Now coming Summer 2022
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Updated site plan shows El Burro Loco taking this space.moorlander wrote: ↑May 26, 2020P.F. Chang’s close permenantly
I....think...it's...already...on...a Boulevard?urbanitas wrote: ↑Nov 11, 2020^^^So, that's an interesting choice. The plan forThe Boulevard - Phase II, does not, in fact, include a boulevard. They just did away with the main feature of the development and replaced part of it with a surface parking lot...
Misplaced snark aside, you think the development was named for the raceway that it doesn't face, or the feature that it does face, aka "The Boulevard", which was to run the whole length of all three phases from Galleria Parkway to Red Bud Ave.?Bart Harley Jarvis wrote: ↑Nov 12, 2020I....think...it's...already...on...a Boulevard?urbanitas wrote: ↑Nov 11, 2020^^^So, that's an interesting choice. The plan forThe Boulevard - Phase II, does not, in fact, include a boulevard. They just did away with the main feature of the development and replaced part of it with a surface parking lot...
boulevardurbanitas wrote: ↑Nov 13, 2020Misplaced snark aside, you think the development was named for the raceway that it doesn't face, or the feature that it does face, aka "The Boulevard", which was to run the whole length of all three phases from Galleria Parkway to Red Bud Ave.?Bart Harley Jarvis wrote: ↑Nov 12, 2020I....think...it's...already...on...a Boulevard?urbanitas wrote: ↑Nov 11, 2020^^^So, that's an interesting choice. The plan forThe Boulevard - Phase II, does not, in fact, include a boulevard. They just did away with the main feature of the development and replaced part of it with a surface parking lot...
Have to agree with aprice. The Pedestrian walk thing just doesn't seem like the best choice at end of day and think this Boulevards II would be better off with a small street, maybe a couple spots for drop off/delivery service and everyone else has to go into the parking garage versus the setup in latest plan.aprice wrote: ↑Nov 13, 2020I actually prefer the small traditional street. But that's just because I overall prefer traditional streets over pedestrian ones (coming from someone who has refused to own a car since 2016). Granted they really only work when there's a large grid of them but I still like what the Boulevard was going for. The fact that they shoved a tiny surface lot in there just... sucks.
That was the original Pace Properties concept. A four-block-long street with a "festival atmosphere" including live music, street performers, a mixture of small shops, cafes and restaurants with outdoor dining, all with apartments and offices above. Of course, they needed a few large retail anchors at the ends to bring in the traffic, but the whole "Boulevard" experience was to culminate in a hotel or residential high-rise next to I-64.aprice wrote: ↑Nov 13, 2020I actually prefer the small traditional street. But that's just because I overall prefer traditional streets over pedestrian ones (coming from someone who has refused to own a car since 2016). Granted they really only work when there's a large grid of them but I still like what the Boulevard was going for. The fact that they shoved a tiny surface lot in there just... sucks.
Right, because marketing people use words literally...Bart Harley Jarvis wrote: ↑Nov 13, 2020boulevard
[ bool-uh-vahrd, boo-luh- ]
noun
a broad avenue in a city, usually having areas at the sides or center for trees, grass, or flowers.
Phase 1 also doesn't include said boulevard.
aprice wrote: ↑Nov 13, 2020I actually prefer the small traditional street. But that's just because I overall prefer traditional streets over pedestrian ones (coming from someone who has refused to own a car since 2016). Granted they really only work when there's a large grid of them but I still like what the Boulevard was going for. The fact that they shoved a tiny surface lot in there just... sucks.
I happen to agree with both of you...BUT, like AP said they only seem to work well when supported by a large active grid of them. This is not that, even once they finish the build-out to I-64 in the year 3,000. Brentwood Blvd is overly wide, fast and dangerous through here and the other sides are basically bordered by interstates. This is anecdotal but in my experience with Phase I that street is nearly universally empty and it seems most people are using it to primarily access the parking garage.dredger wrote:Have to agree with aprice. The Pedestrian walk thing just doesn't seem like the best choice at end of day and think this Boulevards II would be better off with a small street, maybe a couple spots for drop off/delivery service and everyone else has to go into the parking garage versus the setup in latest plan.aprice wrote:I actually prefer the small traditional street. But that's just because I overall prefer traditional streets over pedestrian ones (coming from someone who has refused to own a car since 2016). Granted they really only work when there's a large grid of them but I still like what the Boulevard was going for. The fact that they shoved a tiny surface lot in there just... sucks.
To each his own I suppose, but you will not find a $40 steak at Smith & Wollensky in any case.aprice wrote: ↑Nov 17, 2020I'd take protests over a $40 steak any day.
