BTW, lost in all the demolition talk yesterday, the rep from Hines told the DDRC "we will not be seeking public assistance for the garages".
Note that they did not say "for this project", which leads me to believe they may in fact seek tax dollars for the office building.
If they come back and ask for that later, this will be the second time someone has played the investment / economic development card to gave demolition approval, then later came back and claimed the new construction they had originally proposed requires public subsidy. The first time was Clayco/OG&E/Stage Center.
So glad we don't have to have something like this getting in the way of our parking garages:
The Grey Is Now Open in Savannah's Old Greyhound Bus Terminal - Eater Atlanta
What a waste!
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Something like that would be a truly unique and unexpected experience in OKC for visitors and residents alike. It's a shame the powers that be here aren't more forward thinking. The bus station is really the only thing on that block that I really care to see saved. The Hotel Black and Motor Hotel aren't anything too special but the bus station has so much potential to be something cool and unexpected. Like Stage Center and the Bricktown Flyer however, unique and unexpected isn't something that works in OKC.
Think about where people want to hang out these days. Auto Alley, Midtown, 23rd St., the Plaza District are booming. Kitchen 324 is in a renovated building. Maybe we need to not worry about restaurant and retail space in these new buildings because what appeal will they have anyway? Who will want to go to a second floor restaurant when you can hang out on a street side patio at one of these great old buildings? How many people would rather go to Vast than Broadway 10? Would you rather go to the bar at the Aloft or the O bar. Old buildings have a unique appeal. When you go through our CBD and really look, it is actually quite shocking to see how much of the available land and how many buildings are dedicated to parking. I'm not sure there was much hope for that area anyway, once I really look at it.
Precisely. If this how these guys want to build their utopia, I've given up. Let them build their ideal urban environment full of parking garages, inactive storefront windows, sky bridges and tunnels, and token retail.
Meanwhile, the rest of us will actually experience urban environments that the small and medium sized investors are making in real districts.
None of those districts woud exist with out the strong CBD that we have
I wouldn't go quite so far to say that. Though the Braniff Building is nice, that's not why I go to Kitchen 324. I go there because it's a good restaurant. If they were somehow convinced to pack up and move to 499 Sheridan, I wouldn't stay away because of any shortcomings the building may have. If they put something in there that I like, I'll make a point of it to stop by.
There's nothing desperate about stating the obvious and your post is pretty weak.
Downtown is for all of us living in the metro, all 1.3 million of us... The ones that voted in the MAPS projects, paid the sales taxes, have used our disposable dollars supporting everything downtown as it's developed, provide the work force and many of who will become residents...but the majority of us have no desire to live downtown and never will...
We love our city and its suburban lifestyle and really don't ask for much... an easy commute when we come in to work and play and a good place to park when we get there.
Over a million square feet of new class A office space and plentiful parking in a great spot along the new streetcar route trumps the loss of the Stage Center and the buildings on this block for suburbanists...but it will be for urbanists as well. These developments will be a great benefit to every district surrounding the CBD where retail and residential make much more sense and are well on their way.
Kitchen 324, if operated by tuck, could move into some old building on S Shields and they'd still be good eating. Sure, the view is nice where they are. But if the food and service were horrid, it's not such a view, nor such a building, that I'd bother to return.
Panda, you may only be 21 years young, but you are wise beyond your years. I'd say you are by far one of the most passionate posters on here and put a lot of energy into your posts. You also have some great ideas and the city of OKC needs more people like to to express their goals and desires for the direction this city wants to go. I am more outspoken to a fault no doubt and then go negative on OKC out of frustration but share the same goals.
Wish you the best out in LA. I'd check out the Redondo/Hermosa Beach areas. You will love it there, it almost feels like a small beach community in a strange kind of way. Great weather, ocean air, palm trees, and lots of cougars for you!Be sure and check out Sharkeez there, you will love it. Hope you keep up with OKC on here and don't be a stranger. Also, if you make it big, come back and film a movie here! Wish you the best, you will love it and probably won't ever come back. As much as I love OKC, I realize their are just much better places out there that offer so much more. Maybe someday that will change but we can always keep dreaming. It is a much better place than it was and in some ways heading the right direction.
Oops, replied to the wrong poster on my last post.
Panda, you may only be 21 years young, but you are wise beyond your years. I'd say you are by far one of the most passionate posters on here and put a lot of energy into your posts. You also have some great ideas and the city of OKC needs more people like to to express their goals and desires for the direction this city wants to go. I am more outspoken to a fault no doubt and then go negative on OKC out of frustration but share the same goals.
Wish you the best out in LA. I'd check out the Redondo/Hermosa Beach areas. You will love it there, it almost feels like a small beach community in a strange kind of way. Great weather, ocean air, palm trees, and lots of cougars for you! Be sure and check out Sharkeez there, you will love it. Hope you keep up with OKC on here and don't be a stranger. Also, if you make it big, come back and film a movie here! Wish you the best, you will love it and probably won't ever come back. As much as I love OKC, I realize their are just much better places out there that offer so much more. Maybe someday that will change but we can always keep dreaming. It is a much better place than it was and in some ways heading the right direction
Great post.
I agree that downtown OKC is for the entire metro and at this point in OKC's development, its suburban residents who are supporting all these downtown businesses and creating the vibrant, up and coming districts that people love. I fully support urban living and people who prefer that lifestyle but also realize that adequate parking and other amenities aimed at suburbanites are necessary for a thriving downtown. Any effort to create an urban vs suburban rivalry is an effort to undermine the progress that OKC has made.
I don't know the statistics for most cities, but a lot of the recent office space development in Dallas, the bay area, and San Diego has been suburban. Many larger corporations prefer to have campus facilities. I give Devon credit for choosing downtown OKC. They certainly could have built a facility outside the core. SF is seeing increasingly reverse commutes with employees heading down to Palo Alto/Cupertino/Sunnyvale, which have large business office developments going on. Much of the pharma and biotech in San Diego continue to develop in the mid-town area and Carmel Valley. The recent relocations in Dallas has been north of LBJ and American Airlines is looking at the old Texas Stadium site for a corporate campus. All these cities continue to see downtown growing too, but the suburban areas are outstripping them in growth.
But if it were on the second floor of a parking garage in the CBD, would you be as likely to go? My point is that I think the reason downtowns that are all parking garage and new buildings are off putting. Couple that with absent foot traffic in the evenings, and I suspect it's less appealing to people. That's probably why a lot of CBDs are empty at night. We're just extending the empty space in our downtown with these parking garages and my point was that a restaurant like RePubLic is probably wise enough to locate in a district with older, smaller buildings with space on the first floor and foot traffic. A second floor garage is probably the place to put a Bonefish Grill or some national chain people who work downtown are drawn to.
betts, as I live in Norman, when I eat at K324 it is because I want to enjoy what they prepare and their level of service. Not many breakfast places even try to come close. So yes, if they relocated elsewhere for some reason, I'd follow when I want a relaxing and tasty breakfast. Unless they shifted up north several miles. I just rarely ever venture north of 23rd or 36th anymore, and often not that far.
I'm sorry, I have to agree with betts on this one. That building provides an incredible ambiance to boost the experience. Put that same breakfast in any other place and it just wouldn't be as good.
Ultimately, yes we can't worry about it, but I think it's good to point out what opportunities are being missed to encourage better development going forward. The advocates for 499, as it is now, have basically admitted that they are departing from Oklahoma City's proven successful development strategies when they pointed them out on a post card and then asked everyone to support that they do the opposite. It was quite the Jedi mind trick and it seems to have worked. lol.
However, there is a bigger concern. These developers and the people behind them have an influence that extends beyond their sandbox, one that has potential to undermine the public and private investments made in these districts that have begun to create a new urban center for Oklahoma City. The most high profile examples is obviously Nichols's oppositions to aspects of the streetcar. We have concrete examples of how they think urban areas should be developed, and basically they are 30 year old ideas (at least) and depart completely from the strategies of development that have facilitated a true urban renaissance in countless cities across the country and from which we are beginning to see similar success in Oklahoma City. We can write off the west side of the CBD as a 24 hour urban district, but the minds behind that are actively working against public investment in other districts that have shown the possibility of actually bringing the new urban environment to Oklahoma City. So, really, the question going forward is how do we keep that influence from working against the implementation of good urban development in the districts that have had already seen a great deal of success and rejuvenation because of those strategies?
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