Quote:
Originally Posted by combusean
Yeah, NAC is so terrible, what with them helping the very poor and disabled.
Seriously? Check your privilege.
NAC doesn't own the lot fronting Fillmore. That lot has been on and off for sale for at least a decade and nobody's bought it.
Live/work barely works on East Roosevelt St in those units, it's not gonna work here. Construction costs should go to their mission rather than having an empty or impossible to fill storefront.
This comment would have made some sense several years ago when the only type of housing going up was affordable housing. That's not the case today.
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Do you ask anyone who dares to complain about the Westward Ho's use as senior apts to check their privilege?
As far as I knew, this was much more so a place to discuss urban design than to discuss social program and policy. Just because Parsons Center for HIV/AIDS does great work doesn't mean their building destroys downtown's connection to Hance Park. And, just because NAC provides services to Native Americans doesn't mean that the design of their projects are awful. Live/work has been successful all over downtown - Artisan Village is nearly always filled, and Alta Phoenix has had 4/5 spaces leased since being built. Live/work units would help integrate the projects into the neighborhood and provide upward mobility for its residents to own a home and small business. I know, that's a horrible thing to say... design that benefits the neighborhood and the underserved?
Your last comment misses the point entirely. Nearly every modern city dedicates space within their market rate projects for affordable units. It doesn't matter what goes up around the affordable housing downtown; keeping a group of lower socioeconomic class in a secluded development is still seclusion. It still allows whatever challenges the group faced previously to fester, for adjacent property values to drop, and for pedestrians to avoid uninviting monoliths of people who are not like them.
Even if that last point held true, this 2nd project between McKinley and Fillmore will give NAC at least 50% of the real estate on that block. Yea, that's integrated.
How bored are you to rant under the assumption that anyone would come to this place and have negative things to say about the residents of any project? When has that ever been the case? Everyone else gets the benefit of the doubt their critique is toward the architect/developer? Give me a break.