Quote:
Originally Posted by navyweaxguy
Why isn't there more outcry about Block 162? There was so much energy put into getting Fontius freed up and cleaned up. The buzz around development got people excited. Now we just accept that nothing may happen there for an indefinite time. Seems like such a waste.
I keep reading that Denver is such a great place to do business, but yet big companies aren't moving in.
Sorry just frustrated with settling for whatever scraps it seems like we are getting. Stick built apartments don't do anything for me. They don't don't age well.
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The competition between 2nd tier cities for marquis level businesses is intense: Denver is in direct competition with Portland, SLC, the Twin Cities, Austin, Charlotte, and, Richmond (get the trains speeded up between Washington and, Richmond, and the city will really boom). I am sure I skipped a few.
Each of our competitor cities has a different mix of what might draw a company to put major dollars into a downtown office space.
Our problem relates to the ever growing expectations that world businesses have as a baseline, in terms of social ambience, convenient access to powerful politicians and businessman, good public transportation, high worker educational levels, fair natural beauty, and access to world capital.
We are not exceptional in any single category. Fortunately, neither are our US competitor cities.
Instead, we all are competing against world tier I cities that must have great public transportation (including freeways), good interfaces with the truly powerful, highly sought after educated workers, a powerful skyline (particularly if there is no prominent geography), and major world level banks.
I also have to admit that nothing in the metro area including DIA is outstanding, when compared to world competition. Regardless of "why", Denver must improve urban design, public transportation, the quality of post-graduate education, and, the level of publically displayed creativity- from architecture through all the other arts.
As "TakeFive" notes in his signature, Denver has achieved puberty. Now, competition between it's peers and betters becomes even more intense.