HomeDiagramsDatabaseMapsForum About
     

Go Back   SkyscraperPage Forum > Global Projects & Construction > City Compilations


Reply

 
Thread Tools Display Modes
     
     
  #8781  
Old Posted Jun 17, 2024, 3:46 PM
delts145's Avatar
delts145 delts145 is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Downtown Los Angeles
Posts: 19,475
Update, Downtown Adj. - Larry Miller group adds more property near planned MLB site

Taylor Anderson Reporting for BuildingSaltLake.com - Full Article @ https://buildingsaltlake.com/larry-m...nned-mlb-site/



The Larry H. Miller Company now controls at least an additional 18.7 acres of land just steps from where it hopes to build a Major League Baseball stadium...

...The firm quickly moved to grab several parcels of the remaining land that isn’t owned by Rocky Mountain Power, a subsidiary owned by Warren Buffett’s conglomerate.

Its holdings now include the site of a former Ramada Inn, which the Miller group picked up via a long-term lease, a corner that was once slated to become a Starbucks drive-thru, and a former freight logistics hub.

All told, the Miller Group is now the second-largest landholder in what has been branded the Power District, and there’s one remaining property that could come up for sale soon.

Building Salt Lake reported on Jan. 12 that the Millers had recently bought the 12 acres that had been home to the ABF Freight shipping and logistics hub at 55 S. Redwood Rd. Two weeks later, on Jan. 29, the Millers signed an agreement with Keith Warburton to take over his $5.7 million long-term ground lease of a site once home to a Ramada Inn, county records show...

...The acquisitions follow the company’s quick moves to reach an apparent agreement with Rocky Mountain Power on carrying out a master plan for the 100 acres known as the Power District and secure a subsidy from the Utah Legislature to build the stadium and attract the team.



Related Article:

Miller Company to invest at least $3.5B in MLB Project on Salt Lake City’s west side

Big League Utah, a broad-based community coalition, believes Utah is the “Future of America’s Pastime.” Like baseball’s brightest stars, Utah is a 5-tool player for its growth, economy, location, sports culture, and quality of life. The coalition has targeted a shovel-ready site for a new MLB ballpark at the 100-acre Rocky Mountain Power District in Salt Lake City.

The Larry H. Miller Company and Miller family unveiled renderings for the Power District, a nearly 100-acre site adjacent to the Utah State Fairpark and the Jordan River, Feb. 15, 2024. Here is an aerial view of the Power District looking east. Courtesy of Larry H. Miller Company

Dennis Romboy For The Deseret News - The Larry H. Miller Company intends to put at least $3.5 billion into a mixed-use development on Salt Lake City’s long-overlooked west side, including a potential Major League Baseball stadium.

The company and the Miller family unveiled renderings and videos Thursday for what they say will be a transformational investment and catalytic project for the city. State and local leaders, including the governor, support the plan.

The Power District development includes the Utah State Fairpark and improvements to the Jordan River. The LHM Company is working with the Fairpark board, Salt Lake City, the Jordan River Commission and the state to incorporate various community master and land-use plans into the project... Full Article @ https://www.deseret.com/utah/2024/2/...ject-west-side


Quote:
Originally Posted by Atlas View Post
.
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #8782  
Old Posted Jun 18, 2024, 12:45 PM
delts145's Avatar
delts145 delts145 is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Downtown Los Angeles
Posts: 19,475
Downtown Update - Developer Hines to give the 60's 'University Club Tower' a Makeover - The Seraph Project


Quote:
Originally Posted by Merewether View Post
For those who keep track of cranes…South Temple just east of State was closed for part of the weekend and there is now a tall crane
for the office-to-apartment conversion of the old University Club tower just east of the Alta Club.
Construction has begun by Hines Global Real Estate to transform the University Club Tower at 136 East South Temple into luxury apartments.
The 24-story Office Tower will be stripped to the core and repurposed as Luxury Residential.



https://www.hines.com/husprf/south-temple-tower


Plans for Office to Luxury Multifamily Tower Conversion in Prime Downtown Location
https://www.hines.com/news/hines-acq...salt-lake-city

SALT LAKE CITY) – Hines, a global real estate firm, today announced the acquisition of South Temple Tower in Salt Lake City, Utah. Serving as its first office-to-residential conversion, Hines plans to embark on the transformation of a 217,000-square-foot office building into a 255-unit luxury multifamily tower. With construction set to begin in 2023, this renovation will include the complete removal of existing office spaces and repurposing of the building for high-quality residential living at a time when the Salt Lake City market is starved for much-needed housing.

To achieve this conversion, Hines will strip the existing office building to its core and shell and repurpose the building structure to create an efficient residential floor plan. After extensive analysis, South Temple Tower met the right requirements needed for a successful conversion process including walkability, natural light, shape of the building, number of potential units and overall floor plan.

The 24-story multifamily tower will feature studios, and one-and-two-bedroom homes, paired with high-quality interior finishes and an expansive amenity offering, designed by Hickock Cole. As part of Hines’ ESG strategy, this adaptive reuse project will reduce embodied carbon by limiting new construction materials including the production of concrete, which can be one of the largest emitters of embodied carbon across the industry. Through the implementation of more efficient mechanical systems once the building is in operation, Hines expects that it will lower the operational carbon emissions of the building over its lifecycle and new residential utilization.

“Downtown Salt Lake City is experiencing immense growth, with Utah having the second-highest population growth in the country over the last decade, and there is an undersupply of housing,” said Dusty Harris, senior managing director of Hines. “As a local resident, I’ve watched the office market shift and the residential market pick up speed since the dawn of the pandemic. Aligning with the company’s core values, Hines is stepping in to fill a need amongst the city’s residents, by delivering a sustainable high-rise product that will be new and highly attractive for this growing market.”

The property sits on one of the city’s most desirable streets in Salt Lake City close to downtown and all of its amenities, Salt Lake Temple, the light rail, City Creek Center, and many major employers. South Temple Tower offers unobstructed views of the city skyline, the Capitol, and The Wasatch Mountains. The acquisition was brokered by Kevin Shannon and Bryce Blanchard of Newmark.



March 25, 2024

Quote:
Taylor Anderson For BuildingSaltLake.com: "Hines Development has recently erected a crane outside the former office tower it plans to convert into high-end apartments on South Temple Downtown.

The Texas-based developer is calling the office-to-residential conversion project “Seraph,” likely in homage to Seraph Young Ford, the first woman to cast a ballot in the United States.

One of several conversion projects in the capital city, Seraph is expected to offer 221 luxury units once it’s complete."


Looking at The South Temple Tower from the east.

Photos By Taylor Anderson of BuildingSaltLake.com @ https://buildingsaltlake.com/downtow...EMAIL_CAMPAIGN


(Hines) Interior rendering of apartment planned for South Temple Tower, part of an office-to-residential remake of 136 E. South Temple in Salt Lake City.



About Hines

Hines is a privately owned global real estate investment firm founded in 1957 with a presence in 285 cities in 28 countries. Hines oversees investment assets under management totaling approximately $90.3 billion¹. In addition, Hines provides third-party property-level services to 373 properties totaling 114.2 million square feet. Historically, Hines has developed, redeveloped or acquired approximately 1,530 properties, totaling over 511 million square feet. The firm currently has more than 198 developments underway around the world. With extensive experience in investments across the risk spectrum and all property types, and a foundational commitment to ESG, Hines is one of the largest and most-respected real estate organizations in the world. Visit www.hines.com for more information. ¹Includes both the global Hines organization as well as RIA AUM as of December 31, 2021.


Hines - https://www.hines.com/husprf/south-temple-tower



June 13, 2024


Photo By Paniolo Man

.
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #8783  
Old Posted Jun 18, 2024, 5:13 PM
delts145's Avatar
delts145 delts145 is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Downtown Los Angeles
Posts: 19,475
Salt Lake City's Eastern Bench, University of Utah - Spencer Fox Eccles School Of Medicine - Under Construction


Quote:
"I have long believed that no state or region can become truly great without a world-class medical center at its nucleus," George S. Eccles said. "When completed, this facility will help ensure the university provides the highest quality medical education for the doctors who serve Utah and the entire Intermountain West."
The University of Utah broke ground in October 2022 on the new state-of-the-art home for the Spencer Fox Eccles School of Medicine. The new 185,000-square-foot building will become the hub of the university’s nationally recognized health sciences campus. The facilities will accelerate the school’s ability to provide the highest quality medical education, advanced research, and patient care. The $185 million facility has been made possible, in part, by funds from a landmark gift of $110 million from the George S. and Dolores Doré Eccles Foundation and the Nora Eccles Treadwell Foundation. The gift provides support not only for the building but also for medical education programs and cardiovascular research.

University of Utah Health is the only academic medical center in the Mountain West, providing patient care for nearly 10% of the geographic area of the continental United States. The construction of the medical education building is expected to drive the most critical evolution in the medical school’s history and be used across three primary areas: education, research, and clinical care.




June 18, 2023









Photos By Paniolo Man


Recently Released Renderings


















Yazdani Studio @ http://yazdanistudio.com/portfolio/u...sonde-studios/



Posted September 16, 2023


Quote:
Originally Posted by Paniolo Man View Post
Abatement of the old School Of Medicine to begin next month followed by demolition in the spring.


November 10, 2023



Photo By Paniolo Man



December 10, 2023



Photo By Paniolo Man



March 13, 2024

Quote:
Reaveley Engineers - Up close and personal with The University of Utah Spencer Fox Eccles School of Medicine! We recently visited the site of the future 185,000-square-foot building, set to be the heartbeat of the university's renowned health sciences campus. With the University of Utah Health already setting standards by serving nearly 10% of the continental US, the progress on this monumental project signals a transformative era in the medical school's history. Get ready for a future where education, research, and clinical care seamlessly merge to shape the next generation of healthcare excellence. VCBO Architecture & Jacobsen Construction





Photos By Revelely Engineers @ https://www.facebook.com/search/top?...n&locale=es_LA




April 7, 2024






Photos By Jacobsen Construction @ https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid...68387958627884



June 4 thru 11, 2024

Jacobsen Celebrates Milestone at University Of Utah

Jacobsen Construction and the University of Utah recently celebrated its work on the new Spencer Fox Eccles School of Medicine building — valued at $185 million — with a beam "topping off" ceremony for the new teaching, training and research facility. The eight-story facility is located on the hillside in the heart of the University of Utah Health campus and will replace the old School of Medicine facility that was built in the 1960s.

Photo courtesy of Jacobsen Constructionhttps://www.constructionequipmentguide.com/jacobsen-celebrates-milestone-at-university-of-utah/64996?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=facebook

ConstructionEquipmentGuide.com - Full Article @ https://www.constructionequipmentgui...edium=facebook

...acobsen Construction, the lead contractor of the project, hoisted the final beam into place on the new building on June 4, alongside Spencer Fox Eccles (the school's namesake), University of Utah President Taylor Randall and other university officials.

The building is scheduled to open in 2026.

"Getting to this point has been the result of a lot of methodical planning and hard work by everyone involved in the project," said Chris Field, vice president and project executive of Jacobsen Construction. "It's a milestone well worth celebrating. A lot of work remains, but we already have a glimpse of the university's brilliant vision taking shape, step by step, and it's inspiring to be a part of it...

...The design partners on this project are Salt Lake City-based VCBO Architecture and Yazdani Studio, a national firm headquartered in Los Angeles.

The new building encompasses 211,457-sq.-ft. and will consist of a high-tech anatomy lab, tailored classrooms, an advanced simulation center, collaborative spaces and conference auditoriums that will serve the 500-plus students in the university's prestigious medical program...

Challenges

"Generally, every utility that feeds the hospital was running through the footprint of this site," Field said in an interview with Engineering News Record. "Crews spent about one year and $40 million relocating those critical utilities to ‘make a fresh site.' That work, along with much of the structural concrete, is now complete. The silhouette of the building is becoming more visible as the steel continues to rise up. It's literally ... touching three buildings."

Executing the project on an active campus is another current challenge for Jacobsen and its trade partners. Continuous noise and vibration monitoring and regular meetings with managers of adjacent buildings help reduce impacts to the critical health care activities. Onsite crews maintain a constant vigilance of redirecting and keeping pedestrians away from the site...



Today we enjoyed the privilege of joining Spencer Fox Eccles, the namesake of the new School of Medicine building at the University of Utah, to celebrate the completion of structural steel work on the facility.
“This remarkable building and the transformational programs it will house will further distinguish the University of Utah as a national model for excellence in medical education and health care,” said Mr. Eccles, one of Utah's leading philanthropists.


Jacobsen Construction, Celebrating 100 years - https://www.facebook.com/search/top?...n&locale=es_LA

.
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #8784  
Old Posted Jun 19, 2024, 1:32 PM
delts145's Avatar
delts145 delts145 is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Downtown Los Angeles
Posts: 19,475
Southern Metro Update - LIVE CAM SHOTS OF TODAY - B.Y.U. Provo Campus - New Harris Fine Arts Center

Today's LIVE STREAMS From 3 Perspectives

https://cfac.byu.edu/arts-building


The New Fine Arts Building will also host academic spaces, galleries, performance spaces, media viewing rooms, a cinema and a production studio. The other current occupant of the HFAC — the School of Music — has moved to the new music building.

“The arts and music programs are beacons of excellence for the university,” said Shane Reese, BYU academic vice president, in the release. “We look forward to these two new beautiful buildings, which will accentuate the amazing talents of our students, faculty and staff who work in that college.”

The arts building will house a large collaborative hub for department of design students as well as multiple art and design galleries. There will also be a combination lobby and student gathering space.

A six-station lactation room will accommodate students and their families as well as patrons.

“The new building will create proximity and more opportunities for collaboration and student mentoring,” said Ed Adams, dean of the College of Fine Arts and Communications. “Our faculty and staff are now spread over five floors and are located at the far ends of the Harris Fine Arts Center from each other.”

The project is expected to be completed toward the end of 2025.

Big D Construction has been selected as the general contractor for the project, with HKS Architects as the architecture firm.

The college will temporarily occupy the former Provo High School, located on University Avenue, while the new arts building is being constructed.

The HFAC was dedicated in 1965 and houses four of the college’s six academic units. The newly completed School of Music, which also used the building has moved into the new music building upon its completion at the end of 2022.



Renderings of the new Arts Center currently beginning construction





https://universe.byu.edu/2022/06/06/...-replace-hfac/



May 2024











Photos By Emma Carson @ https://cfac.byu.edu/arts-building



June 2024











Photos By Emma Carson @ https://cfac.byu.edu/arts-building

.

Last edited by delts145; Jun 19, 2024 at 1:47 PM.
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #8785  
Old Posted Jun 19, 2024, 2:59 PM
delts145's Avatar
delts145 delts145 is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Downtown Los Angeles
Posts: 19,475
Southern Metro - Intermountain Healthcare - Lehi Campus
Timeline Construction Highlights on The Metro Wasatch Front's Newly Completed Second Primary Children’s Hospital.





By Daedan Olander for the Deseret News - https://www.deseret.com/utah/2020/11...groundbreaking

...Situated in the heart of Utah County, one of America's fastest growing areas, Lehi was chosen specifically to provide quick access for the thousands of families that live there, like the Partidas.

“Having this new Primary Children’s will be amazing, not only for us for follow-ups and things that she may need in the future, surgeries and revisions, but for other families that might be going through the same thing,” Jacob Partida said. “You know, every time you see that helicopter of Life Flight, somebody’s story begins.”

The five-story hospital will be equipped with a medical-surgical unit, pediatric and surgical newborn intensive care units, an in-patient behavioral health unit and an observation unit adjacent to the emergency department, said Lisa Paletta, administrator of the Lehi campus...




Construction progresses on a second Intermountain Primary Children’s Hospital campus in Lehi on Thursday, Nov. 19, 2020. The campus will address the health care needs of a rapidly growing population in Utah County and an increasing need for specialty pediatric care in the area. The planned 38-acre campus will open in 2023. Laura Seitz, Deseret News


...Building the 38-acre campus, hospital, and medical office will cost an estimated $335 million, Paletta said. The second Primary Children’s location is part of Intermountain’s plan to build the nation’s model health system for children, which it announced in January. Intermountain has pledged $250 million to see the goal through. Aside from opening the new campus, Intermountain plans to add an advanced fetal care center, an augmented Level 4 Neonatal Intensive Care Unit, and an expanded cancer treatment center. It also hopes to extend its pediatric care network to offer better virtual services, as well as implement programs to help children with their mental and behavioral health. Intermountain estimates the total cost will be around $500 million...


June/July 2021



Final Beam Celebration






October 22, 2022

Current state of hospital on October 22, 2022


Primary Children's Hospital caregivers celebrate construction progress







July 10, 2023

Lehi Primary Children’s exteriors complete; construction on schedule


By Skylar Beltran for the Lehi Free Press @ https://lehifreepress.com/2023/07/10...n-on-schedule/

The new Primary Children’s Hospital, a community focal point in Lehi’s west side, has taken shape in Holbrook Farms off 2100 North. The exteriors of the 38-acre five-story hospital and three-story medical office building, totaling 486,000 square feet, are completed, and construction has moved inside. Officials anticipate the complex’s completion in November 2023 and plan to accept patients in early 2024...

Lehi Free Press

... Recently installed features on the campus include:

– A helipad to support the safe transfer of children needing urgent care in the full-service trauma center. X-ray machines will be included in trauma bays so patients can be diagnosed and treated quickly and efficiently.

– Sophie’s Place music therapy room. Sophie’s Place is a dedicated specialty music therapy room that originated at Primary Children’s Salt Lake City campus. This concept has been replicated in 10 children’s hospitals nationwide. Sophie’s Place is celebrating its 10th anniversary this summer.

– Fun, colorful lighting in every patient room that kids can operate themselves. For instance, if their favorite color is purple, they can turn on purple footlights to light up their walls. This feature helps children express themselves, feel at ease, enjoy a fun distraction and have some control over their environment.



Lehi Free Press

The Lehi hospital will include trauma and emergency services, a surgical floor, pediatric intensive care, newborn intensive care, behavior health and observation beds. The medical offices will include outpatient services, sleep study facilities, laboratory services and rehabilitation services. Other amenities include a Ronald McDonald suite for parents, multiple children’s play areas, a conference center and outdoor public space. The campus will also have food services and a gift shop...







January 12, 2024

Primary Children’s Hospital in Lehi to open in February, tours available


Visit PrimaryPromise.org to make your tour reservation.

Lehi Free Press - By Skylar Beltran - Full Article @ https://lehifreepress.com/2024/01/12...urs-available/

Monday, February 12 will be a historic day for children’s healthcare in Utah, and for Lehi City, as Intermountain Primary Children’s Hospital in Lehi opens its doors to patients.

The 38-acre Miller Family Campus brings the first comprehensive children’s hospital and outpatient services based in Utah County. It will offer nearly all the same world-class specialty pediatric services patients receive at the Primary Children’s Hospital campus in Salt Lake City.

The public is invited to tour the Primary Children’s Hospital, Larry H. and Gail Miller Family Campus, at a special event, Saturday, February 3. Tour reservations are strongly encouraged and may be made at PrimaryPromise.org.

The Miller Family Campus is part of Intermountain Health’s Primary Promise to build the nation’s model health system for children by strengthening Primary Children’s Hospital, extending pediatric excellence with care closer to home, and addressing the emerging needs of a rapidly growing pediatric population throughout the region.

This multi-faceted plan requires an investment of at least $600 million in children’s health, shared by Intermountain Health and community philanthropic support...

...The Miller Family Campus includes an Outpatient Center, a medical office building, and a five-story, 66-bed, 486,000-square-foot Primary Children’s Hospital, where medical staff will be fully integrated with clinicians at the Salt Lake Campus...




.
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #8786  
Old Posted Jun 20, 2024, 12:57 PM
delts145's Avatar
delts145 delts145 is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Downtown Los Angeles
Posts: 19,475
[IMG]
Southern Metro Updates - What's New At The Provo Medical Technology Campus


Noorda College of Osteopathic Medicine

The Noorda College of Osteopathic Medicine is a state-of-the-art teaching and learning facility under construction in Provo, Utah. As a new educational facility in the region, it will provide critical medical curriculum for students in the Intermountain West. The building facilitates group-based learning and interdisciplinary conversations among faculty and students. Home to the newest in advanced technology, the College will change the way students learn by utilizing ‘Virtual and Augmented Reality’ software. A priority for the student life environment, the building features study pods on each floor, halo lab, simulation lab, anatomy lab, study spaces and student lounge, library, collaborative learning spaces, and faculty and administrative offices.


...“The development of this Medical Education Research Campus will have a profound and positive economic impact on Utah County and the entire state and region,” said Dr. Richard P. Nielsen, founding president/CEO of both the proposed Noorda-COM and RMUoHP. “We are honored to be the first recipients of this funding in the State of Utah and believe it is a testament to our past success and our future promise to all Utahns.”

Upon completion, the development is planned to contain 400,000 square feet of medical education and research space including the proposed Noorda-COM and the affiliated campus of RMUoHP, a combined Noorda-COM and RMUoHP student union, and surgical/research space; 685,000 square feet of multi-family housing consisting of 685 units; and 234,000 square feet of parking structures consisting of 780 stalls.

Noorda-COM (proposed) has been approved to now accept medical student applications for its inaugural class to begin in August 2021. “This bond issuance and our ability to create infrastructure on the campus is important to recruiting students and building awareness with the communities of Utah,” said Dr. John Dougherty, founding dean of Noorda-COM (proposed). “The medical school’s goal is to attract the highest caliber students, including those local students who want to stay in Utah for their medical education.”...https://wasatcheducational.com/tag/n...thic-medicine/



Campus Layout




October 27, 2021

Quote:
Originally Posted by Mountain Skyline View Post
Crews started raising steel the beginning of last week. Sorry for the cellphone photos
Photo By Mountain Skyline



Topping Off Ceremony - December 17th, 2021



[CENTER]Anchor Facility 2023

Quote:
-Norm Wright, President and CEO
The Noorda College of Osteopathic Medicine will be Utah's largest medical scchool and is located in the $400,000,000 Provo Medical Technology Campus currently under construction. This 30-acre campus will include academic & research facilities along with housing. It will be a landmark gateway for Provo




Spring 2024

Noorda College christening new academic building to teach next generation of osteopathic doctors


Jamie Lampros for the Daily Herald - Full Article @ https://www.heraldextra.com/news/loc...athic-doctors/

... the vision for this medical school started about 15 years ago when Dr. Rick Nielsen, who was president at Rocky Mountain University of Health Professions, started talking about the need for another medical school in Utah.”

The building itself was designed to bring in as much natural light as possible. The curves in the architecture have a welcoming feel as well, Wright said. Curves in architectural structures are used to signify comfort and ease and blend in with the surrounding landscape.

The school curriculum uses short, prerecorded video segments. Students work in small groups of three to eight people in on-campus learning pods to go over the learning material. The school has everything from a 23,000-square-foot simulation center and a state-of-the-art anatomy lab, to cadavers and actors who play the part of a patient with a particular disease to help students have real-life, hands-on experience. Approximately 194 students from all over the state and country are accepted to attend the school each year.

Doctors of osteopathic medicine are fully licensed physicians who practice all areas of medicine, from family doctors, hospitalists, surgeons and everything in between. The philosophy of osteopathic medicine is not only to practice traditional medicine, but also to treat the whole person — mind, body and spirit — which includes osteopathic manipulative medicine.

That feature of the curriculum is one thing that attracted Elle Gaudette to applying at Noorda College.

A former Olympian on the aerial ski team, Gaudette said she was captivated by the way team physicians treated her injuries with hands-on care.

“I saw all of the benefits of osteopathic medicine with my own injuries from being on the ski team and the techniques they used,” she said. “I like the fact that osteopathic medicine incorporates other methods besides just using pills alone. Sometimes when you go to the doctor, it’s a quick in and out with a prescription for medicine. And while I know medicine is important in some cases, that just didn’t sit well with me. I wanted to be able to offer additional treatments available to my patients.”

Jacob Warner decided he wanted to be a physician, so he applied to 20 medical schools across the country. He was accepted to 16 of them.

Because he was so impressed with the curriculum at Noorda, he said his decision to attend the Provo medical school was an easy choice.

“I just fell in love with their curriculum and how it’s such an innovative school, and I love the concept of treating the whole person — mind, body and spirit,” he said. “My favorite part of learning here is the structure. Everything is based on self-guided learning in small groups called pods. You learn so much more than sitting in a lecture with 200 other students, and the technology is just amazing.”

McKee said he would like to become a family physician so he can follow families throughout their lives and even continue with multiple generations...



Photo Courtesy of Huntelectric.com





Student doctors practice treating a patient with a heart attack by using a simulator robot at the Noorda College of Osteopathic Medicine in Provo.
(Photo: Cassidy Wixom, KSL.com)






https://www.ksl.com/article/50933791...ative-building


Contd...Noorda Interiors - https://www.mhtn.com/portfolio-item/...thic-medicine/








.

Last edited by delts145; Jun 20, 2024 at 2:01 PM.
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #8787  
Old Posted Jun 20, 2024, 2:12 PM
delts145's Avatar
delts145 delts145 is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Downtown Los Angeles
Posts: 19,475
Southern Metro Updates - What's New At The Provo Medical Technology Campus
Rocky Mountain University of Health Profession's New Headquarters in Provo, Utah


“When you gaze out of our windows, it becomes evident that Rocky Mountain University truly embodies its name,” said President Martin. “With our new headquarters, a visionary leadership team, expanded clinical care, and boundless possibilities on the horizon, RMU is poised to carve an even brighter path forward dedicated to improving the human condition.”

Pictured, The New Headquarters for Rocky Mountain University



A Hub for Advancing Healthcare

“The opening of our headquarters marks a significant milestone in our history,” said Cameron Martin, PhD, President and CEO of RMU. “This state-of-the-art facility has been designed and built to provide first-class education and training. Moreover, it serves as a hub where education, healthcare, and the community come together.”

Present at the ceremony were the three co-founders of RMU, Richard (Rick) P. Nielsen, PT, DHSc, ECS, Michael (Mike) Skurja Jr., PT, DPT, ECS, and Larry Hall, PhD, who collectively expressed their delight at witnessing the institution’s growth and success.

RMU was founded in 1998 with the mission to educate and prepare healthcare professionals with a focus on outcomes-oriented, evidence-based practice. Over the years, RMU’s academic programs have been designed to address the evolving needs of the workforce, both within the local community and across the nation. More than 3,700 healthcare professionals have received a first-class education at RMU and are making a positive impact on people’s lives throughout the nation.

Rocky Mountain University expansion plans include the recent re-purpose completion of Building 3 at the Timpanogos Tech Campus, which is located on the same campus adjacent to its new headquarters. This building was RMU’s former headquarters and has now become home to four of the five RMU Health Clinics: the RMU Eye Institute, the Center for Communications Disorders, the RMU Counseling Clinic, and an Occupational Therapy clinic which will also help augment patient load at RMU’s Community Rehabilitation Clinic, which is located at 587 S State, Provo, UT in partnership with Utah County. Additionally, RMU has an Electrophysiology Lab and expanded research capabilities in Building 3 by adding a wet lab in partnership with the Noorda College of Osteopathic Medicine. Now completed, these state-of-the-art clinics will further enhance RMU’s ability to deliver high-quality healthcare and support the diverse needs of the community.


Newly Re-purposed/Completed Multi-Clinic Building 3


.
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #8788  
Old Posted Jun 21, 2024, 2:00 PM
delts145's Avatar
delts145 delts145 is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Downtown Los Angeles
Posts: 19,475
Southern Metro

Robert Redford Sells Iconic Sundance Resort - Will develop a new lodge, additional lifts, double skiable acreage

Expansion Timeline Highlights, With Latest Updates Below


OnTheSnow.com - By Craig Altschul - https://www.onthesnow.com/news/a/637...undance-legacy


Iconic Sundance Resort has new owners. Sundance Resort photo

The Sundance Kid is not a kid anymore. Robert Redford, 84, has sold his unique resort mixing bowl of inspirational culture and outdoor pursuits to a combo of two real estate investment firms with national and international experience in world-class hospitality properties. That experience doesn’t include skiing. No matter. Here’s why:

“Sundance is a uniquely beautiful place,” Bill Jensen, who might be as legendary in the ski industry as Redford is in the movie world, told OnTheSnow.com. “It’s so peaceful, so natural, a totally different feel or vibe than, say, Park City or Vail or Aspen. All the elements are there for us to continue the legacy and expand it.”

Jensen, who left as Telluride’s CEO last summer, has been named a partner and senior adviser at Broadreach Capital Partners, one of the two investment firms. His role will be in strategic planning and positioning, not in day-to-day management (“the resort executive team will stay in place”). Bringing in this U.S. Ski Hall of Famer gives the new owners “instant street cred” and experience.



Investment groups combine

Broadreach, based in Palo Alto, Calif., and Cedar Capital Partners, headquartered in London and New York, combined last month to acquire the iconic Utah resort, named in the 2019 Conde Nast Traveler Readers’ Choice Awards as the number one ski resort in North America.

The synergy between the two investment firms starts with Broadreach Managing Partner Philip (“Flip”) Maritz, who is also a senior adviser to Cedar. Redford and Maritz first discussed a sale almost two decades ago, but Redford wasn’t ready to pass the torch yet. “I had been searching for years for the right people to take it to the next level, so that I could take that weight off my shoulders and enjoy my life," Redford told the Associated Press at the time of the sale. “I gave it some time, and kept questioning him and pushing him. His answers held up. So I said, ‘OK, this is the time and I think this is the right guy.’”

The sale price was not disclosed, but as Maritz told Utah media, It wasn’t all about the money. “He was more concerned about legacy, stewardship, fit, philosophy.”

The portfolios of both firms are impressive, with Broadreach having redeveloped iconic hotels such as The Carlyle in Manhattan; the Fairmont San Francisco; the Biltmore in Santa Barbara; Four Seasons hotels in Toronto, Houston, Austin, and in the West Indies. The extensive Cedar portfolio includes the Monte Carlo Grand in Monaco and The Savoy in London.

The sale does not include Redford’s other assets and Sundance projects including the Sundance Institute, the Sundance Film Festival, Sundance Catalog, Sundance TV or the Redford Center. The resort will continue to host workshops and events organized by those entities. Redford also announced his family has put 300 acres at the base of Mt. Timpanogas, in an area popular with cross-country skiers, into the Redford Family Elk Meadows Preserve in partnership with Utah Open Lands.

“But, don’t be fooled,” Ben Leahy, Cedar managing director and a lifelong skier, told us. “We see Sundance in a different category than all these luxury places. Sundance is all about what nature created.”



The Jensen factor



Bill Jensen, Ski industry icon advises on resort icon

Jensen’s 47-year ski industry career began as a “liftie” at Mammoth in the 1970s and moved on from there to the highest-level executive roles at Intrawest (now Alterra), Vail, Sunday River, Northstar, Breckenridge, Whistler and Telluride. His track record and quiet demeanor has made him a well-liked and respected leader.

He told us he met ‘Flip’ Maritz about 20 years ago during his tenure as Vail’s chief operating officer. Maritz has a home in Vail. Jensen said he signed on as a partner with Broadreach to bring a strategic vision and positioning for the future of Sundance, particularly when it comes to its winter life as a ski resort.

The summer experience at the resort includes the Sundance Institute from May to July, but the entire season invites guests to choose a variety of outdoor adventures. The resort website puts it like this: “Bike, hike, ride a horse, raft a river, or catch a fish. Stroll through a shady aspen grove, wade in a cold mountain stream, enjoy our private park - The Hollow. In Sundance, Utah you can be more than a human being, you can be a human doing!” Basically, the idea is to offer an adult summer camp, Maritz says.

But in winter, activity shifts to 12,000-foot Mt. Timpanogas, the behemoth in Provo Canyon, where the resort sits peacefully in the North Fork. Top elevation of the ski service area is 8,250. The 42 ski runs are spread over 450 acres of steep bowls for advanced skiers and groomed slopes for beginners and intermediates.

Jensen told us his group intends to invest in the resort infrastructure by doubling the available ski terrain to 850 acres and adding in more novice territory. The plan is to add three new lifts, replacing one with a high-speed detachable quad, as well as increasing skier services and expanding parking.


A new village lodge


He said building a 50 to75-room lodge in the village is also on the drawing board as that’s particularly important for conference business. A continued commitment to sustainability in all its forms is a given as part of the sale.

Sundance long has been popular with local Utah County skiers where Provo is the largest city and the home of Brigham Young University (BYU).

Jensen said the county will be a major focus for growth in skier numbers. Utah County’s population has jumped by double digit percentage growth every year since 2010. Sundance will continue to lure the destination vacationer as well as skiers taking a day of their ski week at the Park City resorts and making the 45-minute drive to experience Sundance. Salt Lake City is less than an hour away.

So, the memorable quote from Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid – “who are those guys?”- has a good answer. “Those guys” appear to be ready to do exactly as Redford has envisioned for the future of Sundance, all the while taking it to that new level.

As Jensen puts it: “There aren’t many brands like this in the ski world.”




UPDATES FOR THE 2024/25 SEASON


Southern Metro - Sundance Mountain Resort Breaks Ground for The Inn at Sundance and Debuts Act II of It’s Expansion


By Ian Wood, June 14th - Full Article @ https://unofficialnetworks.com/2024/...tel-expansion/

...Sundance Mountain Resort has announced Act Two, which is a slew of projects that the ownership has done since acquiring the mountain, and the next steps of their plan...

...The much-anticipated flagship project of our Act II era—is a 63-room hotel in our base village. The Inn at Sundance is in the works. Modern and western, rugged yet refined, the Inn will span two buildings to ensure it doesn’t stand higher than the tallest surrounding tree. Designed to serve as a cozy home away from home, it will include a comfortable “Living Room” lounge, a ski locker “Mud Room,” and a wrap-around porch deck providing ample indoor-outdoor hangout time. Ski-in/ski-out access means mountain adventure is always close at hand, with a Mt. Timpanogos sunrise starting every day off on the right foot.



On Friday, March 13th, Sundance Mountain Resort announced that The Springs is now open. This space features a large relaxation spa, two hot tubs, and an outdoor shower, giving guests an opportunity to chill out after a long day of skiing or riding. A sauna will be added to the space in the coming months. The Springs will be open year-round and is for lodging guests only.







June 12, 2024
The new 'Inn At Sundance' hotel broke ground on Wednesday June 12. Photo: Sierra Chamberlain - https://townlift.com/2024/06/sundanc...ccessible-inn/


.

Last edited by delts145; Jun 22, 2024 at 12:19 PM.
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #8789  
Old Posted Jun 21, 2024, 2:51 PM
delts145's Avatar
delts145 delts145 is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Downtown Los Angeles
Posts: 19,475
Central Metro East Update - The Sunrise Gondola - Park City, Canyon Village


Toria Barnhart Reporting for the Park Record @ https://www.parkrecord.com/news/sunr...record-roundup






Sunrise Gondola receives the OK from Snyderville Basin Planning Commission with overwhelming community support.
Around 80 letters of support totaling 152 pages were submitted with no opposition received

...Park City Mountain and Canyons Village has recently sealed a development agreement to construct a cutting-edge 10-person gondola. The agreement, signed by the board of trustees of the Canyons Village Management Association (CVMA), marks an important step towards enhancing the mountain experience for visitors.

Dubbed the Sunrise Gondola, this state-of-the-art addition will replace the existing Sunrise lift near the Pendry Hotel. Offering unparalleled convenience, the Sunrise Gondola will transport skiers and riders to the Red Pine Lodge, an ascent of over 1,000 vertical feet situated near the Saddleback and High Meadow lifts.

The Sunrise Gondola will serve as the third access point from the Canyons base, joining the ranks of the Red Pine Gondola and the Orange Bubble Express. This development is in response to the long wait times experienced on peak days at Canyons due to limited mountain access options.

With an estimated cost of $27 million, the ambitious project will see the CVMA contribute slightly over $9 million, with Vail Resorts generously covering the remaining funds. Both parties have expressed their enthusiasm for this collaboration and envision the future gondola as a transformative enhancement that will elevate Canyons Village to a world-class destination.

In a joint statement, Park City Mountain and CVMA representatives conveyed their satisfaction in moving forward with this significant investment. They emphasized the positive impact the Sunrise Gondola will have on the Canyons Village experience. They underscored their commitment to partnering to reimagine the resort as a premier global destination.

According to the terms of the agreement, the Sunrise Gondola must be completed within three years of receiving all necessary approvals, including those from the Snyderville Basin Planning Commission. This timeframe ensures a streamlined approach to the project’s execution and paves the way for an efficient realization of the gondola’s construction.

The introduction of the Sunrise Gondola promises a remarkable transformation for Canyons Village. As visitors eagerly await its completion, this new addition will provide improved mountain access and contribute to the resort’s ongoing evolution into an unparalleled destination. Stay tuned for further updates on this exciting project as it progresses toward its grand unveiling.


The Snyderville Basin Planning Commission on Tuesday night unanimously approved a low-impact permit for the Sunrise Gondola. The project will replace the existing Sunrise chair lift with a 10-person gondola. Park Record file photo by David Jackson




The Sunrise Gondola would follow the ridgeline instead, and the cabins wouldn't be suspended as high in the air as they are elsewhere.

https://www.kpcw.org/summit-county/2...recommendation

Rendering By Park City Mountain - Rendering obtained by https://www.kpcw.org/summit-county/2...recommendation


Park City Mountain proposes pulling the Sunrise Gondola farther into Pendry Plaza, making it level with nearby shops and restaurants.

Rendering By Park City Mountain - Rendering obtained by https://www.kpcw.org/summit-county/2...recommendation




June 15, 2024


Park City Mountain is excited to announce its collaboration with CVMA on this transformative project to enhance guest experiences. The project involves replacing the current Sunrise chairlift with a new 10-person gondola to facilitate better circulation and accessibility from Canyons Village to the Red Pine area...

.

Last edited by delts145; Jun 22, 2024 at 12:19 PM.
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #8790  
Old Posted Jun 22, 2024, 12:17 PM
delts145's Avatar
delts145 delts145 is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Downtown Los Angeles
Posts: 19,475
Central Metro, East - Deer Valley’s Bubble Chairlift Project Moving Forward


Deer Valley receives approval for new chairlift, four new trails.


...In May, the Park City Planning Commission approved the proposal by Deer Valley to add a new bubble chairlift and four new trails to Park Peak. This plan which is a part of the Mayflower expansion, faced a challenging approval process. Two main factors delayed the decision until May 22nd: the route most beginners will take to leave the terrain pod and its location in a wildlife corridor. However, Deer Valley was able to coherently explain how their planning process determined how these factors aren’t going to be an issue with this expansion. The original ski-related accessory building, which would house the bubble chairs, was removed from those plans and will be resubmitted for a new conditional-use permit.

Image Credits: Deer Valley


The bubble chairlift got conditional approval, meaning that Deer Valley must comply with a set of standards. Some of these 29 conditions include no fencing, construction will have to occur in a timeframe with the most minimal wildlife disturbance, signage must be put in place for the summertime that warns of potential moose activity, and a biology consultant to visit a few areas after the snow melt that they weren’t able to get to previously.

Image Credit: Deer Valley

Projected skier flow of the new terrain pod around the base terminal.
The Doppelmayr D-Line high-speed six-pack bubble chairlift will have a capacity of 3000 people per hour, be .56 miles long, and feature a vertical rise of around 600 feet. The new chairlift will service mostly beginner terrain and connect Flagstaff Mountain to Park Peak. Ski resorts across the continent are building terrain pods at higher elevations to give novice skiers a memorable experience, and this area will fit the bill for Deer Valley. The bottom terminal will be situated next to the intersection of the Trump and Ontario trails.

Park Peak, a.k.a. the future home of the bubble chairlift.
Construction work will begin this summer, but the actual lift infrastructure will be installed in the summer of 2025. It’s projected to open during the 2025-26 season.


Pictured, Examples of what will be the six-person chairlift at the Deer Valley expansion development

https://www.boston.com/travel/travel...north-america/


.
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #8791  
Old Posted Jun 22, 2024, 12:42 PM
delts145's Avatar
delts145 delts145 is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Downtown Los Angeles
Posts: 19,475
Salt Lake City's Wasatch Front CSA - Multi Family To The Rescue


Judd Bagley for Colliers - Full Article @ https://www.utahbusiness.com/multifa...-options-utah/

...There’s no escaping the eternal economic principle of supply and demand, especially when it comes to property values. Two things the most expensive cities in the world have in common are that people really want to live there (high demand) and that their capacity to accommodate expansion is constrained by strict geographic barriers—usually water or mountains (limited supply).

High-demand cities will always see housing prices increase over time, but housing prices in high-demand cities with limiting geographies follow much steeper growth trajectories.

The Central Metro/Salt Lake Valley area is experiencing a surging demand while wedged between immovable mountains and lakes—has recently become a junior member of that club...

“I never imagined Utah would be where we are right now,” says Brandon Goodman, EVP of investment sales at Colliers Utah. “During COVID-19, young professionals working remotely in primary markets realized they could move here and not only afford a home, but also have incredible access to the kinds of recreation and lifestyle options the group finds so attractive. This produced demand nobody in 2019 could have anticipated, and we weren’t ready. If we keep doing what we’re doing, that demand will never find a pressure relief valve because we’re not a market that can just continue to build horizontally.” ...



The problem is dire enough that the Utah Legislature recently commissioned a study to get a handle on it, and the outcome of that process leads with the warning: “Time is running short to accelerate action on housing policy.”

According to the study, to meet projected demand, Utah must add at least 27,900 new housing units per year for the next 16 years. The only way that’s possible is by increased reliance on high-density, multifamily housing, despite the fact that “cities that prefer single-family homes or low-density zoning can use their authority to stifle multifamily or high-density residential projects.”

“The only way we’ll ever catch up is this kind of fundamental change to the way multifamily gets approved.”
Goodman says this last observation is critical to understanding the lag in getting new units to market.


“It’s not because it takes that long to find financing, buy land and do the actual construction. It’s because of the challenge of securing high-density permitting. That process currently adds years to the process,” Goodman says, blaming two related factors. “First, the places where there’s room to build were originally incorporated as small towns, never expecting they’d become suburbs. Organizationally, they weren’t set up to handle high-density. Second, the city council members who vote on these permits want to get re-elected next year and want to stay on good terms with their neighbors today. They feel a lot of pressure to keep things the way they are.”

Recognizing this, the legislature’s study suggests that a “state-level housing strategy—along with proper incentives and penalties—could better organize decentralized local government decisions toward meaningful targets for housing production. It could also provide important political cover for local leaders who can face intense pressure from constituents who do not want smaller, more affordable housing in their cities.”

Goodman says such a strategy will likely include a mechanism for developers to get up-zoning permit approvals at the state level when their projects have been subject to excessive delay at the municipal level despite being fully compliant.

“The only way we’ll ever catch up is this kind of fundamental change to the way multifamily gets approved,” Goodman says.

As for what this means for commercial developers looking to help Utah better meet multifamily housing demand, Goodman says just as politics is part of the problem at the local level, it will likely prove the solution at the state level.

“The legislature knows that in failing to increase housing supply, there’s more at stake than just higher cost of living. Most of this growth comes from job-related in-migration, and for companies to recruit and grow and keep our economy advancing, we must be able to house these workers affordably,” Goodman says. “Legislators want to get re-elected too, and when it’s understood that our title of the strongest economy in the nation may be at risk, stuff will get done.”

Goodman says he enjoys telling his clients what he thinks the near future will bring.

“I’m telling them to buy as much multifamily land as they can in the next couple of years because the coming changes are going to be so significant,” Goodman says. “Then I tell them to buy smaller parcels of land, assuming they’ll be able to go more vertical than before. We’re going to be able to get densities approved that we never have before, and that gets them especially excited.”


.
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #8792  
Old Posted Yesterday, 2:08 AM
delts145's Avatar
delts145 delts145 is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Downtown Los Angeles
Posts: 19,475
Downtown Update - The Journeyman Project at The Granary District - Construction Begins


Quote:
Originally Posted by Orlando View Post
Awesome news. I drove by both 'The Journeyman and The Embassy Suites project sites and they are BOTH under construction!
MVE Architects: The Journeyman project offers a unique and intriguing approach to living for individuals who are always on the move. The project’s 184 units provide a stationary space for those who are inspired by the world. With beautiful amenity spaces and breathtaking views, the seven-story building will surely entice residents and ramblers alike. The project offers a variety of living options, including studio, 1-bedroom, 2-bedroom, and 1-bedroom with a den, as well as a podium deck with a pool, spa, fitness area, and other amenity spaces that will attract residents.

Quote:
Patrick Foley
Co-Founder & Managing Partner at Lake Union Partners

Thought I would share the latest on some of our work in Salt Lake City. This project we at Lake Union Partners call The Journeyman is located in the Granary District and is adjacent to our recently completed project Campus Salt Lake with EVO. The building will have 180 units of housing over commercial shops. Weathered steel siding with factory awning style windows nicely designed by MVE + Partners, Inc. + interiors by Vida Design Inc. Salt Lake is a great City and they have treated us well. So, I think we will keep doing business there.





Courtesy MVE Architects - https://www.mve-architects.com/projects/journeyman/



February 2, 2024


Quote:
Originally Posted by Atlas View Post

MVE posted a nice update on "Journeyman" in the Granary:

Quote:
Check out the construction progress at Journeyman! Designed by MVE, this project offers a unique and intriguing approach to living for individuals who are always on the move. The project’s 184 units provide a stationary space for those who are inspired by the world. With beautiful amenity spaces and breathtaking views, the seven-story building will surely entice residents and ramblers alike. The project offers a variety of living options, including studio, 1-bedroom, 2-bedroom, and 1-bedroom with a den, as well as a podium deck with a pool, spa, fitness area, and other amenity spaces that will attract residents. The building will include 4,200 sf of retail space tied with the Granary Campus in #SLC.


Courtesy MVE Architects - https://www.mve-architects.com/projects/journeyman/


Downtown Update - The Journeyman Apartments Project - The Granary District


Taylor Anderson Reporting For BuildingSaltLake.com - Full Article @ https://buildingsaltlake.com/next-mi...sion-approval/


The Granary District is on its way to becoming Salt Lake City’s next food and beverage district...The latest project is called 'The Journeyman' apartments. It would be built at 634 South 400 West, immediately north of the Granary Campus.

Journeyman would be a seven-story apartment building with 184 units, most of them studios and one-bedroom units. It would continue adding to the queue of food and beverage options on their way to the Granary as it continues to rapidly change from a largely vacant industrial area into a bustling neighborhood.





May 31, 2014


Photo By Paniolo Man



June 2014










Photos By https://www.kier.org/our-work/multi-...residence-2-2/

.
Reply With Quote
     
     
End
 
 
Reply

Go Back   SkyscraperPage Forum > Global Projects & Construction > City Compilations
Forum Jump



Forum Jump


All times are GMT. The time now is 10:45 PM.

     
SkyscraperPage.com - Archive - Privacy Statement - Top

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.