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  #1241  
Old Posted: May 5, 2009, 5:17 PM
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Daybreak over North America's most beautifully situated Metro ~ "The Wasatch Front Baby"

by ssilbermanlaw

Sunrise over downtown, looking toward City Hall from the rotunda of the Matheson Courthouse

Todd Keith

Morning Sky over Salt Lake Valley

[B]cconley41

Morning breaks over Southern Metro and Cascade Peak

ccsmithaz

Sun setting over the beautiful south metro town of Alpine

[B]T Wagner


.

Last edited by delts145; May 5, 2009 at 6:02 PM.
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  #1242  
Old Posted: May 5, 2009, 5:19 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by T-Mac View Post
Pics from around town plus a few bonus shots.

Odd Fellows Hall








OC Tanner Building




Alta Club Guest Entrance




Springtime at LDS Church Headquarters




Lion House

by T-Mac

....
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  #1243  
Old Posted: May 6, 2009, 2:28 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by MetroFanatic View Post
New Green SLC Skyscraper's Design Obtains Environmental Certification

http://www.fox13now.com/news/kstu-sl...,1183709.story

The mechanical penthouse is starting to take shape and the facade in the front and up the sides should be done by the end of the week/early next week (judging by the progress thus far). They've started installing windows on the back portion as well.



Updates - May 2nd, 2009
Quote:
Originally Posted by T-Mac View Post
From this morning.







by T-Mac

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Last edited by delts145; May 24, 2009 at 4:29 PM.
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  #1244  
Old Posted: May 7, 2009, 12:51 PM
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Updates - CCC - May 2, 2009

Quote:
Originally Posted by T-Mac View Post
Tower 1











by T-Mac

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Last edited by delts145; May 24, 2009 at 4:30 PM.
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  #1245  
Old Posted: May 8, 2009, 10:57 PM
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...Contd.

Crossroads Block
















by T-Mac
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Last edited by delts145; May 24, 2009 at 4:40 PM.
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  #1246  
Old Posted: May 9, 2009, 11:34 AM
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...Contd.

ZCMI Block






by T-Mac
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  #1247  
Old Posted: May 12, 2009, 10:12 AM
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...Contd.

The Regent






[/QUOTE]
by T-Mac
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Last edited by delts145; May 24, 2009 at 4:46 PM.
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  #1248  
Old Posted: May 13, 2009, 12:30 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Viperlord View Post
Liberty Gateway Apartments 50 south 500 West



Looking at the site plans for this building it will have a "E" shaped layout with wings and open space in the middle. So the facade will not be one continuous wall along 500 west.

Basically imagine a layout similar to the Brigham apartments with the recessed courtyards.


Brigham Apartments, Downtown:


.

Last edited by delts145; Nov 6, 2012 at 1:18 PM.
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  #1249  
Old Posted: May 13, 2009, 6:13 PM
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Fantastic updates, delts.
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  #1250  
Old Posted: May 15, 2009, 12:35 PM
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Odd Fellows Hall Move, Stage One Completed
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Originally Posted by T-Mac View Post
by T-Mac

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  #1251  
Old Posted: May 15, 2009, 12:46 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by T-Mac View Post
I didn't have much time so I just drove by and grabbed a shot this evening. I will have a full array of shots this weekend.

by T-Mac
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  #1252  
Old Posted: May 15, 2009, 12:49 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by H4vok View Post
Something until T-Mac posts his...







pics from H4vok's flickr
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  #1253  
Old Posted: May 16, 2009, 2:07 PM
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...Contd. - City Creek

Quote:
Originally Posted by T-Mac View Post




by T-Mac

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Last edited by delts145; May 24, 2009 at 5:43 PM.
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  #1254  
Old Posted: May 16, 2009, 2:20 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by UTPlanner View Post
....
The New York Times:

Overlooking the Mormon Temple, a New Center

By LINDA BAKER
Published: May 12, 2009


SALT LAKE CITY — While the economic crisis has silenced hundreds of real estate projects around the country, 1,100 construction workers are toiling on a 25-acre development here that is springing up across the street from the Mormon Temple in the center of downtown.


Nicole Morgenthau for The New York Times/City Creek Center, to open in 2012, is rising on 25 acres across from Temple Square in the heart of Salt Lake City.


A rendering of the mixed-use center.


The development, backed by the Mormon Church, has not been impeded by the financial downturn.
A private development of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, City Creek Center will be the largest mixed-use project in Salt Lake City. When completed in 2012, it will encompass 900,000 square feet of retailing, including an outdoor pedestrian shopping mall capped by 115 apartments; 1.6 million square feet of office space in eight buildings; a grocery store; and five residential towers with about 600 condominiums.

The development, which is within sight of the Mormon Tabernacle, will also feature six acres of public spaces and a retractable glass roof over the retail component. A man-made creek will run through the property.

The Mormon Church, which has its headquarters in the city, is investing “hundreds of millions of dollars” in the project, said Mark Gibbons, president of City Creek Reserve Inc., a real estate arm of the church, while declining to be more specific. The project will reshape downtown, Mr. Gibbons said. “We believe there won’t be anything anywhere that compares with it,” he said.

City Creek is not immune to the recession, Mr. Gibbons conceded. But he said the church has always had a “debt averse” philosophy that is proving especially helpful in the current climate.

“For which of you intending to build a tower does not first count the cost to see if he have money to complete, so he doesn’t look like a fool,” said Mr. Gibbons, paraphrasing Luke 14:28-29. “We set aside reserves to build this project, we counted the cost before we started, and we have the resources to complete.”

Bounded by the Great Salt Lake and the Wasatch and Oquirrh mountain ranges, Salt Lake City is home to 200,000 people (metro-2.3 million), about 40 percent of them Mormons. It is a center for outdoor recreation, with several ski areas within 30 minutes of the city; a financial services hub, and a film festival mecca.

But the Mormon Church also wields considerable clout as the city’s largest employer and landowner. “We don’t have a Microsoft or Coca-Cola,” said Jason Mathis, executive director of the Downtown Alliance. “In many ways, the L.D.S. church fills that role.”

Now the church is a bringing a high-density, mixed-use project to Salt Lake City, with its own imprint: outsized, environmentally friendly and with a history of controversy. Two other companies have taken relatively small stakes in parts of the project.

Located at the intersection of the city’s primary commercial and ecclesiastical corridors, Main and South Temple Streets, the City Creek site, which is owned by the church, previously housed two poorly performing malls.

When Nordstrom, which anchored one of the shopping centers, threatened to leave seven years ago, Mormon leaders decided it was time for a makeover. The mayor at the time, Rocky Anderson, called enclosed malls “a failed paradigm,” and the church eventually agreed to a design that is much more open than the former malls.

To integrate the project with the surrounding neighborhood, City Creek planners put all parking underground and carved new streets into Salt Lake City’s monolithic 10-acre blocks — a legacy of the church’s founder, Joseph Smith, who developed a plan for the “City of Zion” in 1833.

The project features sweeping promenades and urban plazas “in line with the great plazas in Italy,” said Joe Collins, a project architect with Zimmer Gunsul Frasca. Fountains that include fire and bells — designed by the company responsible for water features at the Bellagio hotel in Las Vegas — will grace one of the plazas. “It’s going to be marvelous,” Mr. Gibbons said.

City Creek’s two-story 100-store retail center consists of several structures and will be developed by Taubman Centers, a developer based in Michigan, which is investing $75 million.

Its chief operating officer, William S. Taubman, said he had re-signed Macy’s and Nordstrom as anchor tenants, but declined to comment on the number of additional commitments he had secured. The center, which will open in 2012, will provide more upscale shopping than currently found in Salt Lake City, he said.

Nationwide, about 12 other major shopping centers were scheduled to open in the next year, Mr. Taubman said, but almost all of them have been delayed. City Creek is one of the few that has not been hampered by the economic downturn, he said.

Signs of the church’s financial strength — and managerial approach — abound. City Creek’s retractable glass roof will provide protection for shoppers during inclement weather. It would not be feasible without the deep coffers of the church, Mr. Collins said.

In keeping with religious dictates, the mall will be closed on Sundays, and only a few establishments, located on land whose title is held by Taubman Centers, will be allowed to serve alcohol.

Elements of the project are controversial. Some people scoff at the plan to use potable water to evoke City Creek, which determined the location of the city but which will remain underground.

“It’s the Disneyfication of what for many of us who are not members of the church find to be our sacred places, the natural environment,” said Stephen A. Goldsmith, a former city planning director who first approached the church with the mixed-use proposal for the City Creek property in 2002.

A sky bridge to be built over Main Street, where a light rail train operates, has also drawn criticism on the grounds it would mute street-level activity.

But Mr. Goldsmith, who now teaches at the University of Utah, is in favor of many aspects of the project. “To think we are going to have thousands of people living downtown — it’s something we only dreamed about,” he said

About 30 percent of the condos in City Creek’s Richards Court, a 10-story twin tower opening this year, have sold, Mr. Gibbons said. So far, most of the buyers are church members who will pay more than $900,000 for a one-bedroom unit with a view of the temple. “It’s the equivalent of living across the street from the Vatican or the Wailing Wall,” said Babs De Lay, a local real estate agent. “They will pay anything for this location.”

To accommodate the retail and residential components, City Creek developers demolished two office buildings. The ensuing demand led to the construction of 222 South Main Street, a $125 million tower a block from City Creek that will open in November.

Downtown Salt Lake has always had “good bones,” Mr. Gibbons said. But multiuse development is the future of the city — and the church, he said. “The existence of the temple dictates that our headquarters always be here,” he said. “We have a vested interest in making certain the vitality of this area.”

...
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  #1255  
Old Posted: May 19, 2009, 12:07 PM
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A few Downtown Updates - From T-Mac - May 17th, 2009


Quote:
Originally Posted by T-Mac View Post
Hyatt Place at the Gateway






Broadway Park Lofts








Bonus Shot Downtown

by T-Mac

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  #1256  
Old Posted: May 20, 2009, 12:59 PM
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Downtown - City Creek Updates - May 17th


Quote:
Originally Posted by T-Mac View Post
Here are my photos of the City Creek Center. I still have some work to do with
the photos from 222 S Main and a couple of other places around town that I will do up this evening.

ZCMI Block









by T-Mac

.

Last edited by delts145; May 22, 2009 at 12:36 PM.
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  #1257  
Old Posted: May 20, 2009, 1:51 PM
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I never though that Salt Lake City will boom like this! I am so glad to see so much development there.
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  #1258  
Old Posted: May 22, 2009, 12:33 PM
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City Creek Contd...

Quote:
Originally Posted by T-Mac View Post
Crossroads Block























Enjoy. Tower 1 and The Regent to follow.


Pics by T-Mac
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  #1259  
Old Posted: May 22, 2009, 6:59 PM
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City Creek Updates Contd...

Quote:
Originally Posted by T-Mac View Post
The Regent




Tower 1









by T-Mac
.
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  #1260  
Old Posted: May 24, 2009, 4:09 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by arkhitektor View Post
Some quick cell-phone pictures to tide you over until T-Mac's
next pics:

Brick work on Richard's court:



Tower 1:


(There was a small portion of brick work that had been completed on Tower 1, but so little of it and at such
an awkward angle, that it would be impossible to see in a picture from my phone.)

View from W. Temple:



Site Pano:



There was a small portion of brick work that had been completed on Tower 1, but so little of it and at such
an awkward angle, that it would be impossible to see in a picture from my phone.

by Arkhitektor
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