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  #6461  
Old Posted Nov 16, 2020, 2:34 PM
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Salt Lake City & MSA/CSA Rundown

Salt Lake City's Nothern Metro Mountain Parks

https://www.boltontax.com/~boltonta/images/slide1.png

Central Metro, Phase I Pluralsight Headquarters Completed



https://www.mhtn.com/portfolio-item/pluralsight/


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Last edited by delts145; Dec 20, 2020 at 12:48 PM.
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  #6462  
Old Posted Nov 17, 2020, 12:05 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Atlas View Post
Some nice images from KUTV on facebook below. I'm liking the density that's starting to develop west of downtown (second image).



...........
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  #6463  
Old Posted Nov 17, 2020, 1:17 PM
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Salt Lake Power District (Rocky Mountain Power Redevelopment)

I pulled the images from the PDF (discussed above ^^) for the Rocky Mountain Power Development. I believe these are meant to act more as an overall idea/ concept of what RMP wants the development to be like, rather than actual project renderings.

https://images1.loopnet.com/d2/hwCam...4/document.pdf

These were also the same images used in the fox13 newsclip that was mentioned earlier as well.

https://kutv.com/news/local/tents-cr...ll-the-city-do

Project Map:


Images from PDF:






Personally, I think these initial idea renderings are a good sign that RMP is taking the project seriously and wants to make it a great place to be. I really like that they appear to be going for pedestrian plazas & groundfloor retail as the main groundlevel feature, with mixed-use development and mostly 7+ floor buildings as well.

I am also really encouraged by the project goals for this development as well as the threshold criteria for developers:
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  #6464  
Old Posted Nov 19, 2020, 3:33 PM
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Downtown West - North Temple residential growth keeps coming – Here is one of the 2 new projects, The Lusso

Luke Garrott Reports - Full Article @
https://www.buildingsaltlake.com/nor...-new-projects/

Two new residential projects have joined the growing train of proposed and active construction along the North Temple transit corridor in Salt Lake City...


Lusso Apartments


At 1025 West, the SW corner of 10th West and North Temple will be completely reframed by the two structures of the Lusso apartments. It will bring 271 market-rate units on 1.83 acres to the Euclid/Poplar Grove neighborhood, replacing the Panda Buffet building + parking lot and seven single-family structures to the south on Learned Avenue.



The Lusso's 271 market-rate units will reframe the SW corner of 1000 W and North Temple. Image courtesy di'velept design.


Rendering of the Lusso from the NW. Image courtesy di’velept designs.


Di’velept design’s Jarod Hall is proposing a podium plus five project with bold box-like facade features that frame multiple balconies. The Lusso will offer studios, 1- and 2-bdrm units.

The street frontage of Building A along the south side of North Temple will contain a gym for residents, a leasing office, and about 1500 sf for retail. There is a patio represented in current renderings. The ground floor of the east side of the project (Building B) will be residences, fronting 1000 West...



El Asadero will remain, but this view will completely change with the construction of the Lusso. Looking to the SW from the 10th North and N. Temple intersection. Image courtesy Google Earth.

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Last edited by delts145; Jan 22, 2021 at 1:39 PM.
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  #6465  
Old Posted Nov 20, 2020, 9:43 AM
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Downtown West - North Temple residential growth keeps coming – Here is the second of the 2 newest projects, 1625 No. Temple


Luke Garrott Reports - Full Article @
https://www.buildingsaltlake.com/nor...-new-projects/

Another 1970s-era restaurant building will bite the dust for JAR Real Estate Development + Designs of Tomorrow’s six-story (1 + 5), 111-unit market-rate project on .57 acres. Do Eat Chinese restaurant and its parking lot will give way to the project’s studios, 1- and 2-bdrm units, which will range from 450-950 sf. The building’s ample horizontal balconies are prominent architectural features. The street frontage on North Temple will house a leasing office and offer retail space. A sizable art piece is planned for the middle-front of the building, complementing the glass atrium feature facing the street on the building’s top two levels.One level of podium parking will house 45 spaces, for a .4 stall per unit ratio. The project is within 750 feet of the Power Station TRAX stop.


1625 W. North Temple, rendering by Designs of Tomorrow.


1625 W. North Temple from the East. Image courtesy Designs of Tomorrow.


Parcel’s to be redeveloped into 111 market-rate units at 1625 W. North Temple. Image courtesy Google Earth.

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Last edited by delts145; Jan 29, 2023 at 2:27 AM.
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  #6466  
Old Posted Nov 20, 2020, 9:57 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Atlas View Post
EDIT: I just found some incredible recent drone pictures of downtown SLC from a chap on Facebook named Scott Taylor. He also took the photos I shared a few days ago. Take a look at these:














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Last edited by delts145; Sep 28, 2021 at 1:25 PM.
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  #6467  
Old Posted Nov 20, 2020, 12:24 PM
JMKeynes JMKeynes is offline
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Beautiful.
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  #6468  
Old Posted Nov 20, 2020, 10:34 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by allh View Post
The RDA just approved the 1.15 million loan for 255 S State St so expect construction within a month.
Downtown Updates - Brinshore Developments - 255 South State & Spark


Quote:
Originally Posted by Makid View Post
This is the 2nd project for Brinshore. They are doing 255 South State and the Spark Project along North Temple. Spark is supposed to start before the end of 2020.

The Brinshore Projects - 255 South State


Copy By Luke Garrott @ BuildingSaltLake.com Senior representatives from Chicago-based Brinshore Development, one of the largest affordable housing developers in the country, according to Principal David Brint, has briefed the Salt Lake City Redevelopment Agency (RDA) Board these past months...Brinshore’s mixed affordable and market-rate project aims to align with the goals of a 2018 RFQ from the RDA. Among those goals are providing a significant number of “deeply affordable” units, promoting an active streetscape, establishing a public mid-block walkway, and preserving and activating the historic Cramer House on Floral Street...Instead of proposing a single building of large scale, Brinshore’s architect, KTGY, has designed two structures. The south building will be eight floors containing 73 units and the north structure will rise to 13 stories with 117 units. 152 of the 190 total units will be affordable, ranging from 20%-80% of AMI, with 38 units at market rate. The mix will be 122 one-bedroom, 52 two-bedroom, 13 three- and four-bedroom, with three at-grade artist live-work spaces.

On street level, the project will offer 23,000 sq. ft. of commercial space (down from 40,000 in previous plans), some of which will be dedicated to community and education purposes. The developer plans to build one level of below-grade parking, offering 100 stalls. Eighteen surface parking spaces will be reserved for retail clients...Between the buildings will be a public “paseo.” It will run from Floral Street (an alley at about 125 East that’s accessible only from 200 South) to State Street and align with Gallivan Avenue on the west side of State.

Pedestrians will be able to pass all the way from Edison Street (145 East) to State thanks to an existing east-west alley and the paseo.


[QUOTE=stayinginformed;8810109]

Updated images from the planning commission meeting last night for the 255 State Street Project.























Downtown Adj., North Temple TRAX Corridor - The SPARK Apts., Mixed-Use - By Brinshore Development


Facts
- Density: 86 du/ac
- Unit Plan Sizes: 500 - 1,200 sq. ft.
- Number of Units: 200 du
- Site Area: 2.3 ac
- Retail: 14,000 sq. ft.
- Number of Stories: 6
- Parking: 136 spaces (0.5 sp./unit)
- Construction Type: III

SPARK! Provides high density mixed-income, workforce housing with 80 percent of its units designated affordable. The color, materiality, and texture of SPARK! takes its cues from the industrial and durable materials of the adjacent power plant including brick, steel, and metal panel nodding to the past in a clean modern format. The weathered timeless look of Coreten steel and dark charcoal brick at the base are offset by light metal paneling with bright colored accents on the higher massings, which is softened by lushly landscaped terraces and roof gardens that are home to bee hives, providing fresh vegetables and honey to the residents. The community fronts Temple Street and the transit station with a small urban plaza and street-facing retail, which opens to a courtyard shared by tenants and customers alike. A 10,000 square foot childcare facility anchors one of the Temple Street corners and provides a dedicated play area. The additional 4,000 square feet of retail is designed as a grab and go market. Open space along the ground floor on the north side of the community is reserved for bike trails and edible gardens that include fruit-bearing trees, rosemary, sage and lavender. Providing residents and the public a place to stop and soak in the aromas of the garden and deepening the connection between the established and the new. The units on the upper floors are arranged in a large “U” shape surrounding a private residential courtyard and numerous roof terraces. SPARK!’s building composition reflects the varied uses of daycare, retail and housing. Each function is expressed in a clear building massing and highlighted by a change in materials. This new community, immediately adjacent to TRAX transit station, with ground floor childcare and grab and go retail, caters to the young family and commuting professionals.


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Last edited by delts145; Feb 25, 2021 at 12:29 PM.
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  #6469  
Old Posted Nov 21, 2020, 2:45 PM
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Southern Metro - Intermountain Healthcare breaks ground for second Primary Children’s Hospital.


By Daedan Olander for the Deseret News - https://www.deseret.com/utah/2020/11...groundbreaking

...Situated in the heart of Utah County, a rapidly growing area, Lehi was chosen specifically to provide quick access for the thousands of families that live there, like the Partidas.

“Having this new Primary Children’s will be amazing, not only for us for follow-ups and things that she may need in the future, surgeries and revisions, but for other families that might be going through the same thing,” Jacob Partida said. “You know, every time you see that helicopter of Life Flight, somebody’s story begins.”

The five-story hospital will be equipped with a medical-surgical unit, pediatric and surgical newborn intensive care units, an in-patient behavioral health unit and an observation unit adjacent to the emergency department, said Lisa Paletta, administrator of the Lehi campus...





Construction progresses on a second Intermountain Primary Children’s Hospital campus in Lehi on Thursday, Nov. 19, 2020. The campus will address the health care needs
of a rapidly growing population in Utah County and an increasing need for specialty pediatric care in the area. The planned 38-acre campus will open in 2023. Laura Seitz, Deseret News


...Building the 38-acre campus, hospital, and medical office will cost an estimated $335 million, Paletta said. The second Primary Children’s location is part of Intermountain’s plan to build the nation’s model health system for children,
which it announced in January. Intermountain has pledged $250 million to see the goal through. Aside from opening the new campus, Intermountain plans to add an advanced fetal care center, an augmented Level 4 Neonatal Intensive Care Unit, and an expanded cancer treatment center. It also hopes to extend its pediatric care network to offer better virtual services, as well as implement programs to help children with their mental and behavioral health. Intermountain estimates the total cost will be around $500 million...


,

Last edited by delts145; Jun 22, 2021 at 11:54 PM.
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  #6470  
Old Posted Nov 22, 2020, 4:31 PM
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Moved Forward...

Last edited by delts145; Jan 29, 2023 at 3:21 AM.
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  #6471  
Old Posted Nov 22, 2020, 4:51 PM
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Downtown - Central Transit Station

Quote:
Originally Posted by Hatman View Post
Since the discussion is on the Gateway and the Depot District, now is probably as good a time as any to drop the final draft of the Rio Grande Plan in this thread:

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1e2Z...ew?usp=sharing (PDF Warning)

It's basically the same plan as before, but now the document is only 18 pages long. Forum member cj.blakely provided the absolutely beautiful renderings, which (IMO) need to be posted here separately so that he can get all the praise he deserves.

Here is just a taste:
Existing



Proposed



As always, if you see anything horribly wrong, (poor words, ugly formatting, errors, etc) please let me know so I can fix them before sending this to the big wigs.

.

Last edited by delts145; Nov 25, 2020 at 2:10 PM.
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  #6472  
Old Posted Nov 23, 2020, 1:42 PM
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Downtown Update - The Post District - Post House Project


September 12th
Quote:
Originally Posted by scottharding View Post
I was referring to the Post district earlier with the full crew there everyday. Sorry that wasn't very clear. They've got most of the pit dug and have begun the preliminary foundation work.
Seeing the footprint mostly carved out is striking in how large this project is. It'll be massive.

It also appears the renovations to the building at the Southwest corner across 5th South is nearly completely. I like what they've done with it.

I'll try to find some time to snap some pictures tomorrow.


Quote:
Originally Posted by Orlando View Post

New Video - Check it out!



GALE STREET APARTMENTS
Salt Lake City, UT

Lowe Property Group & Q Factor
5 buildings | 580 units | 461,921 sf residential | 26,833 sf retail

This mixed-use project consists of five buildings with 580-units and 26,833 sf of retail within Type IIIA over Type IA construction. Located in the D-2 downtown area of Salt Lake City, this project will be a catalyst for fostering the
development of a sustainable urban neighborhood. The five buildings of new construction are sited to retain existing adaptive-reuse structures to create the “complete block” of old and new. The design promotes a
pedestrian-oriented development with a strong emphasis on scale in an urban context.




June 18th


Photo By Atlas


Downtown Update - Post District Continued



Quote:
Originally Posted by Blah_Amazing View Post
I was excited to see that Lowe Property Group has updated their website on the Post District. Other than some of the planned towers, this is the project I am most excited for! I think some of these images are different from the ones
that were posted a few weeks ago, so I thought I'd include them. https://www.loweprop.com/post-district

Additional New Renderings






It looks like they will be starting with the buildings they are calling 'Post House' https://www.loweprop.com/post-house , which they have listed separately on their site. Currently, Post House is also listed as
'Under Construction' so I am hoping we will be seeing some real progress on the site very soon.


Phase I - Post House Residential Component











July 30, 2020

Post House District -

Salt Lake City, UT | July 30, 2020 - https://www.cbre.us/people-and-offic...-reuse-project

The Salt Lake City office of CBRE has been selected to oversee leasing of the A&Z Building, the former home of A&Z Produce and adaptive reuse project in The Post District, a $300 million master-planned neighborhood development. Scott
Wilmarth, Nadia Letey and Melina Miramontes will oversee the office leasing requirement.

The A&Z Building is a three-story office building with a garden level, totaling approximately 36,000 square feet. Renovations are already underway, and the building should be ready for occupancy in September of this year. The renovation
transforms an old produce building into a space that unites the historic nature of the structure with a modern aesthetic, featuring exposed brick and beam finishes. The A&Z Building will share an above-grade parking structure with an
adjacent building and has a surface lot that can facilitate additional future phases of development.

"The Post District is a timely development that will redefine the western perimeter of downtown's Central Business District, and the A&Z Building is the first step in this paramount undertaking" noted Nadia Letey, first vice president of CBRE.
"Careful consideration has been taken in the master plan to ensure that the needs of the neighborhood and local businesses have been addressed, including space for housing, retail, and local artist installations in addition to the planned
office space."

The A&Z Building is part of The Post District, a major renovation in the area that aims to revitalize a 14-acre region bordering downtown's Central Business District. The Post District is a $300 million master-planned neighborhood development
with 580 new residential units and over 300,000 square feet of new and redeveloped commercial space providing creative office, walkable restaurants, cafes, shops, open green space, public plazas and more. The initial office developments
are taking place on the southern block of 500 South spanning from 300 West to 400 West.



September 12th


Photo By Scott Harding


October 30th

From SW corner of 300 W and 500 S:



Photos By ThePalmerHouse


November 17th

Photo By RC14



.

Last edited by delts145; Dec 13, 2020 at 12:24 PM.
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  #6473  
Old Posted Nov 24, 2020, 1:34 PM
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Downtown Update - Paperbox Project - Photo Updates at the Construction Site

Quote:
Originally Posted by scottharding View Post
...And the Paperbox demo is complete...

Luke Garrott Reports - Full Article @ https://www.buildingsaltlake.com/uta...oject-details/

Dust is newly stirring up on the block directly south of the Arena in West Downtown. The PaperBox Lofts, a project of Clearwater Homes and PEG Development, is clearing its inner block-long site
for construction. The developers are in final arrangements with the city for building permits, and expect construction to take 18-22 months...



Utah Paperbox site seen from the air at 400 West. Image by Luke Garrott.

It looks like the block is set to become even more dense. Clearwater hopes to submit designs for an 85 foot,
140 unit residential project to the city soon enough for a late 2019 construction start.



Massing rendering showing a future residential project fronting 200 South on the current parking lot between Westgate Lofts and the Dakota building. Image courtesy VCBO and SLC RDA.


[IMG][/IMG]
https://www.sltrib.com/resizer/G6W0g...4GC52EYRT4.png

Quote:
Originally Posted by Makid View Post

Regarding the Paperbox Project:

Salt Lake City’s newest project, the Paper Box Lofts, will include 195 apartments and an ‘automobile vending machine’


https://www.sltrib.com/news/2019/03/...-citys-newest/
Developers began Tuesday to convert an old mid-block industrial site in downtown Salt Lake City into a project known as Paper Box Lofts, which will have three residential high rises, retail spaces, a visually
striking open plaza and a unique automated parking system.

Officials with Utah-based ClearWater Homes and PEG Development broke ground on the 1.99-acre property at about 340 West 200 South, just south of the Utah Jazz’s Vivint Smart Home Arena. When done,
the project will include 195 apartments.

Under an agreement with the city’s Redevelopment Agency, which has helped subsidize the project, developers will keep 36 apartments affordable to residents making 60 percent of the area median income.


Sixty percent of the area median income would be $31,700 in annual earnings for an individual, $36,200 for a household of two people and $40,700 for a household of three, according to data from Salt Lake City.

With its affordable housing, new parking, green space and midblock pedestrian walkways, Mayor Jackie Biskupski said Paper Box Lofts “will benefit our whole community.”

The project is also expected to extend the city’s downtown core further westward and improve pedestrian access from the traditional downtown to The Gateway. Salt Lake City-based ClearWater and PEG,
based in Provo, said the first residences of Paper Box Lofts are expected to be completed by spring of 2021.

Officials with ClearWater and PEG praised the help provided by city officials and the RDA in overcoming challenges with the property’s long, rectangular shape in designing what ClearWater CEO Micah Peters called
“a multifamily project we haven’t seen in this city before.”

Downtown’s latest housing project draws its name from Utah PaperBox, a privately owned packaging company founded in 1914 that occupied the site until it relocated in 2013 to new headquarters
at 920 South 700 West.

The PaperBox property, which is adjacent to a light-rail station, runs the east-west length of that block and has frontage on both 300 West and 400 West, giving it the equivalent of “two front yards,”
according to city documents.

One of those, the development’s east frontage on 300 West, will feature an open plaza with prominently displayed public art, serving “as a type of ‘calling card’ or ‘stamp’ for the entire project by providing
an engaging and colorful mural” painted on the side of its main parking structure, city documents say.

ClearWater and PEG have contracted with VCBO Architecture in Salt Lake City for design of the PaperBox project. Rimrock Construction is the builder.

The project is a leap forward for the Depot District, a westside area spanning Salt Lake Central Station and land west of The Gateway and designated by the city as blighted and in need of redevelopment.

ClearWater and PEG say the Paper Box Lofts’ first building, on 300 West, will have 95 residential units, and the second, on 400 West, will have 85 units. The third, smaller structure will have four residences.

Nearly half those will be one bedrooms, with the rest studio and two-bedroom apartments. Up to 14 units in the larger buildings will provide both working and living space, known as live-work or flex apartments.

Paper Box Lofts will also boast roughly 146 parking stalls, with about 96 of stalls those built into a large, multi-level parking structure designed to automatically stack and retrieve cars dropped off by their drivers.

Peters likened the system to “an automobile vending machine” that will essentially stack cars seven levels high. This is thought to be the first time such an automated parking system, made by an Oakland
company called CityLift, has been deployed in Salt Lake City.

Councilwoman Amy Folwer, who is also chair of the RDA board, called the new system “incredibly exciting” and said it could help the city meet a range of parking needs downtown.

ClearWater Homes has built several recent projects in the downtown area near the PaperBox site, including Broadway Lofts, just north of Pioneer Park, and Paragon Station, a 38-unit luxury condominium project
just south of the Utah PaperBox site.

PEG Development is owner and developer of two new hotels, Hyatt House and Marriott Courtyard, north of the PaperBox parcel, as well as the Milagro Apartments, at the southwest corner of 200 West and
200 South.

https://i1.wp.com/www.buildingsaltla...plan.png?ssl=1


The project was designed by VCBO Architecture. Image courtesy Salt Lake City public document


Interior Of Block Perspectives

Rendering of the interior courtyard in the PaperBox Lofts. The project was designed by VCBO Architecture. Image courtesy Salt Lake City public document


Rendering of the interior courtyard in the PaperBox Lofts. The project was designed by VCBO Architecture. Image courtesy Salt Lake City public documents


Rendering of the PaperBox Lofts as would be seen looking east from 300 West. The project was designed by VCBO Architecture. Image courtesy Salt Lake City public documents.


Rendering of the PaperBox Lofts as would be seen looking east from 300 West. The project was designed by VCBO Architecture. Image courtesy Salt Lake City public documents.



January Update - Pics By Scott Harding







July 29th





Photos By Scott Harding



August 28th


Photo By Atlas



October 30th

From 300 West








From 400 West:





From 300 South:

Photos By ThePalmerHouse



November 17th

Paperbox Lofts from 400 W:

Photo By RC14

.

Last edited by delts145; Jan 21, 2021 at 12:51 AM.
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  #6474  
Old Posted Nov 24, 2020, 6:07 PM
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Downtown Update - The West Quarter - New Hotel Designs for Phase I



By Tony Semerad, The Salt Lake Tribunehttps://www.sltrib.com/news/2019/12/...city-approves/
...Salt Lake City has approved a way to pump $15 million into building a huge subterranean parking garage for Block 67, an upcoming ambitious residential and hotel project on the western edge of the city’s downtown.

The agreement, backed Tuesday by the City Council in its role overseeing the city’s Redevelopment Agency (RDA), clears a major hurdle for what is to be known as The West Quarter, a 6.45-acre development bounded by
100 South and 200 South from 200 West to 300 West.[/B]


(Rendering by The Ritchie Group) A rendering of The Ritchie Group's proposed Block 67 development in Salt Lake City, as though looking north along 300 West...



Developers with Salt Lake City-based The Ritchie Group and Garn Development Co. in Layton plan to build more than 650 dwellings, two hotels, an office tower, retail shops, a tree-lined street cut through the block and an underground
parking garage with more than 1,200 stalls.


With its four towers and extensive amenities, to be built in two phases, The West Quarter project will push the center of the city’s urban core west, with more robust pedestrian connections between the existing downtown and The Gateway and
Vivint Smart Home Arena farther west.

“It really is a good project,” Councilman Charlie Luke said Tuesday. “It really is going to do a lot for the city and especially for that part of the city in terms of redevelopment."...

...Ryan Ritchie, a principal in The Ritchie Group, has said the underground parking garage is integral to the project’s overall financial success...The loan agreement sets up a legal mechanism for the city to give the developers the $15 million in
money for the parking garage, then lets the developers pay it back over time as their project generates additional tax money. Salt Lake City’s RDA will, in turn, pass those payments back to the county...




Quote:
Originally Posted by meman View Post
December 5th - Construction fencing is going up around the West Quarter site today!!

Looks like another big project is imminent!!
Jacobsen is partnering with The Ritchie Group and Garn Development to build Phase I of The Block 67 Project. The West Quarter, a multi-use development that will help define the emerging sports and entertainment district in downtown Salt Lake City.
The project — adjacent to Vivint Smart Home Arena — will feature more than 650 residential units, a mid-block street with access to 200 South and 300 West, and a subterranean parking garage. The scope of work also includes more than
100,000 square feet of retail space, 430,000 square feet of office space and a 271-room hotel.


Phase I, The West Quarter

http://www.jacobsenconstruction.com/...1-1370x580.jpg


A few renderings depicting the soon to be upcoming Phase II of the Block 67 Project


https://farm2.staticflickr.com/1822/...f4799550_h.jpg



https://farm2.staticflickr.com/1761/...33fa6a67_h.jpg

From NE:

https://farm1.staticflickr.com/916/4...49056627_h.jpg

Street Level Engagement:


https://farm2.staticflickr.com/1823/...ce6d9893_b.jpg



May 28th

Quote:
Originally Posted by gusam26 View Post
Crane going up!

May 29th


Quote:
Originally Posted by ajiuO View Post
The cranes seemed to pop out of nowhere quick.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Makid View Post
The view from the 6th North bridge is amazing. The cranes look so far away from Main Street even though they are only 2 blocks.

I can't wait for the 2 CCH cranes to also go up. 6 tower cranes up and working From State Street to 3rd West and South Temple to 2nd South.

My wife did point out to me today as we drove around downtown that there are many work trucks from out of state license plats at the various projects. I thought that this was nice in that we are pulling workers from other states for our projects.



May 31st

Quote:
Originally Posted by stayinginformed View Post
Pictures of the West Quarter cranes from all sides.





Pics By StayingInformed



June 29th

The West End project by Ritchie Group at 251 W 100 S is getting footings after installing two main cranes. Its first phase will add residential, hospitality, and hotel capacity around the Utah Jazz arena.

Photo By Luke Garrott @ https://www.buildingsaltlake.com/in-...tinues-to-pop/



July 29th

Pic By Scott Harding


August 14th



Photos By Stayinginformed



August 28th

Photo By Atlas




Updated Design of Hotel Portion of Phase I


Quote:
Originally Posted by Atlas View Post
The next planning commission meeting will discuss proposed changes to the West Quarter development. Most of it seems to be related to the appearance of the hotel portion of the project. Details and renderings (more in the document linked above):
Quote:
The West Quarter project challenges the typical 10‐acre Salt Lake City block by proposing a development centered around a new through mid‐block street, resting on a below grade parking garage. The midblock
street will break down the large block scale and provide a pedestrian connection between the Downtown on 200 South and Gateway District on 300 West. The mid‐block street will be lined with retail on both sides creating an active urban environment that is focused more on pedestrian activity
while reducing vehicular traffic.

Due to the large size of our city blocks, the existing grade of our streets and sidewalks changes deceivingly across the block frontage as well as from one block to another. The existing grade along 300 West block changes by approximately 10’‐0”, approximately half of which takes place across the project frontage. Similarly, the grade continues to change along 200 South block frontage and 200 West creating three different elevations that the mid‐street and the service alley will connect and reconcile. From that perspective the project needed to prioritize the grade elevations and their transition to maximize accessibility and street activation without making modifications to the existing streets.

300 West is a State road operated by the Utah Department of Transportation (UDOT) and is subject to UDOT regulations. The existing street elevation along 300 West (between the new mid‐block street and entrance to the hotel port cochere) varies between 4272.96 at the south end and 4276.30 at the north end. The hotel ground level elevation has been set at 4278 to maximize accessibility and engagement with the new mid‐block street. The grade changes and complex relationship between the existing and new mid‐block street required the design of the 300 West frontage to be reevaluated subsequently to the Planning Commission approval.
And it turns out SLC will have at least one rooftop dining and drinking experience soon! I still hope to see something higher and closer to Main Street eventually. This one seems to have a mostly northwestern-facing orientation too, so the views of downtown and the Wasatch won't be dominant.


Quote:
The current design maintains a rooftop bar along 300 West that will contribute to street and skyline activation in accordance with the city design standards and approved design. The refined building massing creates a distinct rooftop element articulated with recessed glazing, expressed columns and a continuous architectural roofline. The roofline terminates at the northwest corner of the building with a long and dramatic cantilever that, along with the glass volume below, announces the entrance to the
development. The distinct roofline will be illuminated with continuous, linear fixtures to maintain its presence and distinct expression on the night skyline while the wood clad soffit will diffuse the lighting
and create a floating effect.

In addition to the rooftop bar, that will activate the northwest corner and create a strong connection with the Vivint Smart Home Arena, the current design will provide street and skyline activation at the opposite southeast corner of the hotel. An outdoor pool deck, with views of the downtown skyline and mountains, will create additional active uses along the future extension of the mid‐block street. In addition to enhancing and connecting the second project phase, the pool deck will be visible and create a strong connection with 200 South.










November 18th, Construction Updates - Phase I


Pictured Below, The Salt Lake City skyline rises above construction on the West Quarter, a multiuse development that will feature
resident living, retail space and a hotel on Wednesday, Nov. 18, 2020. The development is located at 100 South and 300 West. Steve Griffin, Deseret News






Photos By Steve Griffin, Deseret News

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Last edited by delts145; Jan 21, 2021 at 11:11 AM.
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Old Posted Nov 25, 2020, 1:36 PM
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SLC International - Second Phase of Phase I Opens

The second phase of phase I of the new Salt Lake City airport has opened; here’s a first look - https://thepointsguy.com/news/new-slc-airport-b-gates/ By Zach Griff, Nov 19, 2020



There’s exciting news for flyers headed to or from Salt Lake City.

On Sept. 15, city officials, as well as Delta, inaugurated a portion of the new airport with the opening of the first phase of Concourse A. But only select passengers have been able to experience the new facility since mid-September. That’s because the new terminal and its 25 gates primarily serve Delta flights.

As part of the brand-new concourse, flyers have been treated to dramatic art installations, like The Canyon in the main departures hall, sun-soaked gate areas, a plethora of bathrooms, top-notch retailers and much more.




There’s even a brand-new 28,000-square-foot Delta Sky Club welcoming the carrier’s premium flyers. It boasts passenger-friendly amenities like an outdoor deck, two buffets and private workstations.

But what if you’re flying another airline? On Oct. 27, local airport authorities opened the second phase of Phase I of the new airport — Concourse B. And with the opening, all flyers passing through SLC will now pass through a new gate.

I’ve already detailed what phase one of the new SLC looks like, so now let’s take a peek at how the new B gates compare.


To start, every passenger departing from a B gate will need to clear security in the main headhouse. Then, after passing through The Canyon, you’ll need to walk to the underground tunnel connecting the A and B gates.

The walk from the security checkpoint to the tunnel entrance takes about five to seven minutes, and you’ll then need to walk the nearly 1,000-foot tunnel before getting to the B terminal.





Though the trek is long, keep your eyes peeled to the walls — there’s a colorful art installation depicting Utah’s four seasons.






Fortunately, SLC is building a more convenient underground passageway, but that won’t be ready until late 2024. Once open, you’ll be able to head to the B gates right after clearing security, saving you at least ten minutes.


Once you ascend the escalators at the end of the tunnel there are 21 gates, allocated as follows:

Alaska Airlines — one
American Airlines — two
Delta — seven
Frontier — one
JetBlue — one
Southwest — four
United — two
Three common-use gates allocated based on demand
As you walk east, you’ll appreciate the wide hallways.



Continue walking and you’ll approach the end of the concourse near Gates B21 and B24. These gates are primarily reserved for regional jet operator SkyWest since they afford easy access to the ramp for a hard-stand operation.

As you meander through the concourse, you’ll notice that there are bathrooms at nearly every turn. Indeed, the new SLC is proud to offer restroom facilities every 150 feet.


The bathrooms themselves are large, with plenty of stalls and sinks. Each features a different art installation as well.









All 21 gates have a ton of seating, as well as power outlets and — my personal favorite — USB-C ports. As more and more phones support faster USB-C charging (like the new iPhone 12 Pro), this is a feature I hope other airports add soon.




If you’re hungry, there are three new restaurants in the B concourse, including Gourmandise Euro Diner and Bakery, Uinta Brewing Company and Wasatch Brew Pub. Indoor dining is currently permitted in the airport, and flyers seemed to be enjoying their meals.


There’s also a selection of retailers offering conveniences like drinks and snacks, magazines and newspapers, tech gear and more. As passenger throughput increases, several additional restaurants and shops are slated to open.

Concourse B is large enough to handle current levels of demand. But, hopefully, demand will pick up we recover from the pandemic. If it does, SLC is prepared; the airport has the ability to add eight additional B gates in a second construction phase and 15 more in a third phase.In the meantime, now that the first phase of B gates is open, construction returns to the A gates. Specifically, the airport is working to complete the demolition of the old C, D and F concourses, as well as the international terminal — all while building 22 more gates in Concourse A East. All photos by Zach Griff/The Points Guy

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Last edited by delts145; Nov 25, 2020 at 2:04 PM.
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  #6476  
Old Posted Nov 25, 2020, 9:58 PM
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The west quarter hotel website

WWW.THEGRIDHOTEL.COM

The video has got some awesome views of downtown
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Downtown Update - 95 So. State


https://kutv.com/resources/media/dd4...?1556058476688


View of the 95 S. State Office Tower site on the left and the Liberty Sky Residential Tower site on the right. Background and rising above downtown to the Northeast is the Avenues District



https://i2.wp.com/www.buildingsaltla...er-8.png?ssl=1


https://i2.wp.com/www.buildingsaltla...er-8.png?ssl=1


https://i0.wp.com/www.buildingsaltla...er-8.png?ssl=1


Quote:
Originally Posted by meman View Post
Does anyone know when the steel is scheduled to start going up on Tower 8? The central elevator core is pretty tall, it appears to be about 10 storys tall?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Makid View Post
They have been pouring concrete for the first floor/ground level. I would think that once this is complete and set, we would start to see steel rise. I think this may be in the next 2 weeks. That would give the core another 1 or 2 levels.


July 29th

Quote:
Originally Posted by bob rulz View Post
Updated images of 95 State I took yesterday:
Steel rising!



Rendering, looking south toward north face of 95 S. State Tower, mid-block Social Hall Avenue and Canopy structure on the left


Photo taken July 28th - Looking north, showing a partial view of subterranean structures at the bottom of photo with mid-block Social Hall Avenue and Canopy in the background.

Photo By RC14



Quote:
Originally Posted by Atlas View Post
Excellent shot of 95 So. State today from u/chaunceton on the subreddit:
August 12th




August 28th

Quote:
Originally Posted by Atlas View Post
95 State starting to make a big impact at City Creek:

Photos By Atlas



September 12th

Photo By Scott Harding




September 20th

Quote:
Originally Posted by Highrise_Mike View Post
I was downtown yesterday and snapped some quick pics for project updates!



Photos By Highrise_ Mike



October 30th




Photos By ThePalmerHouse



November 7th

Photo By DCRes



November 18th

Photo By RC14

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Last edited by delts145; Dec 1, 2020 at 12:05 PM.
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Old Posted Nov 28, 2020, 10:32 PM
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Downtown Update - Liberty Sky

“We’re excited to see residential on State Street, which is a fairly new addition to the ecosystem,” said Christian Harrison, the Downtown Community Council chairman.
“It is a good sign that State Street is turning a corner. We do hope it spurs more development farther south along State Street.”

“Offices are daytime [operations] and don’t create vibrancy or activity in the evenings. In downtown, they create dead zones,” Planning Director Norris added. “Apartments put eyes on
public spaces basically all day long. Those residents tend to go out at night and walk around the neighborhood. It enlivens downtown.”



(Artist's rendition courtesy of Cowboy Properties) Cowboy Properties and Boyer Co. are looking to build a 24-story apartment building on the east side of State Street between
the Federal Building on 100 South and the Maverik headquarters building on 200 South. The $90 million project is being praised for its prospects of bringing more residents to downtown Salt Lake City.

The Salt Lake Tribune - By Mike Gorrell - Convinced that downtown living is increasingly desirable, real-estate developers Cowboy Properties and Boyer Co. are building a 24-story apartment building on State Street between 100 and 200 South...

...The $90 million high-rise would include roughly 300 apartment units and a rooftop swimming pool. A five-story parking terrace would be built on its east side, hidden from street views by surrounding buildings.

Although rent levels would vary, Cowboy Properties President and CEO Dan Lofgren said most would cost near the “top of the market in today’s market. We’ll have studios to very large two bedrooms, units that
go for under $1,000 [a month] while some of the largest will be several thousand.”...

...“As the downtown residential market has evolved, and as we massaged what we thought was the best option, this residential tower emerged,” Lofgren said. “Downtown Salt Lake City has become an amenity-rich environment.
It’s become a great neighborhood. The pieces that were missing 10 years ago — not that it was bad then — are now filled in.“

First and foremost: the Harmons City Creek market at 135 E. 100 South. “The grocery store makes it a neighborhood,” Lofgren said. “For many household configurations, the option of living downtown has become the
preferred option. These are households hoping to live without a car, households looking for the convenience of being close to work, households energized by all the activities downtown,
households attracted to this notion of a high-rise and the views and lifestyle it offers.”

At the projected rent levels, he sees these apartments appealing to people working at high-tech and financial-services companies, law firms and banks. Retirees also are likely renters, Lofgren added,
“drawn especially by the arts downtown — the symphony, the ballet, Eccles Theater. That’s a pretty full basket of offerings.”...

...Planning Director Norris said the shift from office tower to residential high-rise is “certainly consistent with our master plan policies, which try to increase the number of people living downtown.”



June 18th

Pic by Atlas


June 29th

Pic By Luke Garrott @ BuildingSaltLake.com


July 28th

Photo By RC14


August 28th

Liberty Sky is on the 7th floor, 17+ more to go.

Pic By Atlas



September 12th


Pic By Scott Harding




September 20th


Photo By Highrise_Mike




September 25th

Quote:
Originally Posted by msbutah View Post
Liberty Sky appears to be getting first residential floor glass today...

Photo By MSBUtah


October 30th

From 200 South:



From State Street:




Construction Photos By ThePalmerHouse



November 7th

Liberty Sky Residential Tower in the Foreground & 95 S. State, up the street in the background.



Photos By DCRes


November 18th


Photo By RC14


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Last edited by delts145; Dec 11, 2020 at 6:29 PM.
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Old Posted Nov 29, 2020, 12:40 PM
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Downtown Update - The Revival - By PEG Development


A modern twist on classic Western European design characteristics of the 1920’s, The Revival is unlike any other multifamily community that exists in Salt Lake City. Located in downtown’s Historic Warehouse District, this unique project’s industrial exterior will blend seamlessly with its environment while beautifully transitioning into a more refined palette inside. Tenants will enjoy prominent geometric patterns, intense color schemes, and grandiose finishes throughout the art deco-inspired buildings. This project stands in one of Salt Lake City’s Qualified Opportunity Zones.

Quote:
Copy By Luke Garrott @ BuildingSaltLake.com - Market-rate apartment construction in Downtown Salt Lake City will see another start, when PEG Development breaks ground on The Revival, just behind the NE corner of 400 South and 200 West.

Simply Sushi and Ibiza nightclub occupy a one-story retail space on the NE corner of the 400 S. 200 W. intersection. That building will remain. PEG will build to the north on surface parking lots and demolish one building on 200 West, currently occupied by RestoreFX, an auto body shop. In addition, the project will add a one-story retail space of 1700 SF, directly east of Ibiza fronting 400 South. The owners are looking for a fast-casual dining establishment. Three buildings total will be demolished for the new project.
Location: Salt Lake City - Year: 2021 - Size: 144,000 SF - Units: 143


https://pegcompanies.com/wp-content/...-optimized.png


The Revival site, approximate, in red, just west of Fairfield Inn & Suites. Image by Luke Garrott, courtesy Google Earth.


November 18th

Demolition has clearly started on this site. As viewed looking east from 200 West.

Photo By RC14


.

Last edited by delts145; Dec 23, 2020 at 2:22 PM.
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Old Posted Dec 1, 2020, 11:26 AM
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Parting Shot - Snowbird Ski Resort - Central Metro

http://speidelsadventures.blogspot.c...-snowbird.html

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Last edited by delts145; Jan 21, 2021 at 11:12 AM.
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