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  #1201  
Old Posted Apr 10, 2009, 11:53 AM
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...Contd.






The Regent


by T-Mac

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Last edited by delts145; Apr 18, 2009 at 2:10 PM.
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  #1202  
Old Posted Apr 11, 2009, 12:35 PM
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...Contd.

ZCMI Block








by T-Mac

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  #1203  
Old Posted Apr 12, 2009, 12:50 PM
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City Creek is rising on schedule despite the economy

http://www.deseretnews.com/article/1...296729,00.html


The progress of City Creek construction is seen Oct. 16, 2007. Scott G. Winterton, Deseret News


The progress of City Creek construction is seen April 8, 2008. (Scott G. Winterton, Dnews)


The progress of City Creek construction is seen Oct. 20, 2008. (Scott G. Winterton, Deseret News)


The progress of City Creek construction is seen March 9. 2009. (Scott G. Winterton, Deseret News)
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  #1204  
Old Posted Apr 15, 2009, 4:19 AM
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Originally Posted by MetroFanatic View Post
Just a photo I took today.

by MetroFanatic

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  #1205  
Old Posted Apr 16, 2009, 10:44 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by stayinginformed View Post
Here are some new designs of Birkhill at Fireclay.

There are two different designs made with 1000 container boxes.









Here is the other design:







Which do you guys like. I prefer the second one.

All of these pictures and a short writeup can be found here: http://www.inhabitat.com/2009/04/10/...using-in-utah/
..

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  #1206  
Old Posted Apr 16, 2009, 10:47 AM
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F.A. Sutton Geology And Geophysics Bldg, Univ. of Utah, SLC, UT



samwibatt

samwibatt

Quote:
Originally Posted by stevena07 View Post
Geology building complete- U of U

Dedication held last friday.




The Sutton Building's east entrance, located on the second floor, is part of a rotunda-like lobby linking it with the Browning Building. One of Sutton's most stunning features is the "fish wall" in the lobby: a display of 103 Eocene-age fish fossils - some of them 50 million years old - from the Green River Formation's Fossil Lake near Kemmerer, Wyo. The fossils are arranged so they look like a school of swimming fish.



The building is the first on the University of Utah's main campus with LEED certification (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design), Chan says. The building also incorporates some student-designed environmental features, including a roof garden, on-site storm water capture, xeriscaping, top-floor tubular skylights and a system to display energy and water use.




The University of Utah Seismograph Stations moved from the seventh floor of the Browning Building to the ground floor of the Sutton Building, which is more stable in the event of a large earthquake. Offices of the Seismograph Stations are located next to the new Rio Tinto Earthquake Information Center, named for the international mining group and parent of Kennecott Utah Copper, which pledged $600,000 for the facility. The center will include a number of quake-related displays, including a large video wall upon which quake recordings will be displayed for the public.



http://unews.utah.edu/p/?r=040909-1
by Stevena07

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  #1207  
Old Posted Apr 16, 2009, 11:58 AM
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$2M too much for a City Creek condo? Not with those 'suite' views

Real estate » Realtors say LDS temple sightlines will bring plenty of Mormon buyers.


Rendering courtesy of City Creek Living.com A City Creek family suite with a view of Temple Square will cost prospective condominium buyers upward of $2 million, according to a price list confirmed by LDS Church officials. Two residence towers, collectively referred to as Richards Court, will have north-facing views of the LDS Temple.

By Derek P. Jensen
The Salt Lake Tribune


OK, so $2 million for a family loft downtown sounds steep. So, too, does $1 million for a one-bedroom condo or a half-million for a stylish but teensy studio.

But maybe not -- for a moneyed Mormon who yearns to live across the street from the faith's most iconic symbol: the Salt Lake Temple.

After all, how much would a Catholic pay for a condo view of the Vatican or an Orthodox Jew to live near the Wailing Wall?

Those seven-digit eyepoppers mark the majority of the sticker prices for City Creek Center's first two residential towers, being built and bankrolled by the LDS Church. And early signs show they are quickly filling up.

"The prices are higher than maybe what some will expect," conceded Ryan Kirkham, president of the Salt Lake Board of Realtors. "But, frankly, I think they'll get 'em."

Downtown Realtor Babs De Lay agrees, saying City Creek, which borders Temple Square, may be immune to the raging recession.

"They're creating an inventory that is absolutely unique," De Lay said, noting more than 40,000 people have expressed interest online. "My guess is they have a lot of cash buyers that really want this location. It's the best opportunity if you live in Salt Lake City."

Described as the portal between Temple Square and the City Creek commercial center, the 10-story Richards Court towers going up at 45 and 55 W. South Temple "define" urban living. Besides the floor-to-ceiling glass that ushers the temple spires or mountain peaks into living rooms, the units offer private balconies or "juliettes," along with a parklike terrace. All are equipped with bathroom marble, granite countertops, stainless-steel appliances, hardwood flooring, designer lighting and underground parking. Both towers will be ready by the first quarter of 2010.

"Inspiringly modern," the 20-story Regent at 35 E. 100 South touts views of the Wasatch and Oquirrh mountains and surrounding cityscape -- again through

floor-to-ceiling glass. It, too, has top-shelf amenities. And the Web site boasts the Regent, available in 2011, "promises to be as attention-grabbing to look at as it is to live in."

So is the price. A two-bedroom unit with a den ranges from $931,000 to $1.7 million. The price drops roughly in half when you shave a bedroom.

Want a one bedroom with no den? Try $311,000 to $469,000 at the Regent and $480,000 to $629,000 at Richards Court.

Even so, four of the seven penthouses already are taken between the two projects. And 47 units, including the entire sixth floor in the west tower, are claimed in the two-through-nine levels between both Richards buildings.

In each case, the north-side suites with temple views were the first to be snatched.

Smatterings of units also have been reserved on the Regent's mid- and lower levels. But forget the 17th or 18th floors. They are sold out.

"We're encouraged by the interest we've seen so far," said City Creek spokesman Dale Bills, especially given the "unsettled market."

The LDS Church also plans a 30-story residential tower -- on the corner of South Temple and West Temple -- that will be marketed this summer. It is part of the church's overall $1.5 billion-plus rebuild of downtown's north end, expected to be complete in 2012.

In addition to the asking price for the condos, homeowner-association fees are pegged at $300 to $500 a month, according to information sent to potential buyers.

Still, in an informational e-mail, Bills focuses only on housing starting in the high $200,000s. So far, only 759-square-foot studios (for $297,000) fall into that category.

Yet even in the down economy, as residential-retail projects sputter and stall, interest in City Creek condos continues to spike, according to Bill Knowles, ombudsman to the Salt Lake Chamber's Downtown Rising effort. "I know a substantial number of them have been sold."

Kirkham notes the LDS Church's ties to Salt Lake City -- with its campus of sacred edifices and headquarter offices nearby -- allow it to market City Creek housing to people outside of Utah.

"They have a bigger pool of buyers than a normal project," he said. "I'm not that surprised. It's like a lifestyle.

"There are people who have worked their whole lives who will say, 'If we can sell our home and get one of these wonderful places downtown, let's do it.' "

Rick Howa, a downtown developer who has seen his Marmalade live-work vision west of the Capitol hijacked by the credit crunch, agrees. The location is gold, he says. And the high-end design -- both are energy-efficient "green" builds -- warrant a cost Howa calls far from unreasonable.

"By the time that thing's done, they'll be sold out," he said. "I'd bet on it."



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  #1208  
Old Posted Apr 17, 2009, 1:42 PM
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Salt Lake City Baby ~ America's Most Beautiful City Vistas.

by jotor

Life in capital city rates pretty high

92% of residents rate their quality of life in SLC high or very high.

By Rosemary Winters
The Salt Lake Tribune


Far from being tax-day protesters, Salt Lakers would rather boost their own property taxes than cut services
to balance the city's budget. And 58 percent say they definitely or probably would vote for a $100 million bond
to build a new public-safety building.

Those are among the findings of a Dan Jones & Associates poll released Thursday by Salt Lake City.

Conducted every two years, the survey queried 707 residents in March and has a margin of error of plus or minus
3.75 percent.

Despite the gloomy economy, most respondents -- 56 percent -- said "things are getting better" for Salt Lake City.
And 92 percent rated their quality of life in the capital as high or very high.


by sometimesong

Residents gave lofty marks to city services: 71 percent said the value they receive for their tax dollar is good or
excellent; 78 percent rated employees' professionalism as high or very high; and 94 percent view the capital as
a clean and well-kept city.

"It's encouraging that city residents seem to be pleased with the quality of life they have in their city and the
services they receive," Becker said. "Of course, that's what we would hope for."


by hannerola

By a paper-thin margin, Salt Lake City voters rejected a $192 million public-safety bond in 2007 that would have
paid for a new cop shop and other police and fire facilities.

The poll shows the latest vision, trimmed to about $100 million, could fare better in 2009 -- if the City Council puts
it on the ballot.

A bond that size would add $58 a year to the property-tax bill on a $250,000 home.

"Under these current economic times we have to have something that is palatable and affordable to the voters,"
Councilman Carlton Christensen said. "It needs to be a facility that will serve us in the long term."

Among the poll's other findings:

» Downtown parking continues to keep away some shoppers.

Forty-five percent said that, in the past 12 months, they had decided against visiting downtown at least once due
to a lack of parking.

» Fewer people say they haven't used a city library in the past year. In 2009, 86 percent of those surveyed said
they had visited a library at least once, up from 79 percent a decade ago.

» More residents are shopping in Sugar House than downtown. Nearly half reported visiting the east-side commercial
center at least a dozen times in the past year, but only 33 percent of respondents had visited downtown that often.

» Relatively few Salt Lakers tee off at city golf course. Nineteen percent had played a course in the past 12 months.
But only 7 percent said they had not been to a city park during the same period.

just minutes from downtown, bike, hike, jog, snow ski, water ski, and on and on...

pictured, immediately above downtown.

..
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  #1209  
Old Posted Apr 17, 2009, 1:53 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Viperlord View Post
Salt City Plaza

Planning Commission meeting April 22nd

http://www.ci.slc.ut.us/boards/planc...tCityPlaza.pdf















There really werent any specifics mentioned about the office building on the corner. They had spoken with the City's design boards early in the process of design and have responded by anchoring the complex with the tallest building on the corner.

Quote:
Originally Posted by John Martin View Post
The staybridge looks awful! I really hope the planning commission pushes the envelope on this one. We could learn from that new Wal-mart.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Comrade Reynolds View Post
I don't understand why you'd have so much color and then have such a drab, ugly thing like the Staybridge. At least paint it to match the rest of the buildings!

Other than that, I really like that Indigo building.

..
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  #1210  
Old Posted Apr 18, 2009, 12:44 PM
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U. geology building brings home the green

http://www.deseretnews.com/article/1...298055,00.html


Stevena07


Guests tour the University of Utah's new Frederick Albert Sutton Building on Friday. Jeffrey D. Allred, Deseret News

...Designers of the four-story, 91,000-square-foot building, which includes classrooms, a lecture hall, laboratories and offices, incorporated a number of environmental features and geological displays from an outdoor rock garden to the "confluence" adjoining the new building to the existing William Browning Building next door. Carbonized leaf fossils drape another wall, boasting one of the best collections in the country, while various mineral, fossil and hominid specimens are continually on display...


Guests look over seismograph readouts at the Earthquake Information Center at the new Sutton Building on Friday. (Jeffrey D. Allred, Deseret News)

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  #1211  
Old Posted Apr 20, 2009, 10:50 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by T-Mac View Post
Going back down in the morning for all the normal photos I usually do but I went down this evening to play around with the camera to get to know it better.









by T-Mac

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  #1212  
Old Posted Apr 21, 2009, 11:21 AM
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Originally Posted by stevena07 View Post
U to break ground on USTAR building



Students can expect to see construction starting April 22 when the U breaks ground on a new science and technology research building on the old golf course.


The new complex is the first of four proposed buildings to house U researchers recruited through the Utah Science Technology and Research Initiative, which the Utah Legislature established three years ago to stimulate economic growth through research-based businesses.



http://www.dailyutahchronicle.com/ne...ding-1.1720581
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  #1213  
Old Posted Apr 21, 2009, 11:36 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by T-Mac View Post
Daft Building Renovation



T-Mac
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  #1214  
Old Posted Apr 22, 2009, 7:54 PM
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moved.

Last edited by delts145; Apr 24, 2009 at 1:20 PM.
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  #1215  
Old Posted Apr 23, 2009, 12:29 PM
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Development marches on at Daybreak



Residents at Daybreak take advantage of the extensive trail and park system. (Paul Fraughton/ The Salt Lake Tribune)

Expansion» Utah's largest master-planned community keeps on growing.

By Lesley Mitchell
The Salt Lake Tribune


You might expect it to be a lot more quiet at the Daybreak community in South Jordan these days amid an economic downturn that has hit Utah's home building industry hard.

But unlike some areas of the Wasatch Front, where development has all but stopped, developer Kennecott Land is still embarking on a slew of development projects in Utah's largest housing community.

A new housing area for seniors built by Ivory Homes will debut in June. A 68,000 square foot retail development with Daybreak's first retail shops also will be completed around the same time. And work will begin in June on the community's first apartment complex, a 315-unit project scheduled to open fall 2010.

Also in the works: A 175,000 square foot University of Utah Health Center set to open in late 2010.


An entry level residence at the North Shore development at Daybreak. (Paul Fraughton/ The Salt Lake Tribune)foot University of Utah Health Center set to open in late 2010.

And although home building is down sharply from its peak in 2006, there are some encouraging signs here. In the first quarter, 90 single-family homes and condos sold in Daybreak, up 11 percent from first quarter 2008. Right now, any year-over-year increase in housing units is a cause for celebration.

To put that into perspective, "We're selling a home a day," said Ty McCutcheon, Kennecott Land's vice president of community development.

Home prices in the community range from the $130,000s to more than $800,000.

The 4,126-acre Daybreak, framed by the Oquirrh Mountains, debuted in 2004. It was like nothing the Wasatch Front had ever seen, with its nearly two dozen model homes designed by no less than seven builders. Today there are 10 builders.

Daybreak is still Utah's largest residential community, with 1,950 occupied condominiums, townhomes and single-family homes along. On the commercial side, it now has about 415,000 square feet of office and industrial space. Another 547,000 square feet of commercial space is in development in the medical center, retail development and additional industrial space.

Think that's pretty big? At buildout, Daybreak is expected to have as much as 20,000 single-family and multi-family units and 14 million square million square feet of office, retail and other commercial space.


The interior of a new home (Paul Fraughton/ The Salt Lake Tribune)pretty big? At buildout, Daybreak is expected to have as much as 20,000 single-family and multi-family units and 14 million square million square feet of office, retail and other commercial space.

James Wood, director of the University of Utah Bureau of Business and Economic Research, Daybreak is unique from other housing projects in Utah.

Its appeal is that is "it's a true mixed use project, where you have a range of residential options as well as commercial choices," he said.

Kennecott Land was established in 2001, the development company grew out of Kennecott Utah Copper Corp., a wholly owned subsidiary of international mining conglomerate Rio Tinto.

Daybreak occupies part of about 93,000 acres acquired years ago by Kennecott Utah Copper.


A cyclist approaches a bridge spanning a narrow section of the lake at Daybreak. (Paul Fraughton/ The Salt Lake Tribune)years ago by Kennecott Utah Copper.

Kennecott Land is not actually building the homes in Daybreak. It's serving as a master developer, selling lots to builders who handle actual construction of homes, including Ivory Homes and Garbett Homes.

Ivory's housing development for people age 55 and older will be a mix of 500 condos, townhomes and single-family detached homes.

On the commercial side, Kennecott tends to be more involved. It develops its own office buildings, which it leases.

It is partnering with apartment developer Western National Realty to build and manage its 315-unit apartment complex.

And Kennecott also is developing the 68,000 square feet of retail space currently under construction will be spread out over five buildings scheduled for completion in June. Through the summer and fall, tenants including a coffee shop, ice cream store, Mexican restaurant, dry cleaner, hair salon and youth multisport facility will move in. Daybreak will not yet release any names of tenants except for Zions Bank.

What about that grocery store that Kennecott has been talking about for years? Still no deal yet, says said Scott Kaufman, director of commercial development at Kennecott Land.

"We're patiently waiting for the right operator and the right concept," he said.

In other words, the division has yet to ink a deal with an operator they want and that also has the means to build a new store right now.

The good news for Daybreak is that it probably has seen the worst of the housing downturn, said Eric Allen, director of the Utah/Idaho region of Metrostudy, a housing tracking firm.


The new TRAX line being built at Daybreak. (Paul Fraughton/ The Salt Lake Tribune)The good news for Daybreak is that it probably has seen the worst of the housing downturn, said Eric Allen, director of the Utah/Idaho region of Metrostudy, a housing tracking firm.

He said Daybreak has undoubtedly been affected by the downturn, but not as much as some other areas that have focused primarily on higher price points.

Daybreak's uptick in first-quarter sales are just one sign that the community -- and the Wasatch Front's home building industry as a whole -- is poised for a turnaround.

"I think we're very near the bottom, if we're not already there," he said. "The market should start to stabilize this year."

Daybreak Facts
Located between 10200 South and 11800 South from 4000 West to state Route 111 (about 7200 West)

Contains 1,950 occupied homes

Opened in 2004

Will have 1,056 acres of open space

Price range of home, condos and townhomes for sale in Daybreak: $130,000 to more than $800,000


..
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  #1216  
Old Posted Apr 24, 2009, 1:05 PM
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Daybreak over North America's most beautifully situated Metro ~ "The Wasatch Front Baby"

by ssilbermanlaw

Metro Geography of the Northern Wasatch Front CSA
Northernmost CSA ~ Cache Valley ~ Logan

Bachspics

Northernmost Logan CSA, pop. 121,000 ~ Tony Lake, one of Logan's many canyons

James Neeley

Northern CSA Urbanscape
Late Autumn ~ Ogden's Snowbasin Ski Area

Photo~John

Weber Valley CSA ~ Ogden ~ pop. as of 2008 - 520,000

papa jerel

.

Last edited by delts145; May 5, 2009 at 5:20 PM.
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  #1217  
Old Posted Apr 24, 2009, 1:08 PM
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Originally Posted by SLC Projects View Post
University breaks ground on research center

Rendering from KSL.com

SALT LAKE CITY -- Jobs now and in the future: That's one of the driving forces behind a new research center at the University of Utah.
The university is building a 200,000 square foot facility, a project that will employ 900 workers. The hope is that, in the long run, many more jobs will be created by the research that will be done there.



Video and rest of the story.
http://www.ksl.com/index.php?nid=148&sid=6244036

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  #1218  
Old Posted Apr 24, 2009, 1:09 PM
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Metro : More Attractive Walmarts Emerging?

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Originally Posted by arkhitektor View Post
I was in Cedar Hills this afternoon and took some pictures of the new Wal-Mart there as I got lunch at the Subway inside:







by Arkhitektor

......

Last edited by delts145; Apr 24, 2009 at 1:46 PM.
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  #1219  
Old Posted Apr 24, 2009, 1:18 PM
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Downtown Updates - Hamilton Partners Tower - April 18th

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Originally Posted by T-Mac View Post
Downtown this evening playing around with the camera. Trying to figure out HDR photography. I only have the trial version of photomatix and so I get the watermark. I will be purchasing the software soon and get rid of the watermark. Hope you guys like it. Going back down in the morning for the full array of photos.


Quote:
Originally Posted by T-Mac View Post












by T-Mac

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  #1220  
Old Posted Apr 24, 2009, 1:26 PM
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Downtown Updates - City Creek Center - April 18th

Going back down in the morning for all the normal photos I usually do but I went down this evening to play around with the camera to get to know it better.











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Originally Posted by T-Mac View Post
The Regent








Tower 1







by T-Mac

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Last edited by delts145; Apr 26, 2009 at 12:12 PM.
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