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I don't think 14 floors would make much of an impact as far as height goes, but it would probably make the skyline noticeably more dense. The CTBUH Height Calculator estimates that it would be 170 feet tall. In my opinion the biggest gap that needs to be filled is the northwest corner of Central and McDowell. |
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Those empty lots being developed are so important to revitalizing the midtown area. For starters, that intersection is a key connection between downtown and midtown being just north of the 10 divide. It's also in the heart of what is supposed to be our museum district, and is right across from the library and park entrance. Dense residential, with some ground level uses that complement these existing cultural amenities might give some life to the area and bring traffic to these places. Lastly, McDowell has some great bones from the 51 to 7th ave. Bad choices - filling these slots up with chains - aside, 7th through 3rd ave is really quite great... Street facing retail, almost always busy... Adding dense, permanent residential down the street will help spread that revitalization east. It won't happen overnight, but I would to see the area around 16th St turn around. It has to be the last remaining strip of classic, urban retail... Some mid rise lofts mixed into the empty lots with some funky shopping and eating offerings throughout would be a great benefit to the central city. We could use some viable urban neighborhoods surrounding downtown. A shame there isn't any transportation connecting the area over to downtown. Selfishly, I think it would be great to see this as Phoenix's gayborhood. Melrose is the default area, but isn't walkable and the residential options are spotty. This strip of retail along McDowell seems ripe for clubs, bars, eateries, salons, and boutiques. I also love the art piece bridging the north and south sides, and wish something similar would be installed on Roosevelt to give a sense of place. Anyway, yes- those lots on Central and McDowell are very important. I thought I heard the lots surrounding CVS were being used for apartments... Is that still in the works? I doubt we will see more than 6 stories, but it's a start... |
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The Southwest Center for HIV/AIDS building is coming along. Unfortunately they didn't restore the original brick façade but it looks much better than it used to.
http://i40.tinypic.com/zim82s.jpg |
I think it is boring and drab.
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I found these renderings at Will Bruder's website. I really like it, especially how it goes right up to the street.
http://i42.tinypic.com/20ti1s9.jpg http://i39.tinypic.com/24kz7ys.jpg http://i44.tinypic.com/23o6s8.jpg |
Interesting. Looks like the NE corner of Central and Willetta, where Blue Fin is.
It looks awfully wide, east to west. I wouldn't want to see the old Suns-Diamondbacks academy building knocked down, its a cool old Valley National Bank and ought to be adaptively reused. But if this project (who knows how real it is, my guess is not very) was built right up against it, that'd be cool. |
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I hate Will Bruder's style, especially for Arizona. Who wants to live in a stainless steel building? And imagine how hot it will be around it, with all the sun reflecting off. Anyway, all of his work is starting to look the same to me. Diversify a little bit Bruder! /end rant.
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From allowing this building to continue to hide the park, to the new dog park that I never see being used (and likely will always be infrequently used) that's surrounded by a sea of ugly gravel, to doing a National search for a designer of the park and saying they were going to get someone 'world class' and then hiring a local firm thats never done a project like this. Its been a huge disappointment. |
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There seem to be a lot more proposals for midrise residential in midtown than downtown these days, no? Broadstone at Central, former Brophy Towers lot, Lofts at Thomas finishing, the infill apartments behind the opera building, and now this Bruder project. Seems interesting as downtown seems to have so much more momentum going for it and walkable amenities/restaurants/etc., whereas Midtown is more or less a ghost town with sporadic places amongst the sea if dirt lots.
I'll always hope for higher, and it seems like rebuilding midtown is an insurmountable challenge, but I like the idea of midtown being a low-key hub of urban residential and more alternative kind of bars and restaurants to complement the museums and cultural amenities, with light rail connecting it to the busier downtown with sports, clubs and big box/chain/tourist-attracting offerings. That's not to say each has to be defined in such black and white terms, I just think it's great that we could have defined urban neighborhoods along the light rail. Ayone know more about the Bruder project? A while back there was an article about a couple who was engaging in some kind of land swap with the City with plans to build apartments near th CVS. Is this the same property? I think the design is perfect for the area, and would look great next to a taller, Onyx-like residential tower. :) |
If anyone wants to accidentally light the SW Institute on fire and erect a grand entrance to Hance in its place, I won't say a word.
Hoover- you summed up the reality of Hance Park's renovation perfectly. Just last week, 4 of my Phoenix-native friends' jaws dropped as I explained the fact that there is a park above the tunnel as we drove to CityScape. It sucks that the City refuses to even try to make it work. |
The Bruder project looks like a parking garage.
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