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Originally Posted by smallfrie
I think, and I'm generalizing of course (but if you're sensitive I'll qualify it by saying the median UT student) that UT student's families are are so well-off that they have constructed the demand for dormitory developers that their children live as close to campus as possible, in as new a space as possible, and with a pool and and a gym, and in as "safe," a place as possible, and that rent cost doesn't really enter into the equation.
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(I'm a recent grad, FYI, appreciate the leniency but happy to debate) I think that when talking about the median UT student, that's definitely true, but considering the size of UT, there are plenty of lower-income families looking at WC. There's an increased focus on providing affordable (or at least non-luxury) housing in new developments, and SMART housing in these buildings is making being able to live near campus as a lower-income student much more realistic.
Financially, UT and the surrounding area is a huge job center for students, and not having to own a car to be able to go to work, school, etc. is a huge cost savings for those kinds of families. Students *want* to live close to campus, which, I'll give is not usually the determining factor for where they actually end up staying, but it can be a major decision point for students *if* they have the choice to go to other universities (which I would say is likely the case if they're accepted to UT).
Quote:
Originally Posted by smallfrie
"Real retail," I think would be regarded as quite undesirable; a little more "service retail," like a couple of Chipotle-type places or a manicure or tanning salon would be okay, IMO.
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I tend to agree with you with a few exceptions. Obviously, I don't think that a jewelry store or pet supply store would work well within inner-WC. However, I do think there would be demand for some of the bigger box stores or more well-known brands - think HEB or Whole Foods (even maybe something like
the new Costco design, if somehow they could get 18 wheelers to it), or even smoke shops or bodegas like Rio Mart. It's pricy to get food at the Target on Guad, and there's little availability for diverse and/or fresh groceries.
Quote:
Originally Posted by smallfrie
TOD is actually the opposite intent of the WC development, and densification per se is irrelevant. Whether this is consistent with "Urbanism," is of course in the eye of each beholder.
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I guess I would agree that TOD is not the intent of WC, but at the current snapshot, it looks way better than most development outside of downtown/Mueller/Domain. UT and WC encapsulate a major job and education center that is well connected to transit and promotes walking and micromobility, allows for dense multifamily housing, and encourages mixed-use and affordable developments. I'll amend my statement to "I think it's really an example of what good TOD could look like and what densification can do to help the housing crisis". Not perfect by any means, and not what I would call a model case to be repeated, but worthy of some respect, I think.