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  #6441  
Old Posted Dec 23, 2019, 6:33 PM
SLCMoosy SLCMoosy is offline
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I thought you folks would get a laugh/groan out of this



edit - fixed link
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  #6442  
Old Posted Dec 23, 2019, 7:58 PM
nushiof nushiof is offline
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Tower 8

Four walls are up in the center of the Tower 8 lot. Elevator shaft should be rising soon.
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Old Posted Dec 23, 2019, 10:09 PM
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LIBERTY SKY

The tower crane is onsite at the Liberty Sky Site.
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Old Posted Dec 24, 2019, 1:49 PM
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Project to Watch: Why the Utah State Prison Looks Like a College

2017 - Correctional News:

SALT LAKE CITY — There’s a “term of art” that continues to emerge in corrections facility design circles — “human scale.” The concept was one of the guiding lights for the design of the new Utah State Prison, scheduled to debut in Salt Lake City
in 2020.

The college campus–like, 4,000-bed facility will be comprised of small units distributed over two floors, replete with windowed doors that open into a shared day room. The units will be aligned with natural light patterns made available by
large windows in a commons area for each bank of units. Locally based GSBS Architects worked with national architecture firm HOK and Miami-based CGL on the design of the project. The main design goal of the new Utah State Prison in
Salt Lake City is to focus on rehabilitation, normalizing day-to-day life for inmates. The approach echoes the tenets of Utah’s Justice Reinvestment Initiative, which launched in 2015 as a means of reducing inmate numbers and recidivism
by “normalizing” the incarceration environment. As a recent article in Utah’s Deseret News put it, the undertaking reflects a “radical theory” in prison design wherein “inmates who live in a normal environment adjust more quickly to normal
life upon release,” and it “begins with architecture.”


The main design goal of the new Utah State Prison in Salt Lake City is to focus on rehabilitation, normalizing day-to-day life for inmates.
Photo Credit: Conceptual Rendering by Prison Relocation Commission

Coupled with improved occupational and educational programs baked into the overall design, the Utah State Prison could be an exemplar of the future of prison design. The trend is, at least in part, precipitated by a couple of factors emerging
across the nation’s prison system.

“Two things are happening — the population is getting older in prisons and you’re dealing with more mental illness,” said Robert Glass, executive vice president and director of planning and design at CGL.

The firm put an emphasis on making “spaces smaller, a little more ‘open’ feeling.” Glass added, “Good colors, good natural light and things, seem to go a long way to help both those populations.”

The design decisions also benefit the staff who have to work with a population that’s shifting from what Glass termed “lighter-custody inmates” who are benefitting from states’ budget-driven early-release programs, to a remaining
population of “harder-custody inmates” that are better managed in “smaller unit subdivisions.”

“You try to reduce the numbers of people you’re dealing with,” said Glass. “The mental illness brings in the type of inmate that can be, day-to-day, a little hard to handle. The older inmates, who are getting some dementia, can also
be hard to handle, so it’s easier in smaller units to handle them.”

Glass added, “Half the battle with these facilities over the years is having staff have a real nice place to come to work. They’re ‘sentenced’ to eight hours a day there, everyday, too.”

Bringing more design-savvy features to the inmate experience also facilitates rehabilitation, said Glass, whose firm is seeing some of the fruits of their labor realized in a recently completed Southern California facility.

“One of the best ones right now is the Las Colinas Detention and Reentry Facility in San Diego,” said Glass, whose team was instrumental in its conception. “They’re doing a remarkable job with the re-entry programs there. That’s a
really open design; it has palm trees inside of it, grassy areas, all sorts of things. I think it’s actually doing two things — the inmates are more successful and I think the staff feels a lot better about working there.”

Throughout these projects, Glass said his firm endeavors to maintain a sense of proportion with the environmental needs of the inmates.

“Really, what we’re trying to do, is keep them low scale. In the mental health facilities, we’re trying to keep them all one level, not even an upper mezzanine level like so many facilities have,” said Glass, who emphasized that these are
normal-scale buildings similar to that of a housing development. “We’re also trying to get more space between them now so that there aren’t tight, narrow corridors or fenced walkways.”

Glass said that there has been little critical blowback for the contemporary design approach. He said that critics, if there are any, are usually more concerned with the cost of managing the inmates.

“The critical blowbacks are just on the cost to run these things nowadays. The cost to incarcerate the inmates is about the same as the cost to go to college now,” said Glass about the annual expenditures incurred by counties and states.
“That’s the push and the impetus now — to get these facilities working better so that people don’t return to prison.”



2018

Low Estimates for Utah State Prison Raises Questions in Press Conference
February 28, 2018 Correctional News CGL, gsbs-architects, HOK, Jim Russell, Utah State Prison

SALT LAKE CITY — State officials are facing scrutiny over a proposed correctional facility — the new Utah State Prison — due to shifting cost estimates. Lawmakers convened in a news conference in February to defend a revised estimate,
which has ballooned from an original figure of $550 million four years ago to $692 million today with intimations that the number could still grow.

A question that loomed throughout the news conference called by the Governor’s Office was whether or not officials intentionally low-balled their initial estimate to win the support of lawmakers. Apparently, an original $860 million estimate
was produced in 2016, subsequent to the state legislature voting to move the prison based on early Prison Relocation estimates that calculated construction costs between $547 million and $683 million. This did not, however, include the
price of the land or other preparations.

By the fall of 2016, however, the Division of Facilities and Construction Management (DFCM), “conducted an exhaustive line-by-line review of the program estimate and reduced it to $700 million,” according to a timeline released on the
state’s website. Using national benchmarks, according to the timeline, the Legislature’s original 2015, $550 million appropriation was intentionally set close to the lowest existing estimates in an attempt to ensure all parties worked in a
fiscally responsible manner and to prevent a creep in the scope of the project.

Jim Russell, who was appointed the director of the DFCM last March, also observed the unique elements of the prison — namely the sheer amount of inmates of varying classifications and genders to be housed in a campus-like, presently
3,600-bed, 130-acre facility — made estimating its costs via comparisons to other prisons difficult. “So there’s not an equal benchmark out there. That’s why estimates have been a little subjective and all over the place,” Russell said
according to a report in the Salt Lake Tribune.

Kristen Cox, executive director of the Governor’s Office of Management and Budget, concurred with Russell and offered that actual costs would not be known until contracts are awarded. Portions of the project are slated to go out to bid by
this fall. That said, costs may still go up due to rising construction prices and inflation.

Utah State Prison Costs Could Still Grow
The timeline also states that the “DFCM anticipates possible appropriation requests in the 2019 general session. Decisions regarding site transition, fixtures, furniture and equipment may also affect final costs.”

Among the issues facing lawmakers is the fact that the prospective prison site is near the Salt Lake City International Airport, which had neither roads no utilities and brought an additional $154 million to the overall costs. Moreover, the
state’s Department of Corrections projects that 400 additional beds will be necessary come 2022, which would be a year after the Utah State Prison completion date. Naturally, expanding the prison to accommodate more inmates will likewise
add to costs and, ironically, be pricier than building a larger prison in the first place.

Salt Lake City-based GSBS Architects worked with national architecture firm HOK and Miami-based CGL on the design of the project, which is intended to be part of the state’s Criminal Justice Reinvestment Initiative to aid in inmate
rehabilitation.



Utah lawmakers eye budget surplus to fund new state prison — The Utah Legislature voted unanimously to allocate $235 million to the construction of a new state prison in Salt Lake City. Sen. Jerry Stevenson, R-Layton, says
lawmakers had already authorized up to $285 million in bonding for the prison relocation project. But new state revenue numbers released Monday show more than $1.3 billion in new state revenue will be available for the next legislative
session, thus, Stevenson says, allowing for a cash payment on construction in lieu of credit. The bill directs $67 million for the project in 2019 and $168 million in 2020. The new prison is estimated to cost $700 million.



2019


Utah State Prison Population Booming - BY KSL - SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — https://www.usnews.com/news/best-sta...-fastest-in-us - Utah's prison
population has grown faster than most states in the past few years, authorities said. The Utah Sentencing Commission saw a dramatic surge in prison population as new crimes and drug violations led to more convictions, KSL-TV reported .
Utah's prison population increased by 4.3% from the end of 2016 to the end of 2017, faster than every state except Idaho at 5.1%, the U.S. Department of Justice said in a report released in April. The average daily inmate population
continued to increase, adding 165 prisoners between August 2018 and July 2019, the Utah Department of Corrections said. "We're seeing more people returning to prison on technical violations and on new crimes that are non-violent petty
crimes, mainly drug use," said Marshall Thompson, Utah Sentencing Commission director. Because there are more inmates, Adult Probation and Parole has to handle larger caseloads, the television station reported. The target is 50 cases
per agent, but the average is currently 65 and has reached as high as 69, probation officers said. Despite the rise, state officials still attribute support to the Justice Reinvestment Initiative reform passed in 2015. "We would be in a full-on
crisis situation right now. We would need to be shipping people to out-of-state, for-profit prisons at a huge expense to the taxpayer, a huge burden to prosecutors, defense counsel, to victims, and to the offenders and their families,"
Thompson said. The prison population was expected to rise with increases to the state's general population, officials said.




By Megan Nelson - https://www.upr.org/post/new-utah-st...-set-open-2022
Five years ago, Utah lawmakers started breaking ground on a new prison facility for inmates currently housed in Draper. The prison facility was built in the early 1950s, outside of town. Now, and after decades of use, it has become
worn and surrounded by new development. Utah Senator Jerry Stevenson explained that with every year, the prison brings on new demands that are becoming harder and harder to accommodate. “It’s just something we have to do
you know," he said. "Facilities wear out, methods for taking care of these kind of things change and become better, and that’s the reasoning were making a move.” In the current prison, the inmates are lacking basic facilities to meet
their needs. Men and women are having to share medical services - sometimes meaning they don’t get their treatment when they need it. Counseling services are limited. And GED and other classes are having to be taught in the hallways.

Utah Senator Lyle Hillyard said that with the risings statistics of returning inmates, they’ve been looking for a change that can give inmates the resources they need to leave prison and not return.“We have a real problem in Utah with a
large number of inmates who are released from prison without adequate training and counseling and help who end up just coming back," Hillyard said. "So that really became the impetus to get something going.”

The prison will be located near the Salt Lake City International Airport and is set to open by June 2022.

Last edited by delts145; Sep 17, 2020 at 11:00 AM.
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  #6445  
Old Posted Dec 25, 2019, 8:27 AM
Blah_Amazing Blah_Amazing is offline
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I saw this article in the SL Trib and I thought I'd post it, even though it's in South Salt Lake and not Salt Lake City proper.
Salt Lake Tribune
South Salt Lake’s Housing Boom Driven by its Transit Lines
12/24/2019
https://www.sltrib.com/news/2019/12/...lakes-housing/

(Rendering courtesy of Newmark Knight Frank) South Salt Lake officials broke ground in October on South City, to be located on the site of the former Granite Mill warehouse 2200 South and Main Street. The project is part of a housing boom in the city could give Salt Lake City's neighbor to the south its first downtown area.

By Tony Semerad
Railways helped turn South Salt Lake’s open fields of mid-20th century into “A City of Industry,” which is one of its nicknames. Trains brought people and businesses that fostered the first neighborhoods. Today, the rails that once shipped lumber, stone blocks and other supplies are light rail and streetcar routes fueling a residential boom.
Since 2015, elected leaders here have approved more than 2,800 new apartments, town homes and other dwellings — mostly located adjacent to TRAX lines and stations. For a built-out suburban city of roughly 25,000 residents spread over just under seven square miles, that’s a big number.

The new spate of apartments and town homes was followed in October by a groundbreaking for a massive new development at the historic Granite Mill site near 2200 South and Main Street — a project that will give South Salt Lake a real shot at building its own downtown just down the street from Salt Lake City’s growing core.

“This is so clearly not the South Salt Lake I grew up in,” said Mayor Cherie Wood, a lifelong resident.

To be called South City, the seven-acre project’s first phase is a six-story, 150,000-square-foot office tower. Software firm PDQ.com and GBS Benefits, a Utah employee-benefits brokerage and consulting company, have signed leases to occupy the new building. The project has been launched after city leaders overhauled zoning rules in 2016 to encourage high-density developments along TRAX lines.

Subsequent phases in the $285 million project, according to investor-developer Dakota Pacific, will bring a 10-story apartment complex wrapped around an 800-stall parking garage, along with stores, more offices and a hotel. It ranks among the largest redevelopments underway in the Salt Lake Valley. Wood said that beyond transit and incentives spurring development, the city’s new growth is born of years of painstaking community building and efforts to shed South Salt Lake’s image as a bland, transient or unsafe place to live.

Likening it to a spoked wheel, the mayor said those efforts have involved more than a decade of trying to reduce crime rates, fortifying after-school and other youth programs, and “giving families a reason to stay and raise kids here.”

“I don't feel like we would have seen as much growth or as much positive change,” Wood said, “if we had not addressed every broken spoke in our wheel that we call community.” South Salt Lake’s upswing in housing and urban growth is also part of a new wave of Utah cities pursuing variations of the same notion: locating higher-density homebuilding — often apartment complexes or town home projects — next to mass transit stops and land around the rail corridors that link them.

Housing density remains controversial in many communities, sometimes pitting the concerns of existing residents against potential newcomers. But there is often more consensus, city and planning officials say, behind locating large housing projects near rail nodes, partly because it can lessen traffic problems.

Major housing projects and a host of smaller developments linked to Utah Transit Authority rail lines are now in progress across the Wasatch Front. In fact, there is now more interest from cities in partnering with UTA on such developments than the agency can handle under state law.

“It’s really astounding to see the amount of transit-oriented development that is happening via market forces and city planning,” said Cameron Diehl, executive director for Utah League of Cities and Towns. Officials at Envision Utah and other regional planning agencies have pushed the idea of high-density housing and retail development next to mass transit for years, not least as a land-use strategy to ease air pollution by reducing vehicle miles. The trend is gaining new momentum now from what officials say is a dire regional need for housing at all price points as Utah’s population mushrooms.

New neighborhoods
To a city eager for housing options, a newly built enclave called Hawthorne — located at about 2800 S. West Temple in South Salt Lake, along a UTA rail corridor — is a win on several fronts. It’s a gated community of 219 stacked flat-style apartments, for rent when town homes are more often for sale. The two-story dwellings are between 1,300 and 2,000 square feet.

The housing project is spread over a 20-acre former industrial site, once home to the Buehner Block Co., purveyors of stone blocks. One top planner for South Salt Lake called Hawthorne “a great opportunity” to bring added housing density — Hawthorne is 15 units per acre — along a TRAX corridor, while also adding to the city’s network of open spaces.

“Large tracts of land rarely become available,” said Alexandra White, manager of the city’s Planning Division. “The project has been extremely successful.” Since city leaders made zoning changes around the S-Line, also known as the Sugarhouse Streetcar line, South Salt Lake’s old patterns of single-story construction have given way to more multistory projects, she said. Several housing developments, such as Hawthorne, have created entire new neighborhoods on what were once manufacturing and industrial sites.

‘One the move’
South Salt Lake’s new downtown development area is framed by stretches of Interstate 15, Interstate 80, State Street and 2100 South. By one estimate, more than a million vehicles move through the city on these arterials every day. The city center also has the valley’s only TRAX station — Central Pointe — that accommodates every rail line run by Utah Transit Authority, including the S-Line. “Developers are being drawn to this area because of the access and connectivity to the rest of the valley,” said White, the city planner.

Real estate brokers say heightened interest in South Salt Lake is also a function of rising demand among residential developers for available land within commuting distance to downtown Salt Lake City. “That’s part of why I’ve never left South Salt Lake,” Wood said. “I can get anywhere in 20 minutes, it feels like.” That easy access to other places is, ironically, part of what is driving development of South Salt Lake’s own distinct downtown center.

In its zoning plan for its downtown district adopted three years ago, the City Council converted a neighborhood previously focused on retail and manufacturing to one allowing high-density projects that combine buildings with a mix of different uses. The plan also created incentives for high-density development near the S-Line, with no caps on dwellings per acre or building heights in the downtown district, White said.

When a new WinCo Foods grocery store opened in the district the following year, city officials predicted the area would one day be filled with more than 2,500 new housing units, 1.5 million square feet of retail and office spaces, several parks and a recreational link to Parley’s Trail.

There are other signs that this vision is taking shape. Not far from South City there is a new cluster of breweries and distilleries that have sprung up in old warehouses, including Beehive Distilling, Level Crossing Brewery, Salt Fire and Shades of Pale. The city’s downtown rezone in 2016 and its approach to transit were key to Beehive Distilling’s decision to open in South Salt Lake, said co-owner and head distiller Chris Barlow. “They have a high push for a live-work, walkable center with an urban industrial feel,” Barlow said, “and that made it an area we were interested in.”
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  #6446  
Old Posted Dec 26, 2019, 6:11 AM
bob rulz bob rulz is offline
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It's good to see density in the inner-ring suburbs. Between this, Millcreek building a city center near Brickyard, and what West Valley City is building around their "downtown", these mature suburbs are really hitting a new phase. Hopefully that urbanist mindset continues making its way further south.
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  #6447  
Old Posted Dec 26, 2019, 7:14 AM
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High school me (around 2000); if you'd told me one day there would be a "Downtown West Valley," I would have laughed. 35th and 27th was where you went to get sketchy Mexican food, see a dollar movie, and have your car broken into.

Now there's a friggin' mid-rise Embassy Suites. Which is sweet!
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Old Posted Dec 27, 2019, 6:15 AM
JTO JTO is offline
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Saw an excavator knocking down 100yr old buildings today next to the Hong Kong Tea House on 200S. Does anyone know what all is coming down there? A couple of those are pretty cool buildings.
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  #6449  
Old Posted Dec 27, 2019, 11:53 AM
Blah_Amazing Blah_Amazing is offline
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Saw an excavator knocking down 100yr old buildings today next to the Hong Kong Tea House on 200S. Does anyone know what all is coming down there? A couple of those are pretty cool buildings.
I assume that is for the 'Central Station Apartments.'
https://citizenportal.slcgov.com/Cit...howInspection=
It will be a 6 floor building with 65 apartments.



It got some coverage in a June 2019 BSL article: https://www.buildingsaltlake.com/3-r...building-boom/

Quote:
Depot District starting to take off…At what cost?

Preliminary documents for a mixed-income, affordable housing development on a historical street frontage at the Old Greek Town Trax station have been submitted to the city.

Central Station, by Gardner Batt and Architecture Belgique, is planned as a 65-unit, six-story mixed-income building on the site of Thomas Electric Company at 549 West 200 South. While they work with planners, the developers are in line at HAND in Salt Lake City for affordable housing funding.

Central Station mixed-income residential site, at Thomas Electric Co., center (beige). Hong Kong Tea House is visible lower right. To the left is Artspace Bridge (green and red), with Artspace City Center and Macaroni Flats, center-left. SLC RDA owns the vacant lots, center-right, branded Station Center.

Sources tell Building Salt Lake that the project was rejected by the Olene Walker housing fund due to the planned demolition of a historical building. The street is part of the recently-created Warehouse National Historical District.

The designation allows owners to access federal tax credits for preservation and rehabilitation, but doesn’t prevent demolitions of contributing structures, as do the stronger Local historic districts.

Two of the three Artspace projects on the block (Artspace City Center and Macaroni Flats) have taken advantage of the national designation to transition warehouse buildings to living- and commercial spaces.

The historic, 2-story architecture of the “Old Greektown” neighborhood is one of the last pedestrian-scaled environments in Downtown. Yet across the street from Thomas Electric, a number of historic storefronts and warehouses sit vacant. Bringing new residents to the neighborhood is sorely needed.


Some of the historic, vacant storefronts on the north side of 200 South.
The Central Station proposal qualifies for low-income housing tax credits (LIHTC), but has yet to receive them. As currently proposed, Central Station will provide 52 affordable units and 13 market-rate, details of which are yet to be determined. Gardiner Batt envisions a wide range of sizes, from studios to four-bedroom units.

The project will supply 34 parking stalls at ground level in its concrete podium, hidden from the street by common rooms for tenants and their leasing office. According to documents submitted to SLC Planning, the developers are committed to achieving both Enterprise Green Building Certification and an Energy Star rating.
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Old Posted Dec 27, 2019, 7:24 PM
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Wow. I’m surprised block 67 has actually started. They have been digging the foundation and have even done some minor demolition to the west end of the RWP building. I think it was just a small wing or something that they tore down.
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  #6451  
Old Posted Dec 27, 2019, 11:53 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Blah_Amazing View Post
I assume that is for the 'Central Station Apartments.'
https://citizenportal.slcgov.com/Cit...howInspection=
It will be a 6 floor building with 65 apartments.



It got some coverage in a June 2019 BSL article: https://www.buildingsaltlake.com/3-r...building-boom/
Huge bummer to see these go for a generic apartment complex with only six stories. There’s a parking lot right next door, too.
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Old Posted Dec 28, 2019, 9:24 PM
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Huge bummer to see these go for a generic apartment complex with only six stories. There’s a parking lot right next door, too.
Get used to it - it'll be the future of Salt Lake. We're gonna destroy every bit of urban fabric in this city for ugly, generic and uninspired apartment complexes that, in twenty years, will look cheap, shoddy and outdated.

There's no sense of past with Salt Lake. It's a shame, too, because one advantage of the city's stagnant growth out of the 1960s was that they didn't go through bulldozing entire neighborhoods for urban renewal. Instead, most everything remained intact through into the 1990s and 00s. But now that Salt Lake is experiencing the type of growth many other cities saw in the 70s and 80s, they're falling victim to the same mindset that gutted so many of those cities and paved out the old for the new.

The only difference is that this modern urban renewal is marginally better looking. But a good amount of these smaller areas are going to be put on the chopping block until, over time, we realize all the coolness of these older areas have been completely removed from the fabric of the city.

SugarHouse was the firing shot to this - the demolition of those historic storefronts on the corner of 2100 S and Highland (granted, their reclad damaged things ... but absolutely they could have been saved) for a monster of a development that feels woefully oversized for the neighborhood (while also driving out what made SugarHouse so damn unique in the 90s and 00s - specifically shops like The Free Speech Zone, Cockers, the Christian Science Reading Room, Haight Boutique and places like the Bar in SugarHouse, all forced to relocate/close when SuguarHouse underwent its most recent development).

I am a stickler for these old nodes. I think they're unique and once they're gone - they're gone. Salt Lake doesn't have a lot of these areas compared to other cities like Denver and Portland. We're doing our best to do away with 'em and turn them into glorified, and more urban, strip malls.
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Old Posted Dec 28, 2019, 10:01 PM
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Sugar House update

Sorry for no pics but here's a small update.

The office portion of Park Avenue is nearly finished. UofU clinic is open, building no 2 looks ready for move in, Stringham Avenue is open all the way through from 1300 East to Highland, and the foundation is poured for the residential building. With the developments on Wilmington on the other side, Sugar House shopping center looks like a sitting duck for redevelopment soon.

There has been significant progress at Sugarmont the last month, so I assume the developer has worked out their money issues.

Dixon Place looks fully excavated, I'll update once I see some progress with the foundation work.
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Old Posted Dec 28, 2019, 11:55 PM
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Does anyone have current data on SLC population and year over year increases? I don’t think the information I’m pulling up is reliable.
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Old Posted Dec 29, 2019, 7:00 AM
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A permit for excavation on 170 S W Temple says estimated completion date is 9/30/2022
https://maps.slcgov.com/mws/projects.htm
I'm assuming this has to do with the CCH
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Old Posted Dec 29, 2019, 8:52 AM
Blah_Amazing Blah_Amazing is offline
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A permit for excavation on 170 S W Temple says estimated completion date is 9/30/2022
https://maps.slcgov.com/mws/projects.htm
I'm assuming this has to do with the CCH
Probably. I looked up the guy who made the filing for excavation, and he works for Hensel Phelps, which google says is "one of the largest general contractors and construction managers in the United States" and is based in Colorado.
The list of projects they have worked on is enormous, with many of them being towers and large hotels. https://www.henselphelps.com/projects/

Last edited by Blah_Amazing; Dec 29, 2019 at 10:07 AM.
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Old Posted Dec 30, 2019, 3:28 AM
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Quote:
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A permit for excavation on 170 S W Temple says estimated completion date is 9/30/2022
https://maps.slcgov.com/mws/projects.htm
I'm assuming this has to do with the CCH
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Old Posted Dec 30, 2019, 3:40 AM
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Old Posted Dec 30, 2019, 5:17 PM
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Today they had the ceremonial ground breaking for the first phase of the Violin School Commons, the Magnolia. So another major project is getting underway.

There are now full construction crews at work on the Birdie site as well. So that one has finally actually broken ground (as opposed to the ground breaking ceremony, which was months ago).
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Old Posted Dec 30, 2019, 11:10 PM
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Today they had the ceremonial ground breaking for the first phase of the Violin School Commons, the Magnolia. So another major project is getting underway.

There are now full construction crews at work on the Birdie site as well. So that one has finally actually broken ground (as opposed to the ground breaking ceremony, which was months ago).
I walked by there the other day and saw a development company banner up and thought something may be happening soon. That Makes The Birdie, The Exchange, The Broadway, The Magnolia and the nearly complete Quattro all going up in just a couple blocks of each other.

Plus The Morton is about 1/3 full and Moda Luxe appears to preparing the buildings for demo in the near future. Lots of infill in that area.
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