![]() |
Will O' Wisp, where are you to make sense of the city's new plans for the trolley extension and the crazy 700ft+ tower they are envisioning for city hall??
https://voiceofsandiego.org/2022/04/...-hub-downtown/ |
Quote:
Also I'm not sure why the Regional Hub is needed but it seems like they have big plans for it (subway line?). |
|
Quote:
San Diego deserves better, we should have a landmark city hall. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
At this point everyone should know that SANDAG is totally broke. The whole Grand Central Station concept relied on some generous developer agreeing to build a massive new office for NAVWAR and a multi-billion dollar transit hub for SANDAG, all for the privilege of being allowed to build a handful of skyscrapers when they could do the same thing less than a mile away in downtown for far less hassle. Sadly, such kindhearted corporate citizens are in short supply these days so there weren't any takers. The Navy got sick of waiting around for its new office, so they gave SANDAG the boot. Not all was lost though, because the process got the Port, the Airport, and MTS talking. And we figured out that the Port has land, the Airport has money, and MTS has a transit system. Truly a match made in heaven. The end result probably isn't going to wow you (although with any luck they'll be a pretty cool observation deck), but it makes far more sense from a cost/benefit perspective. I've said before that airports aren't nearly the ridership generators people think they are, there's little point spending billions and billions connecting them to transit. So when you see the renderings this summer, try and think less about the glorious monument to public transit you've lost and more about how the dollars we save can go towards something that actually gets people out of their cars. Plus, you know, this actually has a chance of getting built. Honestly, I think the only purpose of this "downtown Grand Central Station" is to avoid admitting the NAVWAR Grand Central Station failed. Even if it isn't, it's on a thirty-years-to-never timeline. Allegedly it involves tunneling under half of downtown, which should be neat. I'd expect that skyscraper to get shortened if it ever gets a serious rendering, no way that would get past CALTRANS. As for why this is suddenly in the news now when everything I've talked about has been going on for months? Well, last week Ikhrata got caught using the company card to wine and dine various local bigwigs, and he'd rather see this story when you google "SANDAG" than that one. |
Quote:
Understated in the press release and subsequent articles is that SANDAG is finally going to build a downtown bus layover facility. I always found it odd that MTS lines A St. with parked busses and porta-potties, but I guess it's always been a band-aid until a permanent facility is built. |
Quote:
I think San Diego's APM should get a lot more airport traveling mode share than other air rail links, simply because it is much closer to all the tourist destinations than most other airports are. Of course, APMs are 100% grade separated by nature, and this APM would likely have trains every 4 minutes to Santa Fe Depot, a very good frequency, so ridership should be high. When SANDAG estimates the APM at $4 Billion, it's expensive but you can know the APM's going to be far far better than the crappy Oakland Airport Connector, which gets under 3000 riders pre COVID. Why? Because BART cheaped out, spending only $150 million per mile. The Oakland Airport Connector is only capable of 4.5 minute frequencies max and its trains have no on board motors, rather they're pulled by cables, which means far cheaper construction but also lower top speeds AND requires the trains to stop midway not to pick up any passengers but simply to switch cables! And of course, the Oakland Airport Connector doesn't give you a one seat ride even to Downtown Oakland! By contrast, SANDAG's APM will cost around $750 M per mile, meaning they are NOT building a crappy cable-pulled APM but rather they will build an APM with onboard motors with higher top speeds, higher frequencies (of up to every 100 seconds), and no stopping just to switch cables. Now SANDAG needs to figure a way to expand the APM past the airport to serve Liberty Station, Sports Arena, and NAVWAR. |
They should simply paint the APMs bright red and call it the "Airport Trolley". I don't think the public will care much about what type of rolling stock they're riding on as long as they all feel the same.
|
Quote:
If you want to expand the APM to Liberty Station, Sports Arena, and NAVWAR, you really need a self propelled APM. |
IQHQ RaDD
Blocks 3A, 4A, and 4B are all above ground at the RaDD. The best/most current renders I found of the site are on their commercial real estate advisor's site, check out the brochure. https://retailinsite.net/property/radd/
Their moving fast on construction! The brochure says buildings will be ready for tenant improvements by the end of this year, and move-in ready by Q3 of next year. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
In other news, SDSU breaks ground on the River park. Apparently Rivair Apartments at 7050 Friars Toad across the street from Fashion Valley has been U/C for months. |
Here's a few smaller developments I came across:
I saw online that they started demolishing the buildings directly south of the Sprouts along Park Avenue near North Park. It looks like construction will be underway soon on a new 7-story, 200-unit development called 4135 Park Blvd: https://i0.wp.com/timesofsandiego.co...ark_.jpg?ssl=1 Source Separately, I was browsing Jonathan Segel's website and saw a new project coming soon. It's just described as Air Rights Tower, but it's right behind his 8-story Continental project which finished recently at Cedar/Union in Little Italy. It looks like it would be his tallest building yet. https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/c...g?format=1500w https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/c...pg?format=750w Further afield, I drove by Grantville Station along the 8 and saw a project going up. From some research it looks like a residential development atop the transit station's old parking lot. It's called Union Grantville and will be 250 units (market rate). It appears 150 affordable units will be built shortly after. The units are right against the station: https://i0.wp.com/timesofsandiego.co...aled.jpg?ssl=1 Source |
Quote:
Can anyone get updates on Riverwalk? They said Phase 1 (on Friars Road) should break ground this month. |
Quote:
https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/OY...-no?authuser=0 |
Quote:
Edit: The facebook commenters are PISSED https://www.cbs8.com/article/news/lo...9XRV6_G7Is-BR4 |
Quote:
https://www.reddit.com/r/sandiego/co...taly_receives/ |
Crane Update > 12 Downtown
The RaDD put up another crane on block 2B. We have 12 cranes downtown now and that might be our peak for the near future. The building on RaDD 3A is topped out and Simone looks like it's getting close to max height.
1 Crane - Simone, Alexan Little Italy, Trammell Crow Residential, Union & Ash, https://www.crowholdings.com/alexan-little-italy 0 Cranes - One Broadway Hotel, Manchester Pacific Gateway, Manchester Financial, Broadway & Pacific Hwy, https://www.manchesterpacificgateway.com/ 1 Crane - RaDD Block 2A, IQHQ, https://iqhqreit.com/project/radd/ 2 Cranes - RaDD Block 2B, IQHQ, https://iqhqreit.com/project/radd/ 1 Crane - RaDD Block 3A, IQHQ, https://iqhqreit.com/project/radd/ 1 Crane - RaDD Block 4A, IQHQ, https://iqhqreit.com/project/radd/ 1 Crane - RaDD Block 4B, IQHQ, Harbor Drive & Pacific Hwy, https://iqhqreit.com/project/radd/ 0 Cranes - 8th & B, Bosa, 8th & B 1 Crane - 800 Broadway, CA Ventures, 8th & Broadway 1 Crane - West, Courthouse Commons, Holland Partners, Union & Broadway 1 Crane - Radian, Cisterra, 9th & G, https://www.cisterra.com/radian 0 Cranes - The Lindley, Milano, Toll Brothers, Columbia & Ash 1 Crane - Broadway Towers (Tower 2), Pinnacle International, 11th & Broadway, https://broadwaytowers.com/ 1 Crane - Jefferson Makers Quarter, JPI Development, 15th & Broadway |
All times are GMT. The time now is 5:06 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2023, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.