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  #661  
Old Posted Apr 5, 2023, 12:43 AM
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combusean combusean is online now
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I think if you live in the area, spending money at a casino would be better for keeping money in the local economy than, what, ordering more Chinese-made stuff off Amazon? There's literally nothing as far as entertainment goes over there until you hit Westgate 11 miles east.
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  #662  
Old Posted Apr 5, 2023, 3:25 PM
azliam azliam is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by combusean View Post
I think if you live in the area, spending money at a casino would be better for keeping money in the local economy than, what, ordering more Chinese-made stuff off Amazon? There's literally nothing as far as entertainment goes over there until you hit Westgate 11 miles east.
I guess it depends upon your definition of entertainment. I just bought a house about a month ago over near Prasada and they're building a lot of stuff out here - still in progress; however, I agree it's not anywhere near what the Westgate area has.
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  #663  
Old Posted Apr 5, 2023, 8:15 PM
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Wasn't paying too much attention to Prasada, but it definitely looks to be better than your average power center.
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  #664  
Old Posted Jul 1, 2023, 6:17 PM
azsunsurfer azsunsurfer is offline
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I wish I knew how to post the renderings but there is a very cool 3-story office development proposed for the hard corner of 95th ave and Hannah Ln at Westgate. It's called the Arcade at Westgate. I appreciate the forward looking design and how it addresses the street. It looks like there are further development plans for the surface lot around it including the addition of a parking garage. Nice to see Westgate filling its surface lots with the addition of the Thirsty Lion, Popstroke, etc.
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  #665  
Old Posted Jul 1, 2023, 9:23 PM
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Do you have a link to the renderings or an article?
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  #666  
Old Posted Aug 18, 2023, 7:14 AM
ChaseM ChaseM is offline
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Any new updates on the 15 story towers near State Farm?
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  #667  
Old Posted Sep 6, 2023, 8:25 PM
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Just wanted to give some updates out near my neck of the woods in and around Surprise.

So SimonCRE has a few projects they are working on:

**With Village at Prasada still under construction, an expansion of the Prasada shopping centers are underway with North Prasada (north of Village at Prasada) - Target, Kohls, American Furniture Warehouse and some other stores and restaurants:

https://blog.simoncre.com/news/targe...er-in-surprise

https://blog.simoncre.com/news/simon...-prasada-north

**Also, JOINT VENTURE MOVES FORWARD ON WEST VALLEY CITY CENTER DEVELOPMENT:

"SimonCRE is helming a 70,000-square-foot mixed-use center in Surprise. The project will be known as Elm Street at Surprise City Center. Carefree Partners is working with SimonCRE on the project.

The Phoenix Business Journal reports, at full build-out the development will feature a walkable urban center, new stores, restaurants, entertainment and two-story office spaces south of Bell Road near Surprise City Hall and Ottawa University. The tenants will include burger chain Farmer Boys, Mission BBQ, Italian restaurant Osteria Mia, Café Zupas and Better Buzz Coffee Roasters."

https://blog.simoncre.com/news/joint...er-development

https://blog.simoncre.com/news/surpr...eveals-tenants

https://www.elmstreetaz.com/


**A couple miles down from there off the 303 in Glendale (at Northern) the first phase of the new Desert Diamond Casino seems to be going up relatively quickly.

**And Surprise and residents are still hoping to lure a new IKEA to the West Valley using the similar tactic used when they lured Costco:

https://www.bizjournals.com/phoenix/...tball-day.html

Meow.

Last edited by azliam; Sep 6, 2023 at 8:47 PM.
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  #668  
Old Posted Nov 2, 2023, 7:40 PM
Obadno Obadno is offline
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Meant to post yesterday.

https://azbex.com/planning-developme...n-west-valley/

If anyone follows Hollywood its been a bit of a ... well DISASTER for the last couple years. Some of it not their fault (covid) Much of it very much their fault (Me too, Crappy movies, Pedantic messaging etc).

However, this has created an opportunity, as Superhero movies implode and the success. of Taylor Sheridan goofy Yellowstone shows I think the western is primed for a comeback and Arizona is perfect for that as well as various environments for filming all sorts of movies. The recreation of the AZ tax credit should cause a flurry of new productions in the state we've lost to New Mexico in the last 15 years.



Quote:
A pair of requests scheduled before the Maricopa County Planning and Zoning Commission could bring the Phoenix area’s first new large-scale movie production studio closer to reality.

Desert Studios is proposing a multi-phase, $900M development on 320 acres north of Interstate 10 and 339th Avenue in the Tonopah area.

According to the project narrative, “The Desert Studios Complex is envisioned as a production hub to include services for all aspects of movie and TV production. Although a site plan for the Property has yet to be fully developed, it is envisioned to contain numerous studios/sound stages and theaters with support uses. Key facilities may include but are not limited to sound stages, administrative offices, craft services, theaters, post-production, wardrobe/costume, warehouse, props, motor pool, medical, security, mill, laundry, print shop, maintenance, fitness center, cafeteria, restaurant, and parking facilities, hospitality uses such as hotels, resorts and temporary rental housing facilities, and a retail, restaurant and entertainment district. The studio complex is expected to create thousands of on-site and film industry related jobs. It is also anticipated to be a major driver for the larger Belmont development, along with advancing the growth of regional tourism and transportation infrastructure.”

The first phase of development would include 12 sound stages of approximately 40KSF each, along with supporting structures, including offices and services. The full build-out would have up to 48 sound stages.

To allow for the development, the company is requesting a zoning change “from Rural-43 One Acre Per Dwelling Unit (RU-43) and Planned Shopping Center (C-S) to Light Industrial (IND-2) Industrial Plan of Development (IUPD).”

The request also asks for three variances to normal standards in the proposed overlay. The project will require building heights of up to 80 feet. The applicant also wants reduced site screening for a minimum 6-foot chain link fence and a reduction to the required parking ratio, given the large amount of floor area the project requires.

Belmont Plan Amendment

Along with the rezoning for the Desert Studios site, the developers are also requesting a major comprehensive plan amendment for 1,402 acres in the Belmont Development Master Plan area. The Desert Studios site is located within Belmont, and the developers want to allow for potential growth and buildout of the entire area.

According to the staff report, the full request reads: “Major Comprehensive Plan Amendment (CPA) to change land use designation from large lot residential, small lot residential, medium density residential, high density residential, regional retail center, community retail center, neighborhood retail center, recreational open space, dedicated open space, public facility, and educational to mixed use.”

The site is made up of 13 contiguous lots. The owners want to allow for a variety of potential uses as the site develops beyond just the film studio, including a possible resort and theme park. Individual zoning entitlement requests will be submitted as the site is developed.

The 24,800-acre Belmont DMP was initially approved in 1991 and revised most recently in 2008. Belmont was originally imagined as a community built around a town center with smaller villages of mostly residential uses. Mixed-use and retail designations were included around I-10 interchanges.

The Belmont request narrative says, “Since the approval of the latest Belmont DMP land plan, markets have shifted, demanding more mixed uses and employment opportunities, especially near major freeway intersections. Additionally, in 2022 the State of Arizona passed the Arizona Motion Picture Production Program, making Arizona a prime location to produce film and television programming. Belmont Infraco (the “Applicant”) is proposing a Major Comprehensive Plan Amendment in order to respond to these shifting market demands and allow for a mixed-use development within the southern portion of the Belmont DMP. In order to accommodate the proposed mixed-use development, the Applicant is requesting to remove the 1,140 acres from the Belmont DMP and amend the land use designation for the entire 1,400-acre Site to Mixed-Use.”

Film Studios Slow to Launch

Another major production studio plan was announced following the enactment last year of The Arizona Motion Picture Production Program, which will ultimately provide tax incentives of up to $125M per year for movies filmed or produced in the state.

According to an industry publication write-up after the law was passed, “To qualify, producers must use an Arizona production facility or, if the project is primarily filmed on location, must mostly shoot and conduct pre- and postproduction in the state. The program features a tiered credit system: productions that spend less than $10M will get a base tax credit of 15%, while those that spend more than $35M will get 20%. Projects with budgets from $10M to $35M are eligible for 17.5% of their spending to be offset by the incentives.”

The program has a 2023 cap of $75M and will grow to $125M by 2025.

Desert Studios was heavily involved in lobbying for the program, as was Acacia Filmed Entertainment. Acacia President Matthew George, who also heads Castle Rock Entertainment, planned to build 14 sound stages on 70 acres at the Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community.

Despite repeated inquiries, no new information has been released since the original announcement last July. The status in the DATABEX project database has been listed as On Hold since January of this year.

Another studio project was announced in Peoria in 2018. The Desert Sky Studio Complex would have been a $200M development spread across three phases with 24 sound stages and an entertainment and retail district on 130 acres at Loop 303 and Lone Mountain.

A 2019 article reported the developer was working with City of Peoria officials on the project and with then-Gov. Doug Ducey on what would eventually become the Production Program incentives package. No additional plans were ever submitted to the City beyond the initial pre-application. In the intervening time, the project webpage has been taken down and the project has been listed as Canceled.

With the incentives program now in place and two land use requests filed with Maricopa County, Desert Studios appears ready to move forward. County planning staff has recommended approval for both requests, and the Planning and Zoning Commission will hold a hearing on the matters Nov. 2.

Belmont Infraco LLC is the property owner. HILGARTWILSON is the Belmont Mixed-use planner and engineer. RVi Planning + Landscape Architecture is the planner for the Desert Studios Complex. Both projects are represented by Gammage & Burnham.
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  #669  
Old Posted Nov 2, 2023, 8:18 PM
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Originally Posted by Obadno View Post
Meant to post yesterday.

https://azbex.com/planning-developme...n-west-valley/

If anyone follows Hollywood its been a bit of a ... well DISASTER for the last couple years. Some of it not their fault (covid) Much of it very much their fault (Me too, Crappy movies, Pedantic messaging etc).
Does anyone know what happened to the studio lot proposed near San Tan/Queen Creek?
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  #670  
Old Posted Nov 2, 2023, 9:18 PM
skiesthelimit skiesthelimit is offline
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FYI, there’s a construction cam available for VAI Resort and Mattel Adventure Park here:

https://www.matteladventurepark.com/#camera

Looks like they still have quite a ways to go but work is ongoing with the amphitheater. Really excited to see if they pull this off, could end up being one of the best venues along with the two story nightclub we may finally have a premier venue!
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  #671  
Old Posted Nov 2, 2023, 10:05 PM
Obadno Obadno is offline
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Originally Posted by TheSpud0 View Post
Does anyone know what happened to the studio lot proposed near San Tan/Queen Creek?
Same group, that plan failed because it was too soon it was contingent on the new tax credit that didnt come until a year or more after their initial proposal.
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  #672  
Old Posted Nov 8, 2023, 9:01 PM
Obadno Obadno is offline
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More major industrial development:

https://azbex.com/planning-developme...n-west-valley/



Quote:
The Maricopa County Board of Supervisors is scheduled to hear a rezoning and comprehensive general plan amendment for a planned hydrogen facility on 170 acres at the NEC of Salome Highway and 523rd Avenue near Tonopah.

The hearing is set for Nov. 15. A news story published Nov. 2 incorrectly reported the Board had already approved the requests in its Nov. 1 meeting. The Nov. 1 action merely set the hearing on the Board’s Nov. 15 agenda.

Project documents say partners Linde PLC and NextEra Energy Resources LLC plan to invest up to $1B to develop the plant.

Gila Hydrogen Facility will have capacity to produce up to 120 metric tons of liquid hydrogen per day.

Up to 300 construction jobs could be involved in the development. After completion, the plant is expected to create 30 jobs on-site and 60 for distribution drivers. The expected 20-year economic benefits include as much as $40M in state and local property taxes.

According to documents submitted to Maricopa County, development is planned in a single phase. Construction is expected to begin in 2024 and last approximately 30 months. Initial operations could begin at some point in 2025, since portions of the facility can come online as they deliver. Full operations are expected in mid-2026.
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  #673  
Old Posted Dec 6, 2023, 1:20 PM
muertecaza muertecaza is offline
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Can't remember where we've been putting TSMC and related industrial developments, so feel free to move if there's a better thread, but here's another one:

https://www.anandtech.com/show/21175...rily-for-apple

Quote:
Amkor, the world's second largest independent outsourced semiconductor assembly and test (OSAT) service provider, has announced their intention to build a new advanced chip packaging facility in the U.S. Carrying a price tag of around 2 billion dollars, the plant in Arizona will primarily serve to package chips produced by TSMC at its Fab 21 nearby.

Adding an interesting (and unusual) wrinkle to the announcement, the notoriously tight-lipped Apple also issued its own press release, officially confirming that it is set to become the largest customer of the facility. All of which has greatly raised the profile of the chip packaging plant.

The planned facility will reside in a huge manufacturing campus covering 55 acres near Peoria, Arizona. Amkor does not disclose planned production capacity of the plant or technologies that it will support, but it says that it will serve automotive, high-performance computing, and mobile applications, so we can expect it to support a wide range of 2.5D and 3D packaging technologies.
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  #674  
Old Posted Dec 6, 2023, 3:19 PM
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/\ So the issues with the TSMC plant itself have been resolved? I seem to remember there was a skilled worker shortage and some kind of stand still.

The logistics of all of this stuff is interesting to me... how will this new Amkor plant receive product from TSMC? Will it just be trucked between the two sites most likely? Is its new location off the 303 somewhere as well?
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  #675  
Old Posted Dec 6, 2023, 4:44 PM
Obadno Obadno is offline
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/\ So the issues with the TSMC plant itself have been resolved? I seem to remember there was a skilled worker shortage and some kind of stand still.
The problem was labor arbitrage. its not that they "cant find skilled workers" they cant find skilled workers willing to work as cheaply as Taiwanese (the whole reason Semi-Conductors went to Asia, and the entire way "globalism" worked).

It was a specifically timed well publicized cry to allow more H1b's so they don't need to pay American demanded wages. So they either got what they wanted (More H1b's) or they got slapped down and will eat the cost.

I have no sympathy for such corporate nonsense.
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  #676  
Old Posted Dec 6, 2023, 5:00 PM
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Originally Posted by Obadno View Post
The problem was labor arbitrage. its not that they "cant find skilled workers" they cant find skilled workers willing to work as cheaply as Taiwanese (the whole reason Semi-Conductors went to Asia, and the entire way "globalism" worked).

It was a specifically timed well publicized cry to allow more H1b's so they don't need to pay American demanded wages. So they either got what they wanted (More H1b's) or they got slapped down and will eat the cost.

I have no sympathy for such corporate nonsense.
Ah yes, that makes sense. But I thought there was some equipment and whatnot that needed specific worker skills that they couldn't find here. For any labor cost.
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  #677  
Old Posted Dec 6, 2023, 5:14 PM
Obadno Obadno is offline
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Originally Posted by PHX31 View Post
But I thought there was some equipment and whatnot that needed specific worker skills that they couldn't find here. For any labor cost.
330 million people, with an already massive semiconductor workforce they couldn't find ANYBODY they could even train to work this machinery?

Same game companies play with "Americans aren't educated enough" thus pushing them into college and increasing their cost. Only to turn around begging for Indians for half the cost.

its all-labor cost. Everything else is just excuses. If the local workforce isn't properly trained... Idk maybe TSMC could invest in training them? If the local workforce is expensive... Idk maybe TSMC could take the billions of subsidies they got from the feds and offset that cost.

its nonsense. Not sure when we got it baked into our culture that its America's duty to make operations as cheap and easy as possible for private corporations instead of prioritizing the peoples incomes and spending power and national security.
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  #678  
Old Posted Dec 6, 2023, 9:19 PM
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As usual, we talk about it and it happens

Quote:
TSMC, trades organization find common ground for workforce training, staffing

By Audrey Jensen – Reporter, Phoenix Business Journal
Dec 6, 2023


Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. and the Arizona Building and Construction Trades Council (AZBTC) have come to an agreement for hiring, training and safety of workers at the semiconductor giant's complex being built in north Phoenix.

The mutual understanding between TSMC and the union organization outlines agreed upon priorities to guide the relationship between the two with a focus on workforce training and development, safety, communication and staffing, the two parties said in a joint statement on Dec. 6.

TSMC has been in discussions in recent weeks with AZBTC — which works with 14 affiliates, labor partners and contractors in the state — after construction labor unions raised concerns over staffing and workplace safety at TSMC's construction site.

Local unions started pushing back against TSMC after the company said it had to delay its production start date in Phoenix because of a lack of workers that have specialized expertise needed to install equipment. TSMC Arizona is now set to start production in the first half of 2025.

Aaron Butler, president of AZBTC, said that the new agreement is a "win for Arizona workers and the construction timeline" for TSMC.

"AZBTC and TSMC Arizona have shown that when we come together to focus on our workers and developing the skills of the future, our state has much to gain," Butler said in a prepared statement.

The agreement, which is not legally binding, creates a framework and commitments for workforce training and development as well as how, when and where to communicate about concerns or issues, a source with knowledge of the agreement told the Business Journal.

Specific areas of cooperation between TSMC and AZBTC will include:

Workforce training and development: AZBTC intends to recruit a sufficient number of skilled workers to fulfill manpower requirements for TSMC contractors. TSMC will also partner with AZBTC on development of union workforce training programs.
Site safety: TSMC Arizona will maintain transparency with AZBTC related to safety assessments, audits, incident records and improvement plans.
Global workforce: TSMC Arizona will focus on hiring workers locally but may be required to employ foreign workers with specialized experience.
Open communication: A committee will be formed with members designated by affiliated AZBTC unions and members designated by TSMC Arizona and contractors. Meetings will be held quarterly, including an annual forecast to project future workforce requirements.

TSMC's Harrison: AZBTC a 'vital partner'

The latest agreement is in addition to a workplace safety agreement that TSMC and the state entered into earlier this year for increased safety regulations and standards at TSMC's construction site that's located just north of the Loop 303 and west of Interstate 17.

Brian Harrison, president of TSMC Arizona, called AZBTC a "vital partner" in the construction of TSMC's fabrication plants, or fabs.

"AZBTC union members have the critical skills necessary to help us complete our two advanced-chipmaking fabs, and we look forward to embarking together on a new chapter of partnership and collaboration," Harrison said in a statement.

The joint statement also said that construction of TSMC's first two fabs has "already created thousands of prevailing-wage" construction jobs for AZBTC members.

In 2021, TSMC broke ground on its $40 billion chipmaking facility, which has an average of 12,000 construction workers on the site every day. It could eventually build out the site to include six fabs that would provide “the most advanced chips made in the U.S.,” the Business Journal previously reported.

The company eventually expects to employ more than 4,500 workers at its Arizona campus, where it will manufacture 3- and 4-nanometer semiconductor chips.

To date, TSMC has hired more than 2,000 employees for its Arizona fab, some of whom relocated with their families from Taiwan. Hundreds of U.S. workers completed months-long training in Taiwan.
Source: https://www.bizjournals.com/phoenix/...t-phoenix.html
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  #679  
Old Posted Dec 6, 2023, 9:39 PM
Obadno Obadno is offline
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As usual, we talk about it and it happens



Source: https://www.bizjournals.com/phoenix/...t-phoenix.html
Wow! looks like TSMC caved. I wonder if there was a compromise or if they just didnt get movement on more H1B's

Either way I would much prefer TSMC invests in training local workforces.
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  #680  
Old Posted Dec 6, 2023, 9:41 PM
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TSMC's issue is/was that the working conditions and corporate culture for semiconductor professionals were garbage, especially for the low pay, and they weren't prepared for that culture shock as they entered the US labor market.

The fact that they had scads of *construction* issues is another can of worms that actually doesn't seem to far from this.
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