Wonderful to see the Alexan breaking ground! It'll help balance with Pinnacle out there. Wish it were a bit taller, but they couldn't with the height limit in the area.
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Drove past the site for this today, and there was some heavy demo work being done (bulldozers, etc.) So I guess there's new activity, and possibly a ground-breaking. Good news, I hope.
http://www.sandiegometro.com/wp-cont...6th-Street.jpg Lennar Project Civic San Diego also approved the design and related permits for Lennar Multifamily Communities’ proposed 21-story tower and five-story mid-rise, mixed-use residential development at 460 16th St. in the East Village. Designed by Carrier Johnson Inc., the development would include 368 studio, one- and two bedroom apartments and about 19,000 square feet of commercial space. Construction would begin early next year. http://www.sandiegometro.com/2015/10...rt-oct-5-2015/ |
Horton Plaza Park is expected to open May 4, 2016, per this article in the SDUT.
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It's not really a park though is it. Calling it a park is a misnomer.
Should have moved the name Horton Square over to this. Or maybe just call it Horton Plaza and start calling the mall, Horton Plaza Mall? Horton Public Square? I dunno man, it just ain't a park if it's just pavers and hardscape. |
Citiplace (Front & Ash)
http://civicsd.com/meetings-and-even...committee.html Nothing to see, really. |
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Here are some renderings of JMI's proposal to turn the Qualcomm stadium site into an educational complex for SDSU/UCSD. Also included in the proposal is a 40,000 seat stadium for SDSU football and expansion MLS soccer franchise.
http://s9.postimg.org/5qi1byzi7/Siterendering.jpg http://s21.postimg.org/3x6wgp0lj/Qualcommsite.jpg Images and story appear in this Union-Tribune article: The Q: A new future post-Chargers? By Roger Showley | 6 a.m. March 6, 2016 For months San Diego has debated the Chargers’ future and lately has focused on a 15-acre downtown site for a new stadium. But a challenge 10 times bigger lies eight miles north: The future of Qualcomm Stadium and its 166-acre site. http://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/...redevelopment/ |
Project Updates
Pinnacle buys Pacific Heights building site
http://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/...building-site/ 11th and A: http://cdn.sandiegouniontrib.com/img...15c2d8bc4ecd52 From the U-T article: "Last year the company opened Pinnacle on the Park, a 46-story, 484-unit rental project at 424 15th St. A spokeswoman said 187 apartments have been rented so far. A twin tower of about the same size is expected to break ground in the next few weeks on the north side of the block." "Pinnacle previously bought and won approval for a 618-unit, two-tower project of up to 32 stories at 11th Avenue and Broadway." "Winslow said it isn’t clear yet whether the Broadway or A Street project will be the next to break ground and if Pinnacle will continue opening its projects as apartments or switch to for-sale condos." Build both at once, I say! Pinnacle @ the Park refresher: http://image.apartmentguide.com/imgr...cd2a59c86/602- 11th and Broadway refresher: http://sandiego.urbdezine.com/files/...y_Drawings.jpg |
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I've seen the low end value of the Q land being in the 300 millions and the higher end being closer to the 600 million mark (depending on the source and how they are interested in it). I'm going to guess SD state is going to expect the city to give them the land on the cheaper side and lower their possible tax base income if the city decided on a different form of development on the site instead of a extended campus. Unless they plan on paying the city a high market value for that land I say screw that and put it out there for something that can actually make money for the city. |
I really wish 11th and Broadway /11th A would get going soon we could really use some height and increased activity in that section of downtown. Also waiting to hear when the 7th/and Broadway project is going to move forward that one is really nice.
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I went to the meeting at new school of architecture this past Saturday. It mainly focused on the bus yard site. There was people from all parts of downtown and bario Logan. Quigley kind of ran the discussion and group proposals were steered away from the stadium idea.
While there was many good ideas and thoughts presented to improve downtown, I kept thinking how out of touch these people were to reality. Maybe if there was a company or university willing to compete with the stadium proposal it would have been a useful meeting. With this proposed Q site development it will be hard to also try to pull ucsd or sdsu into competing with anyone for the downtown location. It was almost like the meeting was a recruitment of ideas in order to start a coalition against the convadium. I wonder if there would be a way to have the street of the stadium (maybe 3-4 stories up as well) office/business/retail like the street level of other buildings. I think that would help with the "dead zone" created by the stadium. I think all these bright minds and ideas at the meeting need to do a better job plugging into reality. Go/no go on the stadium or wait for a different industry to attempt to do what the chargers are doing. It could be 10 years or more before that happens. |
Dual-branded Hilton campus to debut Summer 2016 (Old Fat City site)
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I drove through downtown yesterday - Pacific gate is about 2-3 stories above ground and is looking good. Across the street in Bosa's other lot, they've put up a sample piece of the facade. It looks good, but I did not get any photos unfortunately.
The Rey is hiding in between Vantage Pointe and the Symphony Tower. It's creating a nice dense cluster there, but not too visible from outside downtown. Cladding on the new Courthouse is almost topped out. It looks very nice. |
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Has it topped out yet?
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Even if you had a Uni presence downtown, chances are housing would be so expensive that people (especially students) would have to commute anyway, just as they do to SDSU and UCSD already. The Blue Line to UCSD will be a big game-changer, besides.
It's a sad fact that all the housing built downtown is pretty much only reachable by the well-to-do or the housing voucher folks. I hate the dichotomy, but it is what it is. Even if every remaining block was built with high-density housing, the demand would still be enough to command high prices. Given that student housing rates are higher than average than your typical rental in San Diego, that issue would only be exacerbated by building downtown in a premium locale. That brings me to the stadium. I am not in support of a football stadium, downtown or otherwise. I think the NFL is a scam and cities would do well to stay away from them, but here we are. I think most arguments in favor of a stadium downtown vs. a Uni presence are in favor of getting something ASAP to clean up the area, whether or not there is actual truth to it. The real issue, in my opinion, lies with our core neighborhoods that are so adamantly against raising the housing density that we are forced to build high density downtown only, or to continue sprawl (also a no-no). Something's gotta give, and the NIMBY folks are hoping that people will give up and move out to greener pastures. Yet the rents get higher and higher every year. It's just one big clusterfuck. |
I agree with what one of the articles said that the Q should be scaled down for San Diego State, not replaced by one next door. It's 2016, adaptive reuse of this facility to a smaller one with built in classrooms and athletic facilities shouldn't be that hard.
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The Q is really old and has leaks everywhere.
A new smaller stadium would be better. |
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