The following builds on the previously posted image of 200 South. The amount of land available for redevelopment can reshape and transform the dynamic of our downtown, adding more residents and foot traffic, increasing retail/dining opportunities and helping to fill in the empty space between destinations while creating new ones. Having never seen any renderings of what new buildings on 200 South might look like, I enjoyed seeing what Comrade had posted. It provided inspiration of what the possibilities are. With the previous discussion of housing, infill and a new corner office tower, I took what he had done and quickly created what it could potentially look like in the future.
Can this be Downtown 2020?
Convention Center Hotel
Located in the distance, a great depiction from Comrade, located on the Royalwood Plaza which seems the most logical and forward-thinking location given size and future potential of 200 South connecting City Creek and The Gateway/Warehouse District.
Downtown Streetcar
Coming soon, maybe not that soon but it's coming. The first potential route starts from the hub and ventures east along 200 East. A suggestion would be for the streetcar to have a tinted/colored concrete (not shown) to provide a stark distinction from the street asphalt, while effectively making the street appear smaller.
Walker Center Garage
It doesn't appear as if the parking garage is going anywhere. Only with a structural evaluation would it be determined if it needed to come down. The image was carried over from Comrade but this would appear more as a needed aesthetic re-clad of the structure that might have an estimated 20+ years of life.
Residential Tower on Regent Street
Much needed and desired, the tower features bottom floor retail/restaurant/cafe space. This design shows what our downtown is both needing and lacking: variation. The angles, color and massing help break up the monotony of blank glass walls and the dated stucco fascination of our current developers (see The Gateway and Questar building). Also, it appears having the building with a setback opens up the street-face and provides sidewalk dining opportunities. Having housing located directly across from the Gallivan Center and it's many loud events would need to be mitigate through design of materials, certain hours of events, etc. Dependent on footprint, the Regent Street parking garage might also have to go, and would need to be replaced with a better functioning parking solution/structure.
200 South & State Glass Tower
If we want to go up, we need to go slim. The example shows the building with it's longer side along State Street, filling the entire space from the corner to Zim's. This transparent office tower would feature sidewalk storefront retail on both street sides and could reach 20+ stories.
In the above image there is also a small building between the residential tower on Regent and the corner glass tower. I didn't have the time to look at the footprint and square footage of the parcels to determine if it is plausible but the building helps to break up the two large structures.
A developer looking at the current site might only see a single office building that would require the entire parcel, eliminating the chance for housing and not going as tall as many of us desire for the cityscape. It's important to break away from what we're accustomed with and what local developers have built, continue to build and continue to propose (not looking at you Boyer, but seriously hire my consulting services). Downtown is an urban setting and it requires a sense of urban design, variation, massing, scale, street-scape and sidewalk-interaction considerations.