If this goes the Eminent Domain route, it will be really interesting to see how this plays out in court. If the taking of the parking lot renders Uhaul's improvements functional obsolete, the City will have to pay the cost to cure the functional obsolescence. In the event that the cost to cure is greater than the value of the total property, the City is required to purchase the total property. It's not extraordinarily likely that this will happen, but if Uhaul drags this out to a jury trial, and has good lawyers, who really know what a jury will decide Just Compensation is. It will take a few years until Just Compensation to Uhaul will be determined, but I would not be surprised if the City ends up over budget on Boulevard acquisitions. The longer they wait to acquire the property, the more expensive the property becomes. Especially with the rise of speculators paying increasingly higher amounts for land, i.e Strawberry Fields.
There's a very good reason for the 4-track bridge. Those extra tracks and space will be necessary for future commuter rail operations through the Santa Fe Station terminal. Here's Jacobs Engineering's original 3-platform design from the Intermodal Hub Study:
Here's a more recent detailed engineering design by URS:
When commuter rail operations commence, the two eastern tracks will serve those operations into the Santa Fe Station terminal. Two new set of tracks will be laid to the west to provide through service for freight trains and Amtrak service into the hub.
It was critical that the BNSF Boulevard bridge be constructed with enough track capacity to meet these future operational requirements. ODOT, OKC and BNSF deserve a lot of credit for working together to make this happen.
There's a very good reason for the 4-track bridge. Those extra tracks and space will be necessary for future commuter rail operations through the Santa Fe Station terminal. Here's Jacobs Engineering's original 3-platform design from the Intermodal Hub Study:
Here's a more recent detailed engineering design by URS:
When commuter rail operations commence, the two eastern tracks will serve those operations into the Santa Fe Station terminal. Two new set of tracks will be laid to the west to provide through service for freight trains and Amtrak service into the hub.
It was critical that the BNSF Boulevard bridge be constructed with enough track capacity to meet these future operational requirements. ODOT, OKC and BNSF deserve a lot of credit for working together to make this happen.
I was just about to go down there and get some updated ground photos. Looks like you beat me.
I must say, this solution is pretty hilarious. Like what is that, parking spaces directly in front after you turn in there? This little area is going to be a nightmare for Thunder games. I can already envision the stacks of cars idling in the Harkins lot while others are still trying to back out of their spaces.
This intersection is now open.
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Drove through it yesterday. After driving through from the Boulevard side it became apparent to me that the intuitive thing is to turn right, which puts you into the Harkins parking lot and which becomes awkward/congested/weird very quickly. The correct move for through traffic would be to turn left and go around the U-Haul, but I suspect most will turn right. Hopefully Hogan will put up some signage and/or other features that make the entrance to the lot seem more like an entrance to a lot and less like a street.
What a mess. I can't tell from the photo is there any way to punch straight through without any jogs even if U-Haul allowed it, or is their building in the way?
They need a big sign with a left arrow pointing to Oklahoma Avenue and a right arrow pointing to the movie theater and restaurants.
^^^^^^
I don't disagree with this, BUT will point out that in general people don't read signs. They just don't. They rely on the environment to tell them what to do. So making the right turn FEEL like a turn into a private parking lot and making the left turn FEEL like the way into Bricktown is the best bet.
OKC to buy part of McDonald’s parking lot for boulevard
By: Brian Brus The Journal Record September 25, 2017
OKLAHOMA CITY – The final two construction phases for the new Oklahoma Boulevard into downtown will be put out for bid in November after the acquisition of a portion of the McDonald’s property at W. Sheridan and N. Western avenues, officials confirmed.
Oklahoma City Council is expected to approve the nearly $1 million purchase of the restaurant parking lot Tuesday to expand the boulevard’s right of way at the intersection. The acquisition will allow the Oklahoma Department of Transportation to award contracts for the final two phases at the same time, Oklahoma City Public Works Director Eric Wenger said, with construction to begin in early 2018.
Work on the I-40 crosstown realignment began in 1995 at a total cost of $700 million. In May this year, ODOT and state Transportation Commission officials announced highway construction projects were being deferred due to budget cuts by the Legislature, which meant long-term schedule disruptions. Of the two final Oklahoma Boulevard phases remaining at the time, one was planned for contract letting in August and the other set for some time during the fiscal year that ends July 31.
Because the new road closely follows the old Interstate 40 footprint, other necessary rights of way are already under government ownership. Only one other privately held parcel – the U-Haul trailer parking lot in Bricktown – is being considered for acquisition, sources confirmed, but Wenger would not discuss the matter because negotiations are ongoing. Requests for comment by local management were referred to the U-Haul corporation, which could not be reached for comment Monday.
Wenger said only part of the McDonald’s parking lot is needed. The restaurant will remain operational. He said the deal was complicated because it involved both a local franchise owner and multinational corporation. The negotiated purchase price listed on City Council’s meeting agenda is $984,000 plus closing costs of $4,000. By comparison, the entire restaurant property of 1.55 acres has a market value of $1.23 million, according to the Oklahoma County Assessor’s website.
“We were able to acquire a small portion of their south parking lot to make the plan work, realigning Classen Boulevard adjacent to McDonald’s, merging it into Western Avenue,” Wenger said. “It will dramatically improve the traffic congestion we see in that area.”
After completion, the state will turn over the thoroughfare to the city for continued maintenance.
Doesnt McDonalds own the land of all the stores, and lease it to the franchisees?
It should be noted that the $984,000 price also includes compensation for the temporary right-of-way, as well as the acquisition of the permanent right-of-way. Probably 75% is to the perm, and 25% is to the temp. Also, assessor market value is not a credible indicator of true market value and utilizing assessor market value as a value indicator can be misleading. I don't want to be a stickler, but that is a pet peeve of mine.
Here is what is being acquired.
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^
Thanks!
Wow, what a windfall for that McDonald's. Amost a cool million for a parking area that is never used.
Judging by the shape of the acquisition, this leads me to believe this is for a dedicated yielding lane onto the Boulevard from southbound Classen?
*eyeroll*
The connection of Film Row to Farmers Market area is basically impossible.
I can't find the final plans for the boulevard for some reason. Help?
UHaul has started a petition to fight the City on taking their property.
From a press release:
*******************
Oklahoma City Department of Public Works
420 West Main, Suite 700
Oklahoma City, OK 73102-4406
ATTN: Eric Wenger, Director of Public Works, City Engineer; Debbie Miller, Public Works, Assistant City Engineer; Dennis Clowers, City Manager’s Office; Jim Lewellyn, Public Works; Amanda Carpenter, Municipal Counselor’s Office
Open Letter to the Oklahoma City Department of Public Works
OKC is near and dear to each of us. Its distinct communities represent the best of Oklahoma life: good people, progressive business and flourishing culture. This is our home.
Our home is growing. We accept and embrace this. Anytime people are on the move – which is all the time – it’s beneficial for U-Haul because our products and services are in demand. The growth of OKC also requires development and infrastructure. That’s where our admirable city officials come into play. The actions proposed by our municipal leaders often have major ramifications on private and corporate citizens. Considering the positive and negative impacts on our private and corporate citizens is a great responsibility, and yet it is the essence of many government jobs.
OKC has traditionally been pro-business. U-Haul, in turn, has been a leading proponent of OKC. This is especially so of our Bricktown store. Serving the community since 1977, U-Haul Moving & Storage of Bricktown at 100 SE 2nd St. has been a neighborhood tenant for more than 40 years. U-Haul preserved the historical structure, once home of the Snow White Bakery, by applying its adaptive reuse policies to promote infill development and reduce the emissions, materials and wastes linked to new construction.
Through the decades, our Bricktown store has repeatedly obliged city requests. This included spending hundreds of thousands of U-Haul dollars in the 1990s when the city requested a new store façade to fit its vision for an entertainment district, masking the area’s industrial roots.
Now the city has chosen to target our Bricktown store as a potential answer for its oft-delayed and muchdebated OKC Boulevard project. The city is considering bringing an eminent domain case against U-Haul of Bricktown in the name of a more direct connection to Oklahoma Avenue.
Eminent domain – the government exercising its power to seize private property for public use – is a very intrusive and unpopular action. When the need is absolutely irrefutable and there are no other options to consider, perhaps it makes sense. In this case, it makes absolutely no sense.
When the city first approached U-Haul of Bricktown, proposing a land swap for our parking lot, it was not in our best interest. Such a project would turn our store and property around, back to front and front to back. It would be impossible to best serve DIY moving customers with extensive renovations taking place. Yet despite our interests, we came to the negotiating table as a good neighbor, willing to listen to the city’s needs once more.
We soon realized how unaware the city is of the costs that accompany a project of this size. It’s more complex than removing the doors from the west wall and sticking them on the east wall. There are new building codes to meet; permits to attain; big changes to utilities and the water system; showroom relocation; elevator relocation; elevation variations; and so much more.
Construction costs for what the city is asking of our store will approach $5 million. In response, the city offered us just over $1 million. Essentially asking a business to spend its own money – let alone almost $4 million – to accommodate a city-requested project that would hurt business and inconvenience U-Haul customers is mindboggling. And wrong.
There are a variety of opinions about the OKC Boulevard project and whether it’s actually needed, how it’s being handled, and the delays and costs involved. A workaround is being constructed along the border of the U-Haul property to provide a path for drivers to reach Oklahoma Avenue at an additional cost to the taxpayers. If the city now opts to declare eminent domain, it would mean delays of another 1-2 years while the case plays out while putting taxpayers on the hook for the complete cost of the U-Haul property reconfiguration, not to mention the city’s legal fees.
That’s not a productive path for the city, U-Haul, the business community or the citizens of OKC.
If our municipal leaders are pro-business as they claim to be, let it be reflected in the way they handle this project by not threatening an honorable business that has served Bricktown for 40 years. We are often the first representatives that people meet when they move to our city and return their truck or trailer. We’re proud to put a positive face on OKC.
We respect our local officials and the jobs they do. We ask that our local officials respect a good neighbor and one of OKC’s strongest proponents in the business community.
U-Haul of Bricktown has started a change.org and in-store petition to let the people of OKC be heard on this topic: https://www.change.org/p/oklahoma-ci...-oklahoma-city. Please consider its merit, and thank you for considering our stance.
Sincerely,
Brett M. Hogan
U-Haul Area District Vice President
We should start another petition requesting that UHaul leave Bricktown and permit the restoration of a historic building to higher use by the community. With all due thanks for their previous service to the district of course.
See who gets more votes.
$5 million seems exorbitant. If they really want the public to pay it, I think they should show how they arrived at those numbers. If the numbers are real, why don't both sides commit to binding arbitration using a recognized and fair arbiter. If that is the actual number to make them whole, so be it. But, OKC shouldn't pay for any improvement in their condition. I also think that as much as they like to plead the case that they are helping the city, they ignore the windfall that is the result of all the development paid for and spurred on by MAPS, paid by the citizens of this city. They conveniently leave out the fact their property has been made many times more valuable because of public expenditures.
The process is that this all goes to an arbitrator and both sides submit comparables and other information to help support the value from their perspective (high for the seller, low for the buyer).
So, at this stage both sides are posturing but in the end the courts will decide the fair market value. Remember, we went through something similar with the Brewers and Santa Fe Station.
I think the better question here is if the City knew that Uhaul was going to fight them tooth and nail, why didn't they stick with the original intersection at Compress instead of having ODOT build it at Oklahoma when they knew it would be way more expensive and time-consuming?
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