Quote:
Originally Posted by papertowelroll
Honestly I think expanding the existing footprint upward while privately developing the adjacent properties is more efficient use of the limited downtown real estate.
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I agree, but only somewhat. The Adlerian vision -- where the expansion was conceived as mixed use (along with office or housing, etc) was really great, and oddly visionary. I mean, convention centers are still wastes of space, they're anti-urbanist, they don't play well with the rest of the city fabric. None of that is less true than it was. They're also important economic drivers, and that's also still true. What Adler was pushing was to have our chocolate AND our peanut butter, all in one building . . . and then eventually in two buildings. UT had helped Adler prove that what he wanted was at least somewhat feasible, in a broad strokes kind of way. And wow, when they'd made happy noises last year about partnering with landowners I thought maybe there was a clear path to a new paradigm . . .
But there isn't. The market's still the market, and it's moving at speeds that leave all kinds of folks in the dust. Not just regular-joe homeowners, it turns out, but also slow moving bureaucracies that are incapable (purposefully!) of acting quickly.
So while I'm glad there's a plan B, and it will keep the CC and it's deadzone effect limited, we missed out on a chance to really test a great new way of building something like this, and I'm kinda sad about it.
Also -- this resets the clock, and we've got to start alllllll the way at the beginning again.