of two reasons: nothing given away for free is valuable, and, the institutional investors that move on these projects have probably on the order of five year timelines anyway and that's probably before being informed by local market conditions that they might not be up to speed on like Medistar who was both new to Phoenix and dicked around on the programming for the project.

Downtown's history of land banking and over entitling land should be reason enough to be more judicious with the lots the city does have, especially when these parcels are off the beaten path. Grace Court has hardly filled up in 20 years because someone grossly overplayed their hand.

Obadno Apr 2, 2024 7:41 PM

Took a long drive downtown. Central station and Palm Tower both look fantastic. Best building downtowns.

And overall the whole area is really getting busy now. it was 11 am on a Tuesday and the sidewalks and restaurants were crowded. People everywhere. Lots of activity.

Great to see!

xymox Apr 2, 2024 8:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Obadno (Post 10176641)
Took a long drive downtown. Central station and Palm Tower both look fantastic. Best building downtowns.

And overall the whole area is really getting busy now. it was 11 am on a Tuesday and the sidewalks and restaurants were crowded. People everywhere. Lots of activity.

Great to see!

I spent most of a week downtown - my company chose downtown Phoenix to bring all of engineering, product and marketing together from across the country for an on-site (we are a fully remote company - I am one of only 4 local employees). Everyone was super impressed with downtown and the city in general. I was also surprised at how active it is over the course of a day - and it seems every night there was some event going on that brought people out. Got to stay at the Palomar (which needs a remodel - furniture in my room was worn). Wish there were more hotel options closer to Roosevelt for large group activities like this. Was able to keep everyone entertained at various locations around downtown each night (why does the Bourbon Room close at 10pm on a game night?). I really wasn't sure what to expect - but we're growing up. Eager to see more stuff show up.

ASU Diablo Apr 2, 2024 9:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by xymox (Post 10176667)
Was able to keep everyone entertained at various locations around downtown each night (why does the Bourbon Room close at 10pm on a game night?). I really wasn't sure what to expect - but we're growing up. Eager to see more stuff show up.

Why does the Bourbon Room even exist at all? LOL That restaurant needs to close down already and a Twin Peaks needs to open in its place.

I plan on speaking it into existence :cheers:

ASU Diablo Apr 2, 2024 9:09 PM

2nd St & Roosevelt RFP Update
 
Looks like the recommended proposer for this RFP is "Pennrose, LLC".

https://solicitations.phoenix.gov/So...chmentId=14660

Did a quick Google search and looks like it may be this developer? www.pennrose.com/portfolio/

Anyways, excited to see what is being proposed. I went ahead and submitted a public records request and will be sure to post renderings once received.

combusean Apr 2, 2024 9:14 PM

What parcel was this again?

soled Apr 2, 2024 9:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ASU Diablo (Post 10176712)
Looks like the recommended proposer for this RFP is "Pennrose, LLC".

https://solicitations.phoenix.gov/So...chmentId=14660

Did a quick Google search and looks like it may be this developer? www.pennrose.com/portfolio/

Anyways, excited to see what is being proposed. I went ahead and submitted a public records request and will be sure to post renderings once received.

2nd St, not avenue, right?

Isn't that the Federales taco parcel?

CrestedSaguaro Apr 2, 2024 9:57 PM

I believe this is the lot behind Carly's.

MiEncanto Apr 2, 2024 10:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ASU Diablo (Post 10176709)
Why does the Bourbon Room even exist at all? LOL That restaurant needs to close down already and a Twin Peaks needs to open in its place.

I plan on speaking it into existence :cheers:

Twin Peaks is pretty lame. Dying model imo.

I know it's sorta cliche for a downtown, but a big loud Irish restaurant/pub that's also a good place to watch a game would be cool. Maybe the family that owns Rosie/Seamus would be interested in a new concept? Like tilted kilt but better.

ASU Diablo Apr 3, 2024 12:05 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by combusean (Post 10176718)
What parcel was this again?

Quote:

Originally Posted by CrestedSaguaro (Post 10176751)
I believe this is the lot behind Carly's.

Kinda. It's the 3 parcels that's north of the building (1014 N 2nd St) that is behind Carly's. 3 parcels are 1016, 1020, and 1024 N 2nd St. Page 30 of the following PDF:

https://solicitations.phoenix.gov/So...chmentId=13687

Quote:

Originally Posted by MiEncanto (Post 10176773)
Twin Peaks is pretty lame. Dying model imo.

I know it's sorta cliche for a downtown, but a big loud Irish restaurant/pub that's also a good place to watch a game would be cool. Maybe the family that owns Rosie/Seamus would be interested in a new concept? Like tilted kilt but better.

You are literally describing what Twin Peaks is, Tilted Kilt but better :haha:

combusean Apr 3, 2024 12:27 AM

Hanging out at Seamus's at night when it was the only sign of life many years ago reminds me of a Bay Area chain I've similarly hung out at recently and would definitely fill a void downtown.

https://www.ilovejacks.com/

Their location in Newark for breakfast and cocktails that don't mess around was a beacon in an absolute wasteland and that is an incredibly low bar for Downtown.

RichTempe Apr 3, 2024 8:17 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by soled (Post 10176723)
2nd St, not avenue, right?

Isn't that the Federales taco parcel?

Speaking of Federales. From the New Times:

Judge backs decision to block Federales from Roosevelt Row

The controversial cantina proposed for Roosevelt Row faces another setback with latest ruling.

https://www.phoenixnewtimes.com/rest...t-row-18639244

ASU Diablo Apr 3, 2024 3:59 PM

Former mayor ushers in reboot of historic Phoenix church as events, dining space
 
https://www.bizjournals.com/phoenix/...h-phoenix.html

Quote:

A royal poinciana tree has been sprouting at the western edge of the historic First Baptist Church in downtown Phoenix for the past decade.

For former Phoenix Mayor Terry Goddard, the tree, considered one of the most beautiful in the world with its bright red blooms, marked the beginning of his plans to restore the 45,000-square-foot church after the roof burned down and the building sat vacant for decades.

"It's a work in progress, very much so," Goddard told the Business Journal, referring to the abandoned church. "I've got my tree — 10 years ago I planted the royal poinciana in expectation that someday we'd get this fixed."

Goddard, also a former Arizona attorney general, has spearheaded efforts by nonprofit Housing Opportunity Center to turn the Italian Gothic-style church into a space for gatherings, events, dining and other creative uses since 2016.

He has wanted to preserve the church, built in 1929, since its roof burned down in the 1980s — during the second week of his first mayoral term.

Goddard: Discussions underway to add a restaurant
The tree now stands tall against the side of the aging structure as Goddard prepares to open the first phase of the project at the end of April. This includes a new catering kitchen and events that can now be booked for the open-air courtyard at the heart of the church.

The venue, easily recognized in downtown by its rose window and bell tower, is now known as The Abbey on Monroe, located at 302 W. Monroe St.

BTS Event Management and Fresh from the Kitchen have partnered to host weddings and other events in the courtyard. Several weddings have already been held and more are being booked for 2024 and 2025. A catering kitchen has also been built out.

Meanwhile, Goddard is in discussions with potential restaurant tenants to open a new eatery on the west side of the property with outdoor patio seating underneath the poinciana tree. The basement could also be turned into a speakeasy.

But the first phase is only the start of his vision for the maze of rooms scattered throughout the multi-level church.

Work crews have been adding steel beams and structures to support the building and installing tiles, floors, windows, glass and mahogany wood frames across the property.

The bathrooms have been upgraded and modernized, and a host of trees and plants have been embedded in the main courtyard. Goddard said they envision using some of the extra rooms such as the old classrooms as makerspaces or meeting spaces.

"A little side gig we've been able to do is fashion photographers," Goddard said. Photographers like the unique wall backgrounds, some of which were damaged in the fire. They're also planning to keep some of the graffiti left on the walls from decades ago.

At one point they considered turning some of the larger rooms into loft apartments, but at the suggestion of the Dutch architect that restored the Orpheum Theatre in Phoenix, Van Dijk, they kept the space for conference rooms.

"Except for hotels, you don't find any conference rooms of this size in downtown," Goddard said.

Building has seen several owners
As a nod to the history of the building, including the major fire that took down the Spanish-style roof decades ago, Goddard said they are preserving as much as possible and also adding touches such as a tribute to the firefighters.

"The firefighters did an amazing job," Goddard said. "Buildings like this don't have roofs collapse and then remain standing. Whatever they did kept the integrity of the walls and I don't know how they did it because the roof was huge."

After the church vacated the building in 1972 it was used by the Urban League for training through 1982. It was then acquired by an investment group headed by former Phoenix Suns player Alvan Adams, which had plans to turn the church into an adaptive reuse project until the fire, Goddard said.

Housing Opportunity acquired the building in 1992 and has owned it since. Goddard said restoration construction is estimated to cost about $10 million.

The main funder in the restoration project is Local Initiatives Support Corp., with assistance from the Arizona Community Foundation and Phoenix Industrial Development Authority. Bankers Trust will acquire the historic tax credits generated by the building.

The design partner in the restoration was architect Tempe-based Jones Studio, which Goddard credits for coming up with the idea for using the church as an events space in the 2000s. Palo verde trees had been growing in the empty, boarded-up courtyard for years since there was no roof.

"They got this idea that this would be a public space that was a garden in a room and that's sort of been the prevailing concept ever since," Goddard said.

Patry Building Co. was the general contractor for the redevelopment of the property. The Los Angeles branch of New York-based EverGreene completed three months of restoration work on signature pieces in the church such as the columns.

Goddard said they would have initially opened to the community several years ago but plans were delayed because of the Covid-19 pandemic. As downtown Phoenix builds momentum with thousands of new residential units coming online, Goddard believes now is the right time to open.

"It used to be in the evenings and weekends, these streets were empty and that's just not true anymore," Goddard said. "Back when I was mayor we were dreaming about a time when downtown Phoenix would truly be an urban, exciting space. It took 40 years to actually happen and it's happening."

asugrad Apr 3, 2024 4:20 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RichTempe (Post 10177021)
Speaking of Federales. From the New Times:

Judge backs decision to block Federales from Roosevelt Row

The controversial cantina proposed for Roosevelt Row faces another setback with latest ruling.

https://www.phoenixnewtimes.com/rest...t-row-18639244

I don't understand what is so different about this place compared to everything else down there. Why is the community so upset over this proposal?

exit2lef Apr 3, 2024 4:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by asugrad (Post 10177245)
I don't understand what is so different about this place compared to everything else down there. Why is the community so upset over this proposal?

It seems to be a lingering effect of all the problems with Golden Margarita (noise, shootings, etc.). I think the nearby residents and businesses are looking to avoid a repeat of that situation, and Federales has a sort of party reputation in its home city of Denver. It's disappointing that the suburban notion of parking requirements is being used as a weapon against development in an urban environment, but I suppose that may be the strongest tool available to the opponents of this place.

Obadno Apr 3, 2024 6:12 PM

Didnt realize that WeWork had vacated block 23.

Thats a shame but the commerical real estate market is a disaster.


Also TOLD YA about the church!

Cant wait to see this location thrive!

PHX31 Apr 3, 2024 8:54 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Obadno (Post 10177341)
Also TOLD YA about the church!

Cant wait to see this location thrive!

I drove by this a few weeks ago and it didn't look anywhere near inhabitable. At least the 3rd Ave side has boarded up windows and broken windows. I am looking forward to this building being used again, even if just a part of it. But overall it looks like it's a ways away from full use.

https://www.google.com/maps/@33.4505...8192?entry=ttu

Centralworks Apr 3, 2024 10:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by PHX31 (Post 10177498)
I drove by this a few weeks ago and it didn't look anywhere near inhabitable. At least the 3rd Ave side has boarded up windows and broken windows. I am looking forward to this building being used again, even if just a part of it. But overall it looks like it's a ways away from full use.

https://www.google.com/maps/@33.4505...8192?entry=ttu

They're are multiple Phases to the Project. The First Phase include the main Cathedral are, which is now a landscaped courtyard for events. Also the new building on the west end is part of that phase. The First Phase is done and they are holding events. The second phase which is mainly the western most part of the building, Hence why the west end looks pretty rough.
What's done is pretty cool. There was a lot of work put into trying to leave the church as a sort of a relic without doing a ton of restoration work besides code work and retrofits.
Some of the work that was done was adding a 5 story elevator shaft, Multiple restrooms, a commercial kitchen for event catering, as well as all new MP&E
Source-Im sub that did some work in this building.

Obadno Apr 3, 2024 10:38 PM

Plus a lot of the items like new Windows and paint that can make a building look MUCH better only takes a few days.

PHX31 Apr 3, 2024 10:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Centralworks (Post 10177588)
They're are multiple Phases to the Project. The First Phase include the main Cathedral are, which is now a landscaped courtyard for events. Also the new building on the west end is part of that phase. The First Phase is done and they are holding events. The second phase which is mainly the western most part of the building, Hence why the west end looks pretty rough.
What's done is pretty cool. There was a lot of work put into trying to leave the church as a sort of a relic without doing a ton of restoration work besides code work and retrofits.
Some of the work that was done was adding a 5 story elevator shaft, Multiple restrooms, a commercial kitchen for event catering, as well as all new MP&E
Source-Im sub that did some work in this building.

Thanks for the input and that is cool that you did some work here... I think it is a pretty good idea for it to be left relic-looking. Understood that it will be restored in phases, I just meant it just seems as though nothing is really done and the building isn't in use when you look at it from 3rd Ave.

thespiandave Apr 7, 2024 8:27 PM

Pics
 
Didn’t upload these from last weekend until now! Hope you all were able to check out the downtown scenes with Fan Fest.

https://imgur.com/gallery/GuMuMvw

PS: Cityscape Sunrise was this week after a morning OrangeTheory class. One of the best views IMHO!

combusean Apr 8, 2024 8:51 AM

Thank you so much for the updates!

muertecaza Apr 8, 2024 4:35 PM

Downtown from the Ferris wheel at the Final Four concert Sunday afternoon:

https://i.imgur.com/EyDU5KAh.jpeg

https://i.imgur.com/BYz2Cuuh.jpeg

https://i.imgur.com/68NRfcJh.jpeg

J_PHX Apr 8, 2024 5:01 PM

Found myself + friends in that last photo :) gorgeous clear day!

Sepstein Apr 11, 2024 4:49 AM

Some great shots of Downtown! That Project on central by westward ho looks huge went up quick!!

azliam Apr 11, 2024 10:01 PM

I reached out last weekend to my contact at the Phoenix office of Community and Economic Development because it had been at least 2 years since I last heard from them on the future status of the Regency Garage RFP. I asked if the city had planned to revisit that at some point. The response I received was that they currently have no plans to revisit the RFP. Just wanted to let everyone know.

ASU Diablo Apr 11, 2024 11:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by azliam (Post 10182826)
I reached out last weekend to my contact at the Phoenix office of Community and Economic Development because it had been at least 2 years since I last heard from them on the future status of the Regency Garage RFP. I asked if the city had planned to revisit that at some point. The response I received was that they currently have no plans to revisit the RFP. Just wanted to let everyone know.

Meanwhile, Hines (runner-up proposal) has built all kinds of developments in Tempe. Great job City of Phoenix!

combusean Apr 12, 2024 12:20 AM

Tbf, tearing down that very large and serviceable garage seemed like a waste anyways. The replacement cost of the stalls, which would be necessary in any new project, may have screwed with the overall project's return.

muertecaza Apr 12, 2024 12:41 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ASU Diablo (Post 10182866)
Meanwhile, Hines (runner-up proposal) has built all kinds of developments in Tempe. Great job City of Phoenix!

If I'm remembering the right project, Hines even complained at the time that the winning proposal was pie in the sky and would never happen.

ASU Diablo Apr 12, 2024 4:55 PM

Upcoming DVC Agenda for tomorrow’s meeting.
  • Firehouse (1130 N. 1st St) RFP ~ Heather Rasmussen, City of Phoenix CED office
  • Milum Textiles HP update
  • TA for height bonus 1st Ave /Central area update (Z-TA-10-23-7)
  • City of Phoenix budget - discussion of priorities and formalizing input

Curious to learn more about the Firehouse RFP update if anyone attends. Last I recall from this, it was awarded to Poolhouse Group (group behind Gadzooks and Poolboy Taco)

MiEncanto Apr 12, 2024 6:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by muertecaza (Post 10182898)
If I'm remembering the right project, Hines even complained at the time that the winning proposal was pie in the sky and would never happen.

Right, but don't question the tight controls of the RFP process. The apparatchiks at the city know best!

ASU Diablo Apr 12, 2024 9:47 PM

Hines Proposal for Regency Garage RFP
 
For those that wish to open up old wounds LOL

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1kgI...usp=share_link

azliam Apr 12, 2024 9:58 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ASU Diablo (Post 10183634)
For those that wish to open up old wounds LOL

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1kgI...usp=share_link

Yeah, thanks lol. What reason do you think the city would have had for simply dropping the RFP?

CrestedSaguaro Apr 12, 2024 10:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ASU Diablo (Post 10183634)
For those that wish to open up old wounds LOL

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1kgI...usp=share_link

Man, that could've been completed by now. Just a boneheaded decision by the City to not go with Hines. Berger so far, has yet to deliver. No telling when that will break ground on Edith.

ChaseM Apr 13, 2024 6:31 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CrestedSaguaro (Post 10183650)
Man, that could've been completed by now. Just a boneheaded decision by the City to not go with Hines. Berger so far, has yet to deliver. No telling when that will break ground on Edith.

Seriously, how long has that site been fenced off… I’ll be shocked if they actually deliver but I’m not holding my breath!

Chestnut1 Apr 15, 2024 1:51 PM

The PBJ article primarily about Astra mentions other projects Aspirant is working on. I tend to believe these things when there are permits, but we'll see.

Meanwhile, the developer is moving forward on a 25-story apartment tower at the southwest corner of Central Avenue and McDowell Road in Phoenix.

On March 29, the company paid $13 million for the 3.29-acre parcel at 1500 N. Central Ave., across the street from the Phoenix Art Museum, according to Tempe-based real estate database Vizzda LLC.

That $145 million development will include 17,000 square feet of retail space and 325 apartment units, Jacobs said. It's near a light rail station and is next door to The Spaghetti Factory.

The team is also working on a 500-unit apartment tower in downtown Tempe, while continuing to develop build-to-rent communities across the country.


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