First of all, everyone realizes I wasn't calling betts elitist..she herself said that what she was quoting was over the top. Furthermore, how is it not elitism? I doubt that the person with that point of view is in favor of letting poor people live near them. That seems to sort of be the premise. Regular people housing deteriorates into poor people housing. Housing for the top echelon will at least stay somewhat nice.
But keep in mind this is why downtown housing has FAILED to meet a single aspiration we had for it 5 years ago. If you look at the downtown housing report, which I thought was conservative at the time, we should have had thousands of more units. Yeah, there was a recession, but we realistically wouldn't have gotten any more affordable units out of the 2006-7 boom. All of the canceled projects were, say it with my guys, upscale condos. We would have been stuck with a glut on un-sellable condos worse than we had last year. That seems to be what you guys want.
Look, condos are what they are. I'm not denying that it isn't a plus to have home ownership in a neighborhood. I'm not denying that the Brownstones are the coolest residential built downtown. Not denying that there may be the small chance of deteriorating with LEVEL (though I think McKown is building these to last) that there isn't with the Brownstones. Those are all benefits. There are benefits to apartments as well. You bring in more diversity to the neighborhood. A younger population. More of the artists that you can build a cultural scene around. What kind of cultural scene do you think you can build around people making $200k/year? There's a reason The Paseo is the artist village. So those are very real benefits for Deep Deuce, too.
I'll go a little further and directly address Steve's point: Lyrewood, NW 10th, Del City. Who cares about those places? You're using the most extreme cases which does not make a valid argument. Those are all cases of sprawl. Those are all cases of not building things to last on purpose. And yeah, Quail Springs is going to be a really bad dump here in 10 years, I guarantee it.
There are also nice apartment complexes in the city. Downtown has a few. Anyone want to say that the Deep Deuce Apartments themselves are being bled dry by the new mgmt, on a fast path to become a slumland? How long has Sycamore Square been there? There are apartments in Nichols Hills, used to be even more before Chesapeake went realty-crazy. There are even nice apartment complexes in the metro's wealthiest ZIP code in SW OKC. I can think of one at 104th and Penn that's really nice and has been there for 20 years.
So in summary, I'm not denying that there are benefits to condos. That goes without saying, and you'd have to be a moron to overlook those. They are significant. But it's kind of like betts said earlier, I don't think she's actually against rental downtown, in fact I think she's pretty supportive, I just think she has reservations being a big stakeholder. She said she mostly just wants to confront the people who are ideologically crusading against condos now, and that's also understandable. Now I guess I'm just confronting the people I see ideologically crusading against new rentals downtown.
Steve, I'm not going to go all metro on you, but I disagree when you say that the extreme viewpoint about THESE Deep Deuce apartments in the Oke comment page was anything other than elitism. I also disagree with you when you bring up examples of deteriorated sprawl parts of town. All of them at least 7 miles out from downtown. I'm going to disagree with anyone who thinks that quality-built rental units AREN'T what downtown needs. It is exactly what downtown needs. It is making downtown living accessible and it is going to bring in more diversity. All of these apartments will be well-built, probably won't deteriorate very noticeably (anymore than Sycamore has), rents will be high enough to keep the riff raff out, but in the end, will bring in a lot of interesting people who can't exactly afford the Brownstones or City Place.
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