Quote:
Originally Posted by summersm343
I'm fine with any development that incorporates the roundhouse into a larger overall redevelopment of the block, but keeping the roundhouse as-is with it's surface lots, wall facing Race Street, and overall anti-urban form? No thank you.
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The Roundhouse isn't as antiurban as its detractors make it out to be. I think the condos across the street, the Mint, and the two ginormous Federal buildings between 6th and 7th north of Market are even
more antiurban than the Roundhouse. The Roundhouse's problems are fixable, and it has that big parking lot behind it to build a nice new annex on.
I'm generally in the camp that we should save the Roundhouse if at all possible. Yes, it has its problems in its current layout, but so did the Rohm & Haas building until they put that La Colombe in on the corner. It needs significant renovations, but I can easily see the benefit that comes from having its iconic facade (whether you think it's ugly or not, I think we can agree it
is iconic) be one's address, and there is decent space for about four or six commercial parcels, two with outdoor space, available on an opened-up ground floor.
I guess the point is to see what could be rather than what is, to see things, that is, as a developer.
But I wouldn't die on the hill of saving the Roundhouse if that's what it took to redevelop this generally-very-ugly block. What I am willing to die on here, is that, if an arena came to this block, it would have to be paid for with Harris Blitzer's dime. No subsidy nonsense. (Also, if what they're really looking to do is sell the team, then that's a compromise they'd probably be willing to make: let the new ownership group have to actually sink money into realizing the plans!).