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Archive of entries posted on November 2011

2020 Lawrence Update #2

2020 Lawrence has started to go vertical and you can truly start to see how large this project is going to be. If you recall, this is going to be a 231-unit 10-story apartment building developed by Zocalo Development.

This is looking at the project down Lawrence Street where the sidewalk will be.

Looking at this project from the corner of 21st Street you can truly see how much of the block this takes up.

 

And finally a couple of shots from the back of the project. (Hopefully one day the other half of the lot will be taken up along with the lot I was standing in to take this picture)

 

There are still eight floors to go on 2020 Lawrence. This is going to be great infill and it already is changing Lawrence Street between 20th and 21st Street.

 


ULI-Colorado TOD Marketplace Recap

 

The Colorado district council of the Urban Land Institute held a major event this past week, Denver’s first Transit-Oriented Marketplace. My thanks to Kathleen McCormick with Fountainhead Communications in Boulder for providing DenverInfill with this recap of the event:

Report from ULI TOD Marketplace

 

The mood was upbeat among the more than 350 people who attended ULI Colorado’s TOD Marketplace at the Embassy Suites Downtown, where we heard from some of the nation’s most experienced finance, development, and transit experts about creative solutions for transit-oriented development. Over the course of the day, we learned about the successes of recent TOD projects and innovations in financing, housing, parking, public-private partnerships, and other components that could pave the way for more development around stations in our region’s expanding public transit system.

 

ULI Colorado Chair Chris Achenbach opened the program with Phil Washington, general manager of the Regional Transportation District (RTD), who discussed the roll-out of the FasTracks expansion of 57 new commuter and light rail stations, a new transit development policy, and pilot programs to encourage development around transit stations. Keynote speaker Steven Goldin, director of real estate for the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority (WMATA), the nation’s second-largest transit system, said transit-oriented development is complicated, and we need to simplify the message for the public to “ideas that resonate like jobs, mobility, and growth.” Another keynoter Emerick Corsi, President of Forest City Enterprises Real Estate Asset Services, the nation’s largest TOD developer, advised us to “embrace the city and neighborhood next door” by looking at development plans holistically and branding stations to create individual identify within the vision for the whole network.

 

I’d like to have been at all the concurrent sessions—TOD housing, parking, and demographics, and the TAP presentations on Lakewood, Denver, and Aurora—but I chose to focus on learning about innovative financing, urbanizing the suburbs, and joint development with public-private partnerships, and I came away with some great ideas.

 

Over drinks and appetizers in the ballroom, we checked out Great Sites Trading Floor, with exhibit materials on over 40 TOD sites at play in the region, and applauded fellow ULI members who won raffle prizes like Bronco tickets and registration to the ULI Fall Meeting next October in… Denver.

 

Kudos to the local and national speakers, event chairs Denise Balkas and Peter Kenney, the TOD program committee, all the volunteers, and our ULI Colorado staff.

 

– Kathleen McCormick, Fountainhead Communications, Boulder

 


Denver Union Station Tour This Saturday, November 19, 2011

Hey, why not join me for our DenverInfill walking tour of the Union Station project this Saturday morning, Nov. 19 at 10 AM.

Here’s how it works: Head on down to the LoDo side of the historic station at 17th & Wynkoop at about 9:50 AM. Whoever shows up, that will be our tour group. We’ll start promptly at 10:00 AM and conclude around 11:00 AM at the new light rail station by the Millennium Bridge. The suggested donation for the tour is $10 per person and all proceeds go to the non-profitUnion Station Advocates, but you’re welcome to attend regardless of what you can donate.

This is your chance to get a detailed overview of the project’s major components: the public spaces, the transit/transportation facilities, the new private-sector development, and the reuse of the historic structure.

See you Saturday morning!


Denver Union Station Update #91

caisson [kā-sännoun. A watertight chamber used in construction work under water or as a foundation.

The pieces of equipment in the photo above are building caissons for the train bridges that will be part of the roof of the bus terminal.  (I had to look up the definition of a caisson.) There will be eight sets of tracks (Amtrak, Ski Train, commuter rail) requiring four bridges. As we know, trains can be pretty heavy so the bridges will require deep, sturdy foundations. Therefore, the caissons.