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But I'll reserve judgement until renderings are released. Just excited we are able to discuss the potential of another 400'+ tower. |
I would love to see the rendering for this project. It would fill up a pretty big parcel downtown that I feel will fill complete the existing projects around. I’m very intrigued by this project!
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Thanks so much for the digging Crested! Will be interesting to see what evolves from this.
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I wonder what would become of that underground bowling alley.
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They're going to see a LOT of history there. The site has issues with "underground storage tanks" that I'm 99% sure were a speakeasy distillery. When the workers were digging for LRT, they found the tunnel that used to connect it to the Westward Ho.
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But if that's all it takes, then hey...the developer should just apply for a GPLET and build 2-3 towers all at the same time! Problem fixed. :cheers: |
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City of Phoenix HPC voted 4 to 2 in favor of initiating a historic preservation overlay on the City Center Motel (which basically slows down the demo process). Proposed to be built on site is an automated crypto-friendly 7-story luxury hotel in time to be open by SB 2023 (which in no way happens). I remember discussion about a crypto hotel not too long, anyone else remember that? lol from the renderings, everyone though would be by the old Post Office in Civic Space Park. Looks like this was it. Link to the hotel site: https://evaihotels.com https://img1.wsimg.com/isteam/ip/600...s=w:1300,h:800 https://img1.wsimg.com/isteam/ip/600...s=w:1300,h:800 https://img1.wsimg.com/isteam/ip/600...s=w:1300,h:800 https://img1.wsimg.com/isteam/ip/600...s=w:1300,h:800 https://img1.wsimg.com/isteam/ip/600...s=w:1300,h:800 |
This looks much better than the original rendering we saw.
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I wonder if the developer prioritized cheap land. With so many better hotel options in downtown Phoenix, why would future travelers choose this one? I guess it would be downtown Phoenix's nicest hotel west of 2nd Ave, but a Motel 6 get easily get that award first. If this place ever opens its doors to travelers over the next 2 years, I'm not wagering on those doors staying open for long. |
I think you're putting too much thought into it, but I understand your tracking. If they're getting the ROI they want nothing else will matter. People will book the hotel and they'll make money.
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It was on my screen and thought it was the most recent comment. I guess I clicked something old.
The question still remains, though. |
I found the project number for the TSMC site: 20-4636.
I did a quick review of the permits just to get into how damn big this project is. The mass grading and drainage permit was for 813 acres and 2,950,390 cubic yards of soil. If I'm reading this correctly that's about 9,800 of the largest rail cars if all of it was hauled off site, or around 100 full length trains at the least. According to the CES (commercial environmentally sensitive) permit, 449 trees will be taken to nurseries, 2,356 will remain on site, and 4,476 will be sent to the chipper. This project is so complicated that it needs temporary works that need their own very expensive permitting. One of which I've found, a paint shed, is valued at $550,000. A stockpile permit is over $300,000, another $750,000. Imagine paying that much money to store just over 1% of total dirt moved on site in the latter case. I'm reading random things come in at $40, $50 million easy. A separate gas plant, for Linde Gas, a publicly traded company, is mentioned, I don't know how big the operation is going to be but I don't believe they've ever been reported as a supplier. The piping is estimated at $33 million alone. The framing costs alone for FAB 1 are estimated at $113 million, the foundation costs $159 million--skyscrapers downtown don't get that much total cost, let alone for core and shell. A core and shell for the wastewater tunnel is $32 million. A truck building's foundation and an electrical building are both valued at $15 million. The water building's foundation is $62 million. Hundreds of millions are in the permits alone to say nothing of what's left. It's just wild to get an insight of what's going on when all we see is just big cranes and a semi-built steel skeleton. |
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