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We Can Agree on This
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Phoenix will always be a sprawling city. Most cities sprawl including the big cities of the East Coast. This is the reality of today's city. It will sprawl to the edge of Federal lands. It took LA a century to fill-up the LA basin. It has sprawled as far as it possibly can. Phoenix will do the same, but like HX Guy said, DT can also grow simultaneously (and it is). |
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Where I live I can without going out on a major street, even walk or bike to one bank for a credit card payment, Circle K for gas etc. go grocery shopping (Fry's), change my oil and car maintenance, buy auto parts and choose from a couple of fast food places. Within a couple of blocks I can get my plants, flowers, and household needs at Home Depot, shop at Walmart go to two other banks which I use, pay my utility bill, all the fast food choices though other food choices is limited to a Saba's and Rubio's. Northeast Phoenix/Scottsdale/metro area is a "favored" area. What other part of town is served by three freeways? Many of my son's friends live along Pima Road. One, who's mom married her bf from NJ after he sold his business for $4 million and moved out and paid cash for a $1 million home off Pima Road and Carefree. Folks up there could give a rats patooti about transit or sprawl. It's their piece of heaven and they've earned it is how they feel... like it or not. |
Takefive we might know some of the same people. I dated a girl for two years who went to pinnacle and lives on Danbury and 54th. I've got another friend on that same street who went to pvhs.
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Plus you've stimulated some thought and a few comments. My son who's of all of 18 is lucky if he can keep his left elbow straight from his right. To (most of) his friends Downtown is where you go to see a baseball game or maybe to a Sun's game. A couple of year's ago we started coming into the city to find interesting places to eat. We've probably hit 20 or so different restaurants mostly west of the 51 to 35th Ave. and south to Buckeye. Couple of years ago my memory of downtown was from the late 1980's (or earlier). I like to just park somewhere and get out and walk around. Whenever we eat some place we always drive the area, the neighborhoods. One of my kid's "best day's of my life" was spent with his gf and me at Encanto Park. Most of his friends wouldn't think of going there. (I happen to have spent time there with a five-year-old girl, the love of my life (Daddy and daughter) back in the mid-1970's). My son understands his friends, but he now thinks he's discovered a neat secret.... what downtown really is all about. |
Interesting discussion about the Mayo complex. A week ago, I was sitting in the balcony of the Orpheum Theater and winced a little when I heard our new mayor, whose campaign I supported, talk enthusiastically about this development. My gut feeling about it is negative. It's more job sprawl, something that is much worse than residential sprawl. Decentralized living can at least be supported by a hub-and-spoke transit system, but decentralized employment results in suburb-to-suburb commutes that almost always require driving alone.
I'm also highly skeptical of the "better than no Mayo at all" or "better than having it in Scottsdale" arguments. Are we really so desperate that we'll sell our city's soul to land a prestigious employer in a suburban freeway location? While it might be possible to envision Desert Ridge as a "second Downtown" if we already had a robust city core, right now we need to concentrate on improving the existing core before trying to replicate it somewhere else. Whether it's Mayo, USAA, or any other employer, Phoenix needs to be willing to insist on central locations as a condition of any incentive or partnership. That said, if were mayor, I'd probably have talked up the Mayo development as Stanton did during his inaugural address. As many have pointed out, it's something he inherited. He probably couldn't stop it even if he wanted to. Since it's already happening, it makes political sense to embrace it. Remember that Stanton's campaign was least successful in the northern reaches of Phoenix. By touting a major project there in his inaugural address, he can dispel notions that he's only the mayor of Central Phoenix and make it clear that he works for the entire city. |
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Have you been to LA? It's a great city.
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http://www.blogcdn.com/www.luxist.co...m-slider-1.jpg Anschutz Entertainment Group |
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"Parking: 32,000 parking spaces within a 15-minute walk to Farmers Field are already in operation. Traffic: To limit congestion, Farmers Field will utilize four freeways and over 20 interchanges (on/off ramps), and continue to use the successful traffic and parking model employed by STAPLES Center, L.A. LIVE, and the Los Angeles Convention Center." No emphasis whatsoever on transit planning...why, because no one in L.A. uses it. And I mean this place: http://oceanworld.tamu.edu/resources.../LA-smog-2.jpg http://oceanworld.tamu.edu/resources.../LA-smog-1.jpg And http://www.kcet.org/updaily/socal_fo...ot-likely.html |
LOL... Three pics to one. Not fair.
What an Uglie place. |
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http://archplanbaltimore.blogspot.co...nd-sprawl.html |
Nifty link w/ photos of Phoenix.
Not new, but still a fav. |
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There are so many positives from this development and they far outweigh all the negatives. This is a building block for the future of Phoenix and downtown. You'll need law firms and other service companies to support this growth (most of which are concentrated in the downtown core area). On top of that, a big elephant like Mayo can only help in bringing and retaining top intellectual talent. |
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http://www.netsdaily.com/2011/12/29/...arclays-center |
Sunsfan you know la is one of the densest cities in the country right? I'm not a fan of its suburbs either but I'm talking about the city itself.
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Farmer's Field is running into obstacles right now, giving SD time to work on their East Village stadium plan. People are worried the Chargers will bolt to LA, but at least not for another year.
Phoenix is basically making a much small version of LA Live right now with the LED boards and CS office/hotel and USAC. Vicelord John: By some calculations, LA is the densest urban area in America, exceeding NYC metro. PhxSunsFan: Why hate on LA? I would think that Phoenix would be honored to be mentioned alongside a world-class city. I didn't expect false stereotypes of LA from a SSP member. As for traffic, yeah it's heavy and can be bad, but I consistently make it to Marina del Rey in under 2 hours from San Diego. LA smog is usually attributed to water vapor from the Pacific, Hollywood has done a great job portraying this as it ads to the effect and visual appeal of many films. Many LA air monitoring stations are consistently lower than Phoenix and Houston. Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transpo...in_Los_Angeles Quote:
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