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Meh, 7 stories is a copout for that corner--that's one of the most signature intersections in Phoenix.
The previous cornerstone at camelback project was something like 400', which ran into a lot of opposition, but I'd like to see something 250' to endcap the skyline. |
not so fast on Barnes and Noble
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Sean is exactly correct. Seven stories is way to low for this premiere spot. The last proposal had to have been 10 years ago and many of the residents have probably turned over. Such is the norm in Phoenix. The Mayor and Council should have let another tall proposal come to the forefront and then deal with the push back afterward. |
The seven story proposal is not for the whole corner, just the odd shaped piece along the light rail. The rest of the corner is owned by the group that submitted the proposal however nothing new has been proposed for that lot.
The seven stories actually makes decent sense, the Omninet proposal on the other side of the light rail tracks was five stories. They may have a plan to step this up in height as they get further from the neighborhood closer to the intersection. Just a thought... |
If they were opposed to 400', what makes you think they will be thrilled by 250'? Just because some of the residents (probably well under 50%) have left, doesn't mean that all have. Also, it doesn't mean that the new residents won't oppose a 250' project. Come on people, use common sense.
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My understanding is Cornerstone owns the entire corner (empty lot) and is proposing a development there which is potentially unrelated to the city's recent RFP on the piece that currently serves as a bus pull-through. |
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Right that's what I thought.
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http://pdf.leeazmail.com/pdfs/file=tmpC49A.pdf |
Phoenix RFP'd the lot because there's not going to be a transit center there anymore.
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Secondly, the site was already approved for 250'. http://archive.azcentral.com/communi...ntral1016.html |
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Also, I don't see any way that narrow sliver of land could fit an apartment building. The only scenario that makes sense to me is for the same developer to develop both the city-owned and privately-owned land as one project. |
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The transit center parcel alone is only 27,353 SF which is about a sixth of an acre. That is from Maricopa County Parcel Maps. So were the figures I quoted for the remaining parcels above. There was never a possibility of building a large building on the transit center parcel alone. All the land on the corner totals 2.29 acres.
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https://www.google.com/webhp?sourcei...e=UTF-8#q=acre |
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Don't know if this link has been posted on here before, but it's new to me. It's from the ABI Multifamily website and has an interactive map of all multifamily construction activity (50+ unit properties) in the Phoenix-MSA. It's updated quarterly, so this is from the 1st quarter of 2016.
It's everything from low- to high-rise residential for the entire valley, which is why I put it here, but mods feel free to move it to one of the other Phoenix development threads if it's more appropriate there. http://abimultifamily.com/abinsight-...eline-1q-2016/ |
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