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It’s gotta be said though that killing one tower won’t actually protect the Warehouse District for the long term. There are going to be plenty of other proposals, and a very good chance that they’re worse than what Hancock is proposing. There’s going to have to be a long game for Warehouse District preservationists, not just a one-and-done our-righteous-anger-will-prevail approach.
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"Keep the Vibe Alive." :tup: |
If we had a real transfer of development rights option in Austin that could allow a land owner to sell the rights to build up to 15:1 FAR (or so) in exchange for keeping the buildings there could be magic here. Sadly, we’re so restrictive with our zoning we simply don’t have tools to allow us to be creative. Still wish it were legal to build the types of buildings we now want to save. During the discussion keep an eye out for folks who will do anything they can to prevent buildings such as these from being built in ~90% of Austin hoping to keep these the way they are. This is a tough case IMO. The area is amazing. So charming and a beacon for so many. Yet the land has wonderful entitlements, the city is desperate for housing and there is a group that wants to sink a ton of $$ into the site. Look forward to more conversation.
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It does raise the same issue though, of "even if this isn't developed" or "even if the plans change to something that everyone likes," it won't necessarily prevent something nearby or in another neighborhood deserving of protection from doing the same thing. Ideally I suppose, Hanover will be able to work something out (perhaps akin to what they've done keeping OCH, but to an even greater extent with other spaces), and other developers in the future will know to follow suit. But, that might be wishful thinking where the ultimate goal is revenue-centric. |
Oilcan Harry's made a post on Facebook about this today:
https://www.facebook.com/OilcanHarry...01689416546374 Concerning the redevelopment of Oilcan Harry’s: We truly appreciate the overwhelming outreach of concern and support from our community. Ensuring our 4th street family has a safe space has always been our number one goal and it’s amazing to see it paid back, especially when our community feels threatened. Rest assured, our mission is to keep 4th street alive for a long time, and if we navigate these waters correctly, we will succeed. However, in our unique case, we need you to know a historical declaration is NOT the way to do it. The full details of our 4th street block situation are complicated and not publicly well known, but we want everyone to understand that the designation of our building as historic will result in Oilcan Harry’s being forced out of the block in less than 10 years by individuals and factors outside of our control. The building would remain, but we will have been forced out and what fills the space would not be LGBTQ owned. The block's character would completely change. We are not ok with that, and we must consider our family's survival when planning for the future. While it can be jolting to see Austin changing, especially when it hits so close to home, the reality is in our downtown location we must work with these changing forces if our community wants to continue to have 4th street as place to call home. We have been using our biggest tool, the remaining term on our current lease, as leverage to negotiate a deal that will keep the LGBTQIA+ community on the block for more than 25 years to come. We believe our landlord has found a good development partner in Hanover, and their desire is to keep 4th street as a safe space for our community. With that essential requirement in mind and met, we have come to a basic agreement on terms which will allow for our legacy business to continue on in a blend of historic and new. The effort to declare our building as historic would take away the only leverage tool we have, and so we ask that our community NOT oppose the application at the Landmark Commission on May 4th. Oilcan Harry’s has had its doors open on 4th for over 32 years, and we believe we have a path forward with Hanover, which will keep us and our community on 4th for another 25+ years. We thank all of you again for your outreach and support. It means to world to our entire Oilcan Harry’s family. Scott Neal Managing Member Oilcan Harry's |
That was a voice of reason. I think too many people are focused on the next HLC as the way to preserve the block. The HLC can't do anything to stop projects. The best they can do is initiate Historic Zoning, and they will do that. They already did it for the Iron Bear site. It will ultimately be up to the CC after it goes through the HLC and PC.
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Okay, if this is the best way forward, I won't support historical designation. However, it isn't just OCH (which is wonderful that they feel this will ensure their security), but they aren't the only LGBTQ* business being affected. It would be so much better for Hanover to incorporate the other two as well because at the end of the day, we are still losing two establishments that will not be on or near 4th. Which means less options for what is the heart of the community in Austin. Options that I might add that not that long ago expanded on what we had before, now only to be lost again.. I think the goal should be to persuade Hanover to do what they can to incorporate all affected businesses. We don't need yet another restaurant space when there are empty boarded up restaurants in the area that should be filled. I'm specifically talking about the corner of 3rd and Colorado spot. Or if it has to be a restaurant, then why not an LGBTQ focused/owned restaurant. After all, it will be fronting the rainbow crosswalks and updated flag colors on the electrical box. Actually the street has other painted electrical boxes that build on the fact that 4th is the heart of the gay community in Austin. The street's second name Bettie Naylor. All of which should only solidify the district as extremely important and worth fighting for.
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As I understand it, the other businesses are quite new and signed month to month leases with the full understanding that the property would be redeveloped soon. That probably means they got a deep rent discount and might not be viable at full market rate rent. Lease rates for new build shell construction are almost always going to be higher than older adaptive reuse as well, and they would probably have to pay for the majority of their tenant finish out.
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Additional commercial (night clubs or restaurants) would probably need to be accommodated on the 2nd level, if the garage ramping allows. The remainder of the Colorado frontage appears to be devoted to parking access and loading. Unless they can figure out a way to accommodate them off the alley along with transformers and other back of house requirements, it is unlikely that the Colorado frontage can be 100% pedestrian oriented.
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HLC Staff is recommending Demo of 4th & Colorado based on Hanover's proposal.
https://i.imgur.com/YukAdod.png https://www.austintexas.gov/edims/do....cfm?id=382125 |
Not loving that. It's great that OCH remains, but the other spaces being generic upscale restaurant / wine bar would.be disappointing. I support building this if real nightlife on the ground floor was maintained. I guess that I don't really know how to enforce that though.
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honestly, it looks much better
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They really need a 2nd level to accomodate more nightclub space. Every good bar/club downtown has good patio space which will be nonexistent at the new Oil Cans with this new proposal. They should have space between the roof of the bars and the parking garage to allow for some rooftop outdoor space.
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