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  #1  
Old Posted: Aug 8, 2007, 9:31 AM
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Exclamation PASADENA Projects & Updates


$117 million renovation of City Hall completed in June 2007


Pasadena is one of my favorite communities in LA County. It's got a wonderful sense of historic preservation, from Old Town Pasadena (where many buildings are from the mid-1800s) to the beautiful arts and crafts houses that are so unique and special. Also, it's a center for culture and education: Caltech, JPL, Rose Parade, Rose Bowl, Art Center, etc.

Forward thinking urban development is nothing new to Pasadena, and it continues to develop wonderful infill projects that will be covered here.


Pasadena location in LA County

From the Pasadena Convention Visitors Bureau


Pasadena Districts

From tndwest.com


A sunny day in Pasadena

From pasadenararebooks.com
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  #2  
Old Posted: Aug 8, 2007, 10:07 AM
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- Recently Completed -

DeLacey at Green Condos (aka Friend Paper building)

From delaceygreen.com


From delaceygreen.com

- 61 units
- 8,878/sf retail space
- www.delaceygreen.com


Granada Court Condos - 77 N. Oak Knoll Ave.

Photo by Brigham Yen


Photo by Brigham Yen


Photo by Brigham Yen

- 29 units


Pasadena Place Condos - Pasadena Ave./Green St.

Photo by Brigham Yen

- 38 units
- 8,200/sf retail space


Trio Apartments - 621 E. Colorado Blvd.

From tndwest.com


Photo by Brigham Yen

- 304 units
- 14,602/sf retail space


The Boston Building Condos - 35 N. Raymond Ave.

From tndwest.com

- 38 units
- 14,000/sf retail space
- www.35raymond.com


Del Mar Station - 265 Arroyo Pkwy.

From tndwest.com


From tndwest.com

- 346 units (21 affordable)
- 20,000/sf retail space
- Apartment Website


Prado at Lake Avenue - Lake Ave./Green St.

From tndwest.com

- 103 units


Archstone Pasadena - 25 S. Oak Knoll Ave.

Photo by Brigham Yen

- 120 units
- 8,000/sf retail space
- Apartment Website



- Under Construction -

Pasadena Convention Center Expansion

From pasadenacenter.com


From pasadenacenter.com


From pasadenacenter.com

- $121.6 million expansion
- 85,000/sf of exhibit space
- 25,000/sf new ballroom
- 17,000/sf renovated historic ballroom
- estimated completion: 2009 Q2
- www.pasadenacenter.com


Westgate Pasadena - Adjacent and south of Old Town

From westgatepasadena.com


From pasadenaweekly.com

- 820 units (110 affordable)
- 22,154/sf retail space
- 1.5 acres of public open space
- estimated completion: 2011?
- www.westgatepasadena.com


The Dalton Condos - Arroyo Pkwy./Cordova St.

From thedaltonlife.com

- 55 units
- 7,000/sf retail space
- estimated completion: 2008 Q1
- www.thedaltonlife.com


Raymond Renaissance Condos - Raymond Ave./Holly St.

From theraymondcondos.com

- 47 units
- 12,168/sf retail space
- estimated completion: 2008 Q4
- www.theraymondcondos.com


Whole Foods at Bellevue Center - Arroyo Pkwy./Bellevue Ave.

From tndwest.com

- 72,000/sf (Whole Foods is 54,000/sf)
- estimated completion: 2007 Q4


Montana Lofts - 355 E. Colorado Blvd.

From tndwest.com

- 59 units
- ?/sf retail space
- estimated completion: 2008 Q1


DeLacey Flats Condos - 250 S. DeLacey Ave.

From toledohomesinc.com

- 34 units
- 8,594/sf retail space
- estimated completion: 2008 Q1
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  #3  
Old Posted: Aug 8, 2007, 10:19 AM
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Here is an overview of Westgate Pasadena to give you an idea how large of an area this will cover!


From cnu.org



From tndwest.com
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  #4  
Old Posted: Aug 8, 2007, 7:30 PM
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Pasadena certainly has changed a lot in the last 9 years since I moved to the area, in terms of new developments being built. I wish I had taken pictures over the years of how Pasadena has changed. But I really wish I had the opportunity to take pictures from the 1980s, when Old Town was a total dump. From what I've read some months ago, the pawn shop left over from those days will be closing up soon... I wonder if the tattoo place and Le Sex Shoppe will eventually be on their way out too.

I live in South Pasadena but go into Pasadena all the time (I even work in Pasadena). Yeah, many of you urbanists might deride South Pas as a suburb, but I like all the trees and the Crafstman houses. It being an old suburb more than a hundred years old, at least it's more pedestrian-oriented (narrower streets, houses with garages IN THE BACK, front-porches) than those God-awful, sterile, car-oriented "master-planned" suburbs of south Orange County like Irvine and Mission Viejo, where you MUST drive everywhere, everything looks the same and driving around you'd think it was a ghost town... the main streets are wide and EMPTY OF PEOPLE.
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  #5  
Old Posted: Aug 8, 2007, 9:15 PM
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very nice post. i am a big fan of pasadena as well. i love hanging out in old town late at night, and you walk through the dark alleys that feel like they should be dangerous, but their not, there are little stores and boutiques everywhere. I look at all the old buildings around old town and how they have a second life now, and think only what downtown has the potential to become.
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  #6  
Old Posted: Aug 8, 2007, 9:27 PM
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I seriously love living in Pasadena! I think Los Angeles can learn a few things from this fine city.
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Old Posted: Aug 8, 2007, 10:38 PM
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I'll admit, though, I hate the summers in the SGV. Too hot... if Pasadena were by the beach then it'd be the best!
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  #8  
Old Posted: Aug 13, 2007, 7:00 AM
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I had a chance to take some pictures of Pasadena today when I stopped by (after a lovely weekend trip to San Diego with my bf).

Here are some developments taking place in Pasadena that are great infill projects. They're slowly, but effectively creating, through critical mass/synergy, the kind of urban, walkable environment that LA so desperately needs.


The Dalton (aka Milan Lofts) - Arroyo Pkwy./Cordova St.

Rendering of The Dalton

From thedaltonlife.com

Project facing Cordova St.


SW corner of Cordova St. and Marengo Ave.


Looking east at the project site






Anyone wanna open up a business here?



Some more renderings from the architect's (DEA) website:







The Dalton is going to be a great infill project for Pasadena as it faces the "back side" of the Del Mar Station, which gives the area some 3-dimensional qualities.


Pasadena Convention Center expansion



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  #9  
Old Posted: Aug 13, 2007, 2:34 PM
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I've been fortunate enough to have worked in Pasadena for the past year and a half, and I've got to say that it's a beautiful, walkable place to work. My current job is in western Pasadena (on the other side of the Suicide Bridge), so it's not as walkable, but there are a few cafes and a bakery next door.

I love what they do with their alleys, and I hope that LA can replicate it Downtown.
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  #10  
Old Posted: Aug 13, 2007, 7:04 PM
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Are the pics not loading for anyone else?
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  #11  
Old Posted: Aug 13, 2007, 7:33 PM
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I am not able to see the pictures except for:

"Project facing Cordova St" and the first picture of "Pasadena Convention Center Expansion"

Good idea for a thread LAB, it looks like you put a lot of work into setting it up.
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  #12  
Old Posted: Aug 13, 2007, 9:48 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by DowntownCharlieBrown View Post
I am not able to see the pictures except for:

"Project facing Cordova St" and the first picture of "Pasadena Convention Center Expansion"

Good idea for a thread LAB, it looks like you put a lot of work into setting it up.
Thanks man! I switched image hosting servers so the images should be loading properly now.
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  #13  
Old Posted: Aug 13, 2007, 10:36 PM
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Random pics with commentary

Corner of Colorado and Lake Ave. For those of you who are familiar with Pasadena, I think we can all agree that this is one of the most UNDER utilized corners in the city. This could easily become another very large mixed-use project but with a heavier emphasis on commercial/hotel since it's on Colorado and Lake Ave. (All photos taken by me)




Just some random pics from the Playhouse District, which is off the beaten path, but with some really cool alternative businesses to patronize compared to Old Town Pasadena.

Laemmle's Playhouse Theater & Vroman's Bookstore (nice alternative to B&N or Borders)


In back of Vroman's Bookstore. Serene and beautiful.


Arcade Lane across from Vroman's


Zona Rosa Caffe by the Playhouse (Really, really cute indie coffee shop!)
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  #14  
Old Posted: Aug 14, 2007, 3:27 AM
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If more of SoCA were like pasadena, SoCA would be truly premium. When I was in that hood several wks ago, the thing I noticed was how much of it was pretty nice looking. IOW, you can walk or drive quite a distance in Pasadena before you run into an area that's getting way too sketchy or certainly dive like.

However, much of it still follows more of a nice burban type of format, where the size of the bldgs (almost none being more than 5 or 6 floors high) & pace seems closer to what you'd find in a smaller laid back town, which is what Pasadena really is. I guess the same can be said about SaMo or some of the hoods that stretch from around UCLA eastward towards mid wilshire & Weho.

That's why if ppl want an alternative to hoods like pasadena, or a place that feels more like a bigger, yet still nice, city, & they don't want to leave SoCA, the hoods of DTLA are going to have to start filling the gap & playing a bigger role.
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  #15  
Old Posted: Aug 14, 2007, 6:44 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by LosAngelesBeauty View Post
Just some random pics from the Playhouse District, which is off the beaten path, but with some really cool alternative businesses to patronize compared to Old Town Pasadena.

Laemmle's Playhouse Theater & Vroman's Bookstore (nice alternative to B&N or Borders)


In back of Vroman's Bookstore. Serene and beautiful.


Arcade Lane across from Vroman's


Zona Rosa Caffe by the Playhouse (Really, really cute indie coffee shop!)
I actually work in the Playhouse District of Pasadena... hehe, I don't consider it to be off the beaten path, in fact I think it acts as a "bridge" area that connects the business districts of Pasadena: I consider the Civic Center/Paseo Colorado Mall to be a bridge between the Playhouse District and Old Town, and then just east of the Playhouse District is the South Lake Avenue business district. To me, everything east of Lake Avenue is boring and flat, it's a lot more suburban there, and to me it doesn't even look like the same city. It doesn't have what I consider to be the Pasadena "feel."

I'm often at Vroman's books, which I love because it's an actual independent bookstore and a Pasadena institution. I'm also often at the Famima!! on the block just west of there.

Arcade Lane is great, it was designed by Sylvanus Marston, if you're familiar with him and his work. Plus it has a great Yucatan cuisine restaurant there called El Portal.
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Old Posted: Aug 14, 2007, 6:49 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by citywatch View Post
If more of SoCA were like pasadena, SoCA would be truly premium. When I was in that hood several wks ago, the thing I noticed was how much of it was pretty nice looking. IOW, you can walk or drive quite a distance in Pasadena before you run into an area that's getting way too sketchy or certainly dive like.

However, much of it still follows more of a nice burban type of format, where the size of the bldgs (almost none being more than 5 or 6 floors high) & pace seems closer to what you'd find in a smaller laid back town, which is what Pasadena really is. I guess the same can be said about SaMo or some of the hoods that stretch from around UCLA eastward towards mid wilshire & Weho.

That's why if ppl want an alternative to hoods like pasadena, or a place that feels more like a bigger, yet still nice, city, & they don't want to leave SoCA, the hoods of DTLA are going to have to start filling the gap & playing a bigger role.
The ghetto/section 8/bad neighborhoods of Pasadena are all in the Northwest section, north of the 210 freeway, generally off of Fair Oaks and Lake Avenue, or between the two, rather. This area is easily avoidable, in fact I rarely go in that area of Pasadena. And then anywhere east of Lake Avenue is totally newer and suburban... you can tell that over time, Pasadena developed eastward from Old Town. There's not much west of Old Town, some nice homes in the San Rafael Hills area and the Rose Bowl, of course, and of course most of the old mansions on Orange Grove were torn down decades ago. I assume it was the Arroyo Seco and Eagle Rock/City of LA that hindered Pasadena's development west of Old Town.
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Old Posted: Aug 15, 2007, 1:17 AM
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This article was in the Pasadena Star News today...

Group has revival plan for South Lake District
By Janette Williams Staff Writer
Article Launched: 08/13/2007 11:28:05 PM PDT

PASADENA - Once the city's ritziest shopping district, South Lake Avenue has taken a back seat to Old Pasadena over the past decade.

To raise the money to regain its luster - and keep up with its trendy Old Pasadena and Playhouse District neighbors - a South Lake Property-Based Improvement District (PBID) will be formed by the end of the year to pay for $2.4 million in improvements.

Under the new set-up, property owners, not tenants or merchants, will be assessed annual dues. This will increase and stabilize the district's budget, leaving it unaffected by business closures, Rhonda Bennett, president of the South Lake Business District, said Monday.

In past months, The Good Guys, Tower Records, Living Feast and Lee-Mac Camera have closed, she said, and no one has yet moved into the long-gone Stroud's Linens, all having substantial effects on the annual operating budget.

The new system will bring in about $485,000 a year rather than the present $160,000 or so, Bennett said, and will allow a planned four-year renovation to go ahead.

"We were uncertain how people would feel ... but 70 percent of property owners voted yes, they wanted to do it," Bennett said.

Improvements to South
Advertisement
Lake Avenue's median strip, lighting and bench seating are planned to start with, Bennett said, and the district hopes to become more attractive both to new tenants and out-of-town shoppers.

"For 25 or 30 years, South Lake was the shopping district, with the flagship Bullocks Pasadena store," said Carleton Maese, a South Lake Avenue Business District board member. "But with the growth of Old Pasadena going back 10 years and the new development of big-box retailers in East Pasadena, South Lake is not viewed as prime retail."

Condominiums, apartments and major financial institutions - including Merrill Lynch, Wachovia and Citibank - have moved into high-rises and changed the district's look, Maese said.

"But we like to see restaurants and retail at street-level" for locals, workers, and out-of-town shoppers, he said.

"With the help of the PBID we'll attract retailers," Maese added. "But we need to identify and be clear where our niche in retail is. We don't have Tiffany, we don't have Gucci, we're not a Rodeo Drive. But I do think what we do have is medium to higher-level boutiques and salons and we don't compete with big box or Tiffany."

City Planning Director Richard Bruckner said a revitalized South Lake would complement the improvements in Old Pasadena and the Playhouse District, which are all linked by ARTS bus service.

"We don't see them as competitive," Bruckner said, "South Lake is more of a traditional shopping street and, when it was surveyed, had older customers. But it's got a great collection of retail."

Bruckner pointed to the recent sale of the Shops on Lake, fronting Macy's, to Vornado, "a very high-end retail and office management company based in New York," as a sign of better things to come.

"They are well-capitalized, and very involved in retail, and I'm very upbeat on the future of South Lake," he said.

Steve Mulheim, president of the Old Pasadena Management District, said they've had a PBID for 10 years.

"I think it's a great benefit to South Lake, allowing them to be better organized as businesses come and go," Mulheim said. "It helps all of us become a regional destination."

Mulheim said officials of the three districts have started meeting regularly to find ways of improving the entire Central District.

"We're looking at issues important to all of us," he said. "One of the things we're looking at is a mechanism, not exactly the ARTS buses, that links all three districts, so people can park one time and visit the entire Central District."

janette.williams@sgvn.com

(626) 578-6300, Ext. 4482
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  #18  
Old Posted: Aug 15, 2007, 3:14 AM
RAlossi RAlossi is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by sopas ej View Post
There's not much west of Old Town, some nice homes in the San Rafael Hills area and the Rose Bowl, of course, and of course most of the old mansions on Orange Grove were torn down decades ago. I assume it was the Arroyo Seco and Eagle Rock/City of LA that hindered Pasadena's development west of Old Town.
Though most of the area west of the Suicide Bridge/Arroyo Seco is residential, try losing yourself up in the hills off of Avenue 64. It's got neighborhoods that you wouldn't expect in Southern California.

Driving north on Avenue 64 you pass through Garvanza (city of LA), past the Church of the Angels, and on the eastern side of the area is a hilly neighborhood full of midcentury, ranch style, bungalow, Victorian, and Spanish-style homes. Very beautiful and diverse.

On the west side of Avenue 64 is a very upper-class neighborhood (more modern than the east side of the avenue) with unique architecture and very narrow, hilly streets. I only know this because I got lost on my first day of work (Avenue 64/Colorado) a while back. I'm very lucky that I did though, because I've found the place I'd like to live if I ever adopt.
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Old Posted: Aug 15, 2007, 9:04 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Affrojuice
"We're looking at issues important to all of us," he said. "One of the things we're looking at is a mechanism, not exactly the ARTS buses, that links all three districts, so people can park one time and visit the entire Central District."
How exciting! I've been talking about this idea for years now. I have been trying to push an idea of putting a trolley down Green Street that would connect Old Town, Paseo, Playhouse, and South Lake into one cohesive urban area. A trolley system similar to the ones in Portland.
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Old Posted: Aug 15, 2007, 9:06 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by RAlossi View Post
Though most of the area west of the Suicide Bridge/Arroyo Seco is residential, try losing yourself up in the hills off of Avenue 64. It's got neighborhoods that you wouldn't expect in Southern California.

Driving north on Avenue 64 you pass through Garvanza (city of LA), past the Church of the Angels, and on the eastern side of the area is a hilly neighborhood full of midcentury, ranch style, bungalow, Victorian, and Spanish-style homes. Very beautiful and diverse.

On the west side of Avenue 64 is a very upper-class neighborhood (more modern than the east side of the avenue) with unique architecture and very narrow, hilly streets. I only know this because I got lost on my first day of work (Avenue 64/Colorado) a while back. I'm very lucky that I did though, because I've found the place I'd like to live if I ever adopt.
Can you draw it on a map for us here to view? I would love to check this neighborhood out. It sounds beautiful...
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