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  #1601  
Old Posted Aug 17, 2009, 4:52 PM
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Hey John, You betcha,...Here's the link. Holladay City has a nice website that is updated regularly. I'm pretty impressed with the caliber of people(planners,etc.) who are working for the city of Holladay. They really have exceptional taste, and are setting the bar very high for Holladay's future projects. Do you hear any skuttlebutt about the Cottonwood Mall sight, and when it might get back on track?

http://www.cityofholladay.com/constr...agecenter.html

.
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  #1602  
Old Posted Aug 17, 2009, 5:02 PM
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Holladay project moving forward

http://www.deseretnews.com/article/7...g-forward.html

This is an update article posted on Aug. 16. It has some construction pics.
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  #1603  
Old Posted Aug 17, 2009, 5:19 PM
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Great update. Although this is not the Mall, if that is what you were thinking.
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  #1604  
Old Posted Aug 17, 2009, 5:22 PM
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Daybreak commercial center

Sorry Cololi, I didn't realize you had them until after I had taken them on Thursday. But, maybe you have some better pics.

This place is almost done. It was kind of weird walking down the street. They had music for ambience, but no one there. Super cool designs though. I think this is some of the best contemporary architecture in the state. It kind of has a nostalgic presence of barns & warehouses from farm & industrial typologies by the use of the different metal siding, concrete block, and some of the forms. And, it's on kind of a traditional old town street. But, it's used in a new contemporary interpretation. That's what makes this architecture so interesting.









having trouble with Flickr. I'll try to get them reposted soon.

Last edited by Orlando; Aug 19, 2009 at 10:13 PM.
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  #1605  
Old Posted Aug 17, 2009, 7:33 PM
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^^^ Very cool buildings... I almost thought those pictures were renderings because of how clean the buildings are. The way they approach the street is excellent.
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  #1606  
Old Posted Aug 17, 2009, 7:59 PM
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Your pictures work just fine. I actually forgot that I said I would post pictures. I think the commercial area is a pretty good model for a village center development type: attractive, climate sensitive landscaping, good public space, buildings addressing the street, etc. These things should be automatic in all (yes, even in big box) commercial developments, regardless of scale.

Looking at the Daybreak commercial area on a microscopic scale is outstanding. I am a bit interested to see how the future light rail stop will work with what is built and how future development will connect the two, given that it is about a half mile to the south of what is built now. Seems strange. Maybe they should have built the commercial area around that stop. Until there is about 5,000 more people living within a mile of each, Daybreak and the District are going to compete big time for retail dollars.
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  #1607  
Old Posted Aug 17, 2009, 9:44 PM
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Although not very convenient, a half mile is barely within walking distance. Although access for someone in a wheelchair is likely another story.
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  #1608  
Old Posted Aug 17, 2009, 10:29 PM
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^^^ Very cool buildings... I almost thought those pictures were renderings because of how clean the buildings are. The way they approach the street is excellent.
You took the words right out of my mouth! I had to double-take on all of them...

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  #1609  
Old Posted Aug 18, 2009, 2:22 AM
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You took the words right out of my mouth! I had to double-take on all of them...

I especially thought the first one was.
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  #1610  
Old Posted Aug 18, 2009, 3:35 AM
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Originally Posted by Orlando View Post
Sorry Cololi, I didn't realize you had them until after I had taken them on Thursday. But, maybe you have some better pics.

This place is almost done. It was kind of weird walking down the street. They had music for ambience, but no one there. Super cool designs though. I think this is some of the best contemporary architecture in the state. It kind of has a nostalgic presence of barns & warehouses from farm & industrial typologies by the use of the different metal siding, concrete block, and some of the forms. And, it's on kind of a traditional old town street. But, it's used in a new contemporary interpretation. That's what makes this architecture so interesting.







Wow, I thought those pics were taken in Scandinavia for a moment there. Those look like very typical village centers you'd see there.
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  #1611  
Old Posted Aug 18, 2009, 4:11 AM
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Very cool.... Would make a great set for the filming of a few Eureka episodes. Anybody a fan of the television series Eureka?
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  #1612  
Old Posted Aug 18, 2009, 10:59 AM
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S.L. County to discuss creating urban farms

http://www.deseretnews.com/article/7...ban-farms.html

A novel idea to put unused public property to work as mini agriculture centers will go before the Salt Lake County Council today.

Councilman Jim Bradley crafted the urban farming proposal inspired, in part, by a award-winning author Michael Pollan's article exploring the impacts of disappearing small-scale farms...

...Bradley, along with other officials from Salt Lake County, Salt Lake City and Utah State University have already identified some properties that could be converted into small farms. They include a city-owned 200-acre parcel near the airport that could be in production as early as next spring and potentially produce the feed stock for 10,000 gallons of bio-diesel a year.


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  #1613  
Old Posted Aug 19, 2009, 5:44 AM
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The wife and I went to the Salt Lake Parade of Homes last week looked around Daybreak pretty thoroughly. I was very impressed with the design and materials used for their village center. It should be remembered that the future TRAX stations (there will be 2) will be surrounded by mixed-use and high density housing. This village center is just suppose to be a mini retail/office complex. There will be more houses that will be closer to the future stations. I continue to be immensely impressed with the choices Kennecott Land is making with Daybreak.
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  #1614  
Old Posted Aug 21, 2009, 2:17 AM
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Originally Posted by WeST View Post
The wife and I went to the Salt Lake Parade of Homes last week looked around Daybreak pretty thoroughly. I was very impressed with the design and materials used for their village center. It should be remembered that the future TRAX stations (there will be 2) will be surrounded by mixed-use and high density housing. This village center is just suppose to be a mini retail/office complex. There will be more houses that will be closer to the future stations. I continue to be immensely impressed with the choices Kennecott Land is making with Daybreak.
I wish they had moved forward with the other two residential villages they were considering at Little Valley and Soldier Flats, instead of putting them on hold.
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  #1615  
Old Posted Aug 21, 2009, 4:24 AM
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I wish they had moved forward with the other two residential villages they were considering at Little Valley and Soldier Flats, instead of putting them on hold.
I don't know about those. Do you know if they were more of what is already in Daybreak or was there some new wrinkle with those? While I know some would like urban boundaries or housing that is almost exclusively multi-story, I don't believe that will ever be politically feasible. So short of that kind of density, this kind of concept makes so much more sense than what was built between 1950's-1990's in Utah.
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  #1616  
Old Posted Aug 21, 2009, 7:18 AM
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I don't know about those. Do you know if they were more of what is already in Daybreak or was there some new wrinkle with those? While I know some would like urban boundaries or housing that is almost exclusively multi-story, I don't believe that will ever be politically feasible. So short of that kind of density, this kind of concept makes so much more sense than what was built between 1950's-1990's in Utah.
I don't know that they got far enough to deciding what would be in the village centers. Soldier Flats was going to be west of Kearns in the Oquirrh foothills (and possibly include the ski resort, although it sounded like the ski resort wasn't necessary for the rest of the development to happen) and Little Valley is up on the mountainside overlooking Magna.
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  #1617  
Old Posted Aug 21, 2009, 7:19 AM
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Very cool.... Would make a great set for the filming of a few Eureka episodes. Anybody a fan of the television series Eureka?
I like Eureka. It's a fun show.
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  #1618  
Old Posted Aug 21, 2009, 11:31 AM
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^^^
Yeah, allot of quirky, but great characters. Very inventive show.
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  #1619  
Old Posted Aug 21, 2009, 12:01 PM
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Luxurious Waldorf Astoria Hotel & Golden Door Spa opens at The Canyons Resort


Graphics, New York Times

Hospitality » Dakota Mountain Lodge brings Waldorf Astoria brand to Utah.

By Mike Gorrell
The Salt Lake Tribune


Park City » Luxury with a few surprises.
Developers Lee Hindin and Reza Fakhrieh set out to emphasize both at the Dakota Mountain Lodge, Utah's first Waldorf Astoria luxury brand hotel, which opened without fanfare last month on a hillside just off the main entry to The Canyons Resort.

And how did they do that?

Well, for starters, the dominant wood in the lodge is not the knotty pine characteristic of so many mountain resort buildings. Instead, it is a hardwood stained dark to match the hotel's cocoa-brown mohair drapes and carpets, interior designer Stephen Brady's way of connecting Dakota Mountain Lodge to the Waldorf Astoria in New York City.


Rather than giving visitors a rustic, knotty pine look that might be expected at a mountain resort, Dakota Mountain Lodge at The Canyons opted to surprise them with a sophisticated lobby, with sconces to match a chandelier, and a light-dark color scheme that accentuates atmosphere. (Francisco Kjolseth / The Salt Lake Tribune)

Breaking the rustic mountain mold once more, the lobby's elegance is accentuated by a sweeping spiral staircase to the second floor, a 400-pound Czech crystal chandelier hanging above the open area in its curve. The furniture is all reupholstered antique.


A Baccarat crystal chandelier hangs in front of a winding staircase that adorns the lobby of the Dakota Mountain Lodge, the first Waldorf Astoria property in Utah, which has opened at The Canyons Resort outside of Park City. (Francisco Kjolseth / The Salt Lake Tribune)

Befitting the elegance of the original Waldorf Astoria Hotel in New York City, a Baccarat crystal chandelier adorns the lobby of the new Dakota Mountain Lodge at The Canyons. It is the first Waldorf Astoria property in Utah. (Francisco Kjolseth / The Salt Lake Tribune)


Two 100-year-old carvings of stags, at least four feet tall, pay homage to the mountain feel. But then one wall over -- what's this? -- classic Japanese art in the form of a floor-to-ceiling screen, featuring nearly a dozen side-by-side panels of a village-life scene. That's behind tables and chairs arranged to serve as a European-style check-in desk.

"They're little things, but unexpected," said Hindin, founder of DuVal Development, which owns Dakota Mountain Lodge.

Off another side of the lobby is the Spruce restaurant, based on the original in San Francisco. It offers fine dining as well as quick bites for people coming off ski slopes or just finishing a mountain bike ride.


The Spruce restaurant is one of the upper-tier features of the Dakota Mountain Lodge at The Canyons Resort outside of Park City. It was designed to appeal to a diverse clientele, from people in tuxedos out for a big night to others seeking a snack after a hike or mountain bike ride. (Francisco Kjolseth / The Salt Lake Tribune)

Entry to the restaurant is through the bar, so that "its fun, vibrant atmosphere will spill into the lobby," noted Fakhrieh, DuVal's executive vice president. More mohair curtains partially separate the marble-topped bar area from the dining area, elegant in all respects except for the rustic image of a half dozen sets of deer antlers attached to a wall above tables for four.

Branch another direction off the lobby and the Golden Door Spa offers relaxation. It breaks from the hotel's darkened-wood motif. The spa's walls and ceiling feature a stylized mix of light brown woods and whitish rock, flanked by two more eye-catching features: a dozen strings of water cascading two stories into a basement pool and a wall of plants, 20 feet high and seven feet wide, that extends from the salon entry desk to 15 treatment rooms on the lower floor.

"Between the sound of falling water and the visual, it's beautiful," said Jim Miller, Dakota Mountain Lodge's general manager.

There are two entries to the spa -- one from inside the hotel, the other from the outside -- a design feature that reflects Dakota Mountain Lodge's desire to appeal to Park City and Wasatch Front residents as much as destination visitors.

"We don't want this to be a stuffy place off limits to outsiders. Everyone is welcome," said Hindin. "You can rent a room for a weekend or for a month during ski season. You can come up to the Golden Door Spa for a half-day break. We've tried to make everything here inclusive and part of the greater community, including the [Salt Lake] valley. We can't do it alone on the ski season. It's not big enough yet."

Building community ties also figured into Golden Door Spa hiring Park City resident Scott Cowdrey to manage its sixth salon in a 50-year history. The spa also brought in a number of local fitness instructors.

"We're offering something attainable for the local," said Cowdrey, noting that many fitness classes go outside and use "the outdoor canvas we all live here for. Many of our instructors are people [who locals] have come to know in the community. ... We have the brands and systems of Golden Door and employees from Park City who people trust. We educate people that facials and massages are not indulgences but promoters of good health, agents in creating active lifestyles."

Cowdrey's description conforms with an earlier Hindin observation that part of Dakota Mountain Lodge's strength stems from each partner being able to "have some swagger." After all, he added, "being uptight is not what the Waldorf Astoria Collection [of hotels] is all about. You're here to enjoy yourself and be comfortable."


Plush couches and other high-end amenities can be found throughout a one-bedroom suite at the Dakota Mountain Inn, Utah's first Waldorf Astoria hotel, which opened to prefered customers in late July. (Francisco Kjolseth / The Salt Lake Tribune)

Hindin and Fakhrieh are confident that Dakota Mountain Lodge will appeal to the millions of members in the frequent guest program of Hilton Hotels, parent of The Waldorf Astoria Collection. Many of those people have never been to Utah before and, the developers believe, will find that the first surprise of their trip will be a realization of the beauty and recreational opportunities available in Summit County, particularly at The Canyons.

In turn, they added, the lodge's pedigree lends credence to the greater Park City area's effort to establish itself as one of the world's elite resort communities.

"If you're not branded, you're just another very nice product," said Hindin. "We're glad we made the decision to hook up with Waldorf Astoria. It's helped The Canyons and Park City, letting people know we can play ball in the 4-5-star hotel market."

Added lodge manager Miller, who came to Dakota Mountain Lodge after managing the Grand Wailea Resort in Maui for Waldorf Astoria: "Having these luxury brands puts Park City into the same sentence as the Whistlers, Vails and Tellurides of the world. Park City has not had that luxury hotel product before."

Fakhrieh said the developers know that skiing and snowboarding are their biggest draws, hence the presence of a ski lift that will take guests directly to The Canyons' base facilities. "But we're big believers that there are another 200 days when it's pretty great up here," he added. "And if you have the amenities, people will come."

One amenity still being developed is a golf course. Although it is a year away from being playable, Hindin noted that the opening of several other premier courses in the "Wasatch Back" -- Tuhaye (Kamas), Glenwild (Park City), Victory Ranch and Red Ledges (Wasatch County) and Promontory (Summit County) -- already has helped make the area more appealing as a summer recreation destination.

"A rising tide carries everyone up. As an old school merchant developer who puts his money where his mouth is, where else in the country are they doing this?" Hindin asked, contending the developers' insistence of living up to their promises will enable Dakota Mountain Lodge to withstand the assault of the worst recession since the Great Depression.

"We are not going to live or die with any one ski season or economic cycle," he said. "It may take longer in this [economic] environment to get everything launched, maybe 1 or 1½ years instead of a winter. But I expect we'll reach a point where people say 'this is what they said it would be -- and more.' "

[email protected]

The Waldorf Astoria Collection
Self-described as a "distinctive group of unique luxury hotels from the Hilton Family of Hotels, each indigenous to its destination and situated in key cities around the world. Home to world leaders, royalty and society's elite ..."

18 hotels in New York City, south Florida, Puerto Rico, Rome, Saudi Arabia, Naples, New Orleans, Phoenix (Frank Lloyd Wright, architect) and Versailles, France

William Waldorf Astor built the original 13-story Waldorf Hotel in New York City in 1893. His cousin, John Jacob Astor IV, then built the 17-story Astoria next in 1897. Henry Hardenbergh, architect on both, connected them with a 300-foot marble corridor.

In 1932, Conrad Hilton wrote "The Greatest of Them All" onto a photograph of the The Waldorf Astoria. He bought it in 1949.

Source: www.waldorfastoria.com
Dakota Mountain Lodge
Overall cost not disclosed; major financing provided by Goldman Sachs.

170 hotel and condominium units in two buildings.

Residences range in price from $479,000 to more than $2.5 million.

155 employees now, 220 in the winter with addition of more ski valets, bellmen, housekeepers.

Spruce Restaurant has 140 seats, indoor and outdoor, offering contemporary American cuisine and access to more than 1,400 wines.

Golden Door Spa is a 16,000-square-foot facility with 15 treatment rooms, fitness classes, Pilates, kinesis and resistance training.

..

Last edited by delts145; Aug 22, 2009 at 11:40 AM.
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  #1620  
Old Posted Aug 21, 2009, 5:31 PM
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My own little tower 1. I will have to stop at floor 1. I even went for the Tower 1 brick color.





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