You forgot the parking lots along Lamar around Whole Foods, although, all those are planned for development.
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I don't really think of that area as being so much as downtown. Is it considered CBD zoned? I guess it probably is just always think of downtown as between the creeks and the area from Waterloo Records up to the Tavern as the Lamar/Shoal Creek area. Kinda like how West Campus is its own area. At least thats how my screwball mind thinks of it. =P
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Oh, I also just realized I missed a big garage that I should have marked right south of where they are building the new Federal Courthouse. =(
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Sad but true. Tulsa's once had one of the densest populations west of the Mississippi and had more buildings of 10 stories or more than any other city its size in the US. We tore down half of our Art Deco buildings, HALF of them. We had the Art Deco Congress in Tulsa a few years ago and its said that one of the people from Europe said that our downtown looked like Potsdam after the war... except that we did it to ourselves. Garrison Keillor was in town doing a show a couple years ago and said something to the effect... "You all have some beautiful buildings in your downtown. Its interesting how you have it set up now so that you can enjoy looking at each one individually." But not all is lost. We do still have some magnificent treasures left and the last decade has seen a lot of them turned into new lofts, hotels, retail, restaurants, etc. Several new adaptive reuse projects are currently underway. And now we are finally seeing new construction beginning again. The corner has turned and downtown is on its way back. Hopefully we will not lose any more buildings. Though one beauty in particular, the Art Deco, Tulsa Club Building is in dire straits and could be in danger of being lost. http://www.tulsaworld.com/news/artic...0_Afrsrg698010 To update the map a bit. There is a large church expansion currently going in between 7&8th behind the Presbyterian church off Boston Ave. Both the wings and the courtyard are new additions now under construction. http://img24.imageshack.us/img24/618...ast011309j.jpg There are several projects underway in the Brady Arts District, (to the left side in that map of downtown) Under construction now at the corner of Brady and Archer is the Tribune Lofts II http://img860.imageshack.us/img860/6...uneloftsii.jpg http://img89.imageshack.us/img89/2088/tribunelofts.jpg Just to the "left" of that is an area that is currently being turned into a new park. http://img228.imageshack.us/img228/3562/urbanpark.jpg Underneath the park is going to be a Geothermal field which will help heat and cool several new nearby arts projects. One that just broke ground last month is the a new Visual Arts Center on the N E Corner of Boston and Archer. http://img832.imageshack.us/img832/3...ornerbosto.jpg Just down the street across from the new ballpark are some new lofts that will start soon at 2nd and Greenwood. And there are several other new loft projects in the area that are due to start soon as well. http://img687.imageshack.us/img687/2...saarcherfr.jpg Then one of the bigger projects that supposed to break ground late summer or early fall is the 20 story Cimarex Tower and a new Northwest Mutual Life building, both on the same lot right across from the BOK Arena. This is an old concept rendering before the recent news of the addition of more floors to the taller Cimarex building. The building in front of it is going to be the Northwest Mutual building. http://img683.imageshack.us/img683/5623/cimarex.jpg But anyway, things have turned around and we are finally starting to get rid of some of those danged parking lots. Oh, and the large patches to the far left of the map, those areas were once blighted homes that have been torn down and most of that is now owned by OSU Tulsa and hopefully the University will continue their expansion plans into those areas. |
He's like me, but for Tulsa. :)
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Photo, what that horrible pic of Houston parking doesn't show is that the skyline to the right (out of the photo) was already very impressive. It was already getting that way in the 70s and exploded in the 80s. That's not to say that there wasn't (and isn't) too much surface parking.
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BevolJ map
http://img845.imageshack.us/img845/1778/austinlots.png http://i1117.photobucket.com/albums/...oy1/Austin.png Austin I just made the above map and think you left out some parking lots and disgusting cement parking garages. I included in this map parking garages, even onces that are 6 or so stories tall because they look even worse in my opinion than just an empty lot. Theres plenty of them that totally ruin downtown Houston and parts of Austin and pretty much all American cities. What they need to do is make huge underground parking garages like from this scene in iRobot, that would be kick ass. http://i1117.photobucket.com/albums/...age-irobot.jpg http://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=...w=1408&bih=678 |
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Officially downtown is bordered by Lamar to the west, I-35 to the east, the river to the south, and 19th (MLK) to the north. Quote:
As for the huge parking lots and garages north of the Capitol, they are planned to be replaced. See here: http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/show...hlight=capitol |
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Ok, you're right. The building ruins are under the trees on the east end of that block. I haven't been over there in ages.
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That picture of Houston from the 80's is unreal! I got the post that said the actual CBD was cut off from the picture, but still, that's A LOT of surface parking so close to the downtown. Crazy.
That pic of Philly is embarrassing. DC is great. Sure their economy is ridiculous but that 12 story height limit sure goes a long way in helping spread the wealth. Philly's top 5 tallest buildings are around 60 stories. I'd take 20 15-story buildings over five really tall buildings if it meant eliminating a dozen or so parking lots. |
I thought I'd add one of my current home, San Diego. I'm sure I missed a few lots and garages but this should offer a general idea of the state of things.
http://www.ericburress.com/sandiego/sddowntown.jpg |
Am I right in assuming that Manhattan has no surface parking lots?
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No. It has some. They're just few and far between. Pull up an aerial in google maps and zoom in to the far northern tip and several will immediately jump out. |
Thank you for covering San Diego, eburress. While the Marina is in relatively good shape, hopefully the next building boom will spread to the other areas. The City College is filling up some blocks nearby; the North Embarcadero plan should be (or is?) starting soon; and once the Nimbys lose lawsuit#34,467 the Navy Broadway Complex will be a nice addition to the waterfront. If the Chargers get a stadium built downtown that might kick off some much-needed gentrification nearby. North of Broadway, being further away from the downtown's main attractions (Petco Park, Gaslamp, Convention Center, etc.), will probably take longer to develop.
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Here you go. I took a shot at midtown Manhattan.
I couldn't find any in the central core or along the East River, but the Jersey-facing shore is littered with them. Interestingly, about half appear to be reserved for buses only (shown in yellow). http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2635/...faf8e40a_o.jpg |
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