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I didn't realize it was still 2006 and we had to give low-tier developers like TrueNorth everything they wanted like free alley land for speculative, anti-urban schlock so their shoddy pro-forma pencils out or outright greed is satisfied.
The last thing this city needs is more arrogant developers who think they're somehow doing us a favor by eschewing community involvement and tossing out good design. I like it when their "projects" never materialize or get shot down. |
Enjoy your empty lots, then.
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Mmmhmm.
Nobody stepped up design review for iLuminate, Linear, and the 3rd/Roosevelt development and look at the monolith garbage that got built. I would have traded all of that for Roosevelt Row from before this boom. People had a reason to be out walking around there back then. |
Why do you find issue with those buildings? They've brought hundreds of people into the area and spurred numerous bars, restaurants and shops opening their doors. They've led to jobs in the area. There's activity on the street level now, lots of it.
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Its a strange type of person who is into that kind of neighborhood. |
Some people just like to hate things.
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I really like the looks of Illuminate and Linear, and I have coworkers who live in Illuminate. They're now bicycling to work instead of driving, so that's a huge gain in itself. On a related note, I've used the shaded bike rack at Illuminate several times while eating lunch at the Dressing Room. Broadstone is too big (horizontally, not vertically) for my taste, but I appreciate how it addresses the corner with the new Paz Cantina space. While critics find all sorts of ways to pick apart these buildings, some valid and some not so much, I still see them as a huge net gain for the neighborhood.
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Oh ya, and also, the rooftops at Iluminate and Linear are amazing!
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I don't think anyone posted this. Sounds interesting.
By Brandon Brown - Reporter, Phoenix Business Journal https://www.bizjournals.com/phoenix/...n-phoenix.html Superstition Meadery LLC is looking to expand down in the Valley with a new tasting room and restaurant in a historically designated building in downtown Phoenix...at 1110 E. Washington St.. Superstition Meadery plans to renovate the 3,781-square-foot building, adding more than 1,000 square feet for an outdoor dining area....Owner Jennifer Herbert told the Phoenix Business Journal that she does not expect to break ground until the end of the summer. Herbert owns and operates the meadery with her husband Jeff Herbert . They started the company in 2012. They have a tasting room in a basement in downtown Prescott and a state-of-the-art production facility eight miles away. Superstition Meadery has created a dedicated following in Prescott, but a lot of its fans are not locals and travel to get there. The Phoenix tasting room will differ from Superstition Meadery's Prescott location in that it will have a commercial kitchen so the food menu will be more diverse, Herbert said. The company is also working with a chef to create a menu with mead and cider pairings in mind. |
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The meadery up in Precott is very cool and they seem to do such a great job (I knew next to nothing about Meade before going there up in Prescott, but they seem to know a lot and it was pretty tasty). It's just very expensive and I wonder how a place like that will work in Garfield/Eastlake park/east of downtown. I hope for the best for them. |
I've been thinking for years that building would make a great bar or restaurant. If Mike ever does anything with all the warehouses in that neighborhood it could become a dense concentration of tech jobs. We've been saying Eastlake could become a trendy neighborhood for a long time. Garfield is first, though.
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