I am excited to see a restaurant from Kevin Durant and something to fill this hole, but I am disappointed in the design. However, it matches the rest of the area of Lower Bricktown - suburban in nature that happens to be along a canal.
The new boulevard is an above ground bridge over the canal and then will come down to ground level just to the west of the canal crossing. It may be cutting it close and there may even be some kind of landscaping berm between the building and the road. Who knows, just saying, it'd be worth it not to have to look at the back side of a building when you're looking over at the Brick from the Boulevard since we're looking at a different perspective in this new future.
Here are the final plans for the Kevin Durant restaurant plus one other restaurant space:
Thank goodness they finally steered that fictional elderly couple away from the canal!
have to wonder if the other spot will be an upper crust ..
A slender and small patio on half of the building....what a pathetic use of prime canal frontage. An absolute joke
Just terrible. How can people who do this for a living be so bad at it? Why would you not have your business interact with the canal more?!? A huge patio would likely be a hit!
Hogan continues to disappoint. I seriously don't understand his ineptitude here.
The other tenent will have no patio at all.
Pathetic waste of land...
Keep this thread in mind when thinking about how you want the new boulevard developed. Do you want a parkway or an urban street?
As for this abomination, there won't be many protest when they have to scrape this area clear in 20 years.
I agree Metro - as bad as it is, atleast it takes up some vacant space.
It will also be easy to replace down the road.
Nope, but that doesn't mean I can't dream of something better that could go there.
Edit: I would like to think are city has grown out of the "its better than a dang grass lot" phase of our development, I guess not. At least were not waving carrots for sporting good stores anymore. BP is about to have more competition from all four corners of the metro in a couple of months.
Id rather have the grass
If it's a Hal Smith Group chain, it'll last. The building may not be so cool, but it'll have more people traffic than the empty grass lot. Several years ago, we went to San Antonio twice in about 15 months. What we were amazed by was the 'turnover' in resturants, what we had enjoyed were either something else or completely vacant, and it was in the urban canal wall of buildings.
I love San Antonio Riverwalk, however, past two times I have been there I have been practically alone on the river at 9 pm. It was mid week, but I would have expected more life and traffic. As for historic, the river was a sewer..that's the history.
We should hope this restaurant is good and draws people. Whether there is a lively patio or not, the restaurant will bring people IN to the city and they will spend time before, after, or both. It will give people one more reason to go downtown and/or to stay, and that is good.
As for it being scraped later...maybe after years and years. But, there is so much undeveloped and under-developed land downtown there will be lots of other places to scrape before businesses with cash flow and profit will be replaced.
Wasn't dreaming, according to this map. Hardly any of Lower bricktown is subject to any special review commitee. Just the planning department for building permits.
http://www.okctalk.com/other-urban-d...districts.html
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