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I do not get this "We need more parking" mentality of Phoenix. |
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But inst there hard-coded laws about how much parking developers must build per occupant or something? |
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I don't think the preservationists would be complaining on the parking, at least not much. Just the local residents that look out their windows on 3rd, 4th, McKinley, etc. and see the street parking full. |
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In other news, there are updated aerial photos of Phoenix and Tempe on Google Maps. You can see everything under construction. |
Downtown Phoenix district targeted as startup hub
Torn about this proposed "Innovation District". I would've loved the Warehouse District to become an entertainment district and see come cool adaptive reuse projects for restaurants and bars. Still, the district has organically evolved into housing some tech start-ups and other businesses which is a good thing as well. Hopefully this revitalizes the area and brings some housing
http://www.azcentral.com/story/news/...-hub/83249900/ |
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Yes, same people who forced the removal of street parking along Roosevelt are the same ones demanding parking lots and garages despite a city-funded analysis showing a surplus in the thousands. Phoenix should be redeveloping garages like Chase, Regency, and 111 VB, not building new ones.
The 'Innovation District' is exactly what I feared was coming for the Warehouse District; whoring out the low cost of land and buildings to attract 9-5 businesses. Yes, organic growth is more successful than force-fed projection, and the tech businesses already there are great additions. But, the District is a really important piece of Central Phoenix and painting it as a tech hub ignores its potential to house entertainment clusters, its history as an agricultural center, its potential for affordable housing, its ability to hold a multi-modal transit center at Union Station... Also, don't hold your breathe on Legends Entertainment ever becoming an identifiable district. It was a ploy to sell ad space, all of which is horribly tacky and adds nothing to the 'vibe' of the area. At the very least, a Legends Square , Walk of Fame, and/or Museum within the Warehouse District would have given it some legitimacy. |
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As I've said, this essentially solidifies Civic Space as ASU property. The SunCard entry Post Office and now all of its major frontage will be ASU real estate. I would imagine high-end hotels, condos, etc. would have been great with views of the park and would have helped break up the suburban campus. Quote:
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Barnes and Noble is a dying chain. You're too funny sometimes.
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Scaffolding collapsed at Union yesterday due to the strong winds. A car was crushed. No fatalities.
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In other words, The Business Journal has a story this morning about a proposed apartment building at the southwest corner of Central and Camelback. Unfortunately, the article is behind a paywall so I don't know any details beyond the headline. |
Here you go:
EXCLUSIVE: $24M apartment complex proposed for Camelback, Central land A development group wants to build a $24 million, 120-unit, seven-story apartment building on land next to the Metro light rail stop at Camelback Road and Central Avenue. The city of Phoenix owns the land at the southwest corner and asked for development bids earlier this year. One group — called Cornerstone at Central & Camelback LLC — has put in a bid. Cornerstone includes real estate industry veterans Wayne Howard, Reid Butler and Martin Aronson. The group owns some adjacent land. The group has put in a $790,000 cash offer for the land. A city request for proposals pegged a minimum bid price of $788,800. The Cornerstone bid also includes allowing the city to temporarily use some bus lanes and bays on the land and would include community use space such as event space, bicycle and handicapped parking for nearby shops. Cornestone said those bring up the value of its bid to $1.36 million, according to city documents. The Davis Experience architecture firm in Tempe will help design the apartment project. Howard and Aronson could not be reached for comment on the bid. City documents show Butler is a 5 percent partner in the proposed apartments. Apartment rents are expected be between $900 and $2,300 per month, according to Cornerstone plans filed with the city. The land is currently undeveloped and its catty-corner to the refurbished Uptown Plaza. City staff will try to finalize a purchase and development deal which could then be forwarded to the Phoenix City Council this summer. Mike Sunnucks writes about residential and commercial real estate, government, law, sports business and workplace issues. |
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