Lot happening in downtown Tucson

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Reydituto
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by Reydituto »

Jefe wrote:I don't remember ever stating that the streetcar needs to pay for itself. I knew the supporters would claim every single project along the route was a result of the streetcar. My entire point was that the money could have been spent better. That money could have re-paved 85% of Tucson. A portion of it could have built the Snyder bridge. Or here's a bright idea, don't spend the money! We had a streetcar before, remember how well that worked? Why not spend less than 5% of that money and buy some double decker buses if this was really about getting people around?

The street car wasn't the main reason for the "public/private" investments in the area. The majority of them(Cadence, 1E, 1N, Hub, Level, Herbert) happened because of 8 year tax breaks and other incentives the city gave them.

It took me 45 minutes to go 15 miles last week through town. Google says that trip should take 28 minutes. Congress is so congested now that I bet they will close it to vehicle traffic. Lets wait until they try to expand the streetcar routes and turn this into a billion dollar project that clogs our streets even more and makes commuting by car a nightmare. They want to add routes on Campbell, River, Broadway, 6th, Nogales Hwy, etc. They want to connect Tucson Mall to Tucson Airport. It will take an hour to get across town soon. It will take even longer to use the street car on a similar route.

By the way, I rode it again last weekend and didn't spot the fare police anywhere. I saw several people board and sit down without paying. Already abusing it less than a month in.

First of all, Merkin previously suggested the self-sufficiency angle as a reason against it, so have other opponents of the streetcar, and I wasn't only addressing you, hence the use of the phrase "The Whole Mentality."

Second of all, those tax breaks weren't coming without the streetcar, the city provided them in advance of and precisely due to the street car coming, incentives working hand in hand. Don't kid yourself, much less anyone else by trying to separate the two somehow.

Third, it was entirely predictable that streetcar opponents like yourself would try to deny that just about every single project along the route since the street car was announced was somehow not a result of the streetcar. Never mind that it's a ridiculous notion that defies both fact and logic, haters wanna hate, but really, you can't cite examples to the contrary. The streetcar is THE reason for ALL of that public & private investment along the route, otherwise it either a.) would not have happened and/or b.) would have happened somewhere else besides the route corridor. Additional student housing could have gone up North, South and East of campus farther from Phase I, instead of West of campus and in Downtown along Phase I. Congress, Broadway and other pockets of Downtown were not just going to explode commercially as they have on their own - Downtown had 50+ years to do so since its last heyday, and had not on its own until the streetcar project provided the impetus. Additional buses, double-deckers dressed like big saguaros or not, would not have brought that investment, and would not have allowed the city to provide further incentive to build along the route, don't be silly.

Fourth, Google is no authority on the time it takes to travel somewhere. Google told me it would take 4h25m to go from Anthem just N of Phoenix to Pinetop, AZ through Payson and Heber on a Sunday night two weeks ago, and the trip took 3h10m, including miles of construction zones and traveling the speed limit. Earlier this summer Google told me a trip to Stone Brewery in Escondido would take 22 mins from my location in Del Mar and it took 37. I know your point is that it takes too long in your opinion to get across Tucson, but it took too long before the streetcar existed, as those problems have been years in the making, and the streetcar actually aims to address some of those issues long term, not only in the potential to remove cars off the road, but in the re-engineering of current arteries in conjunction with the streetcar that will make them more effective in moving traffic.

Fifth, this has always been Phase I of the overall streetcar plan, the nexus of the mass transportation network, and if they expand it as planned, it will provide more access to more people, which will not only alleviate the current limited reach of the streetcar - something opponents always cite and something that has been cited (and refuted) often in this thread - but alleviate traffic congestion along these routes by moving more cars (and buses) off the road. Construction along the major arteries won't be as painful as you think due to the existing medians and turning lanes that will either become part of the streetcar route or become a lane of traffic. The remaining short-term pain during construction to fix long-standing issues is fine by me. Congress probably should at some point become pedestrian only anyways, that's not the silver bullet you think it is, as the current success of the streetcar and the related development in bringing people downtown is a MUCH bigger blessing than a curse.

Sixth, as the son of a civil engineer who spent much of his life paving roads and building bridges in Arizona, I have long known that the traffic engineering and management in this town has been perennially fucked, that the anti-growth mentality of the NIMBYs and other assorted idiots in Tucson have long contributed to this issue as several prior remediative measures have been defeated, and that the current traffic quagmire long predates (and has very little to do with) the streetcar project.

Seventh, fare abuse happens with every mass transit system, old or new, but especially new. Sun Tran already announced fare enforcement would be lax in an initial education phase at the start of the streetcar through most of the rest of this year, but would ramp up enforcement once people are accustomed to the streetcar. So no offense to you personally, but your little anecdote about "fare abuse" means jack shit right now.

Finally, it's abundantly clear you just hate the streetcar. Really though, you're crying over spilled milk. The money is spent, the construction happened, the streetcar is moving, whether or not you think it could have been spent better (As an aside, there is no way $83MM of federal monies that came in for the streetcar construction would have existed BUT FOR the construction of the streetcar. The TIGER grant for one never would have come in for Tucson to spend it on paving roads or fixing potholes, and even the portion of the money that could have been used for that purpose would have caused even more disruption to Tucson traffic - and to Tucson business - in the form of road construction projects than you are currently complaining about. Tucson also never raises the finances for their portion of the streetcar to merely pave roads).

There's no "takesies backsies" just because you and a few others are bound and determined to whine about it. There is no guarantee that the problems of another municipality with mass transit projects (caused in large part by bass-ackwards NIMBY-style tea party activism) are guaranteed to replicate here. As a result, there is little to no reasoning with you and most other opponents of the streetcar. I'm not changing your mind, and you sure as hell are not changing mine. The streetcar is here to stay though, that's also not changing. Build it, and they will come.
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by ASUHATER! »

Fantastic post Rey. The whole thing about the anti transportation and modernization crowd in Tucson is spot on. I remember when I took a regional development class at the ua when we had one of the streetcar planners there and they talked about those people in town. He showed us a map.of a proposed freeway system from like 1980 that was shot down and I was amazed that it was. It had plans for aviation, but to be more of a real freeway that went further and another artery going east from i10 by Grant all the way to about pantano and another artery going south around craycroft I think that linked up with i10. Would've been a great system built when it was still feasible
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by azgreg »

Need a quick recommendation for a micro brew pup downtown tonight.
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by UAdevil »

Thunder Canyon and Borderlands are both solid. Barrio is not too far, half mile south of the othwrs.
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by azgreg »

I got out voted and we went to Nimbus. Very disappointed.
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by ASUHATER! »

azgreg wrote:I got out voted and we went to Nimbus. Very disappointed.
All the way over on tanque verde? That's an ok area but downtown is so much better. If you're still in town tomorrow it will be hopping tomorrow night with the game.
i was going to put the ua/asu records here...but i forgot what they were.

i'll just go with fuck asu.
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by azgreg »

ASUHATER! wrote:
azgreg wrote:I got out voted and we went to Nimbus. Very disappointed.
All the way over on tanque verde? That's an ok area but downtown is so much better. If you're still in town tomorrow it will be hopping tomorrow night with the game.
Nope, 44th st and Dodge. Our training is near by at the Alcoa plant at Algernon and Irvington.
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by wyo-cat »

azgreg wrote:
ASUHATER! wrote:
azgreg wrote:I got out voted and we went to Nimbus. Very disappointed.
All the way over on tanque verde? That's an ok area but downtown is so much better. If you're still in town tomorrow it will be hopping tomorrow night with the game.
Nope, 44th st and Dodge. Our training is near by at the Alcoa plant at Algernon and Irvington.
I love going to the Nimbus brewery. I miss the days of the old shitty couches and 'Two for Tuesdays.'
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by UAEebs86 »

ASUHATER! wrote:
azgreg wrote:I got out voted and we went to Nimbus. Very disappointed.
All the way over on tanque verde? That's an ok area but downtown is so much better. If you're still in town tomorrow it will be hopping tomorrow night with the game.
The one on Tanque Verde has been out of business for about a year.
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by ASUHATER! »

I had no idea. Where is the other?
i was going to put the ua/asu records here...but i forgot what they were.

i'll just go with fuck asu.
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by UAEebs86 »

ASUHATER! wrote:I had no idea. Where is the other?
In an industrial park on 44th St. between Palo Verde and Alvernon.
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by ASUHATER! »

Weird place for that. Not much around and mostly just industrial areas or ghetto.
i was going to put the ua/asu records here...but i forgot what they were.

i'll just go with fuck asu.
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by Jefe »

ASUHATER! wrote:Weird place for that. Not much around and mostly just industrial areas or ghetto.
Ya its definitely hidden well back there. Good food last time I was there, plus you can take a tour of the brewery
Jefe wrote:Be sure to do Little Poca Cosa for lunch. Cash only
Scratch that, Summer break so they are closed till Oct 6th. Changing the name as well to The Little One so there's no confusion with the other Cafe Poca Cosa
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by Alieberman »

ASUHATER! wrote:Weird place for that. Not much around and mostly just industrial areas or ghetto.
It's the original one and I used to love going there. Haven't been back for years though. Atmosphere is/was way different than the one on Tanque Verde.
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by UAdevil »

Until the recent explosion of microbreweries, most were located in out of the way industrial parks. Nimbus' original location was the norm for that type of place up until about the last decade.
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by Jefe »

http://tucson.com/news/local/govt-and-p ... 3fd1f.html
Losing bidder for Rio Nuevo project protests competitor's selection

Rio Nuevo’s attempt to develop a downtown parcel hit a snag.

Peach Properties, one of two groups that bid on 8.5-acres of Rio Nuevo property where the Greyhound station sits, filed a protest on how the bid was awarded.

Ron Schwabe , Peach Properties CEO, contends board member Alberto Moore violated district policy to remain impartial when he announced his preference for Allan Norville’s proposal before the board scored the proposals. Moore then gave Peach’s proposal a scant 70 points out of a possible 1,000 for the oral presentation.

Schwabe also claimed Moore judged the proposals on criteria not listed in the original request, such as linking the area with land west of Interstate 10 and a creating gateway that would represent both Tucson’s past and future.

Schwabe wants the board either to discard Moore’s scores from the final tally, which would make Peach the project’s top score, or scrap the entire thing and start over.


Schwabe said Rio Nuevo’s flawed selection process demanded a response. “We weren’t left with too much choice,” Schwabe said. Moore said the protest was baseless. “They have no grounds to block this,” Moore said. “Norville won fair and square.” Moore said he favored Norville’s proposal because it far exceeded Schwabe’s plans in quality and scope.

Norville’s plans include a 140-room hotel, a 96-unit apartment complex and visual arts center, three museums — gem and mineral, photography and art — and a theater. Norville, manager of Nor-Generations, would also build a 120,000-square-foot exhibition hall on his own property next to the Rio Nuevo land. Norville offered to pay about $5.6 million to the district for the land. Schwabe’s plan also contained a hotel, apartments and a mix of restaurants and shops. Moore said Schwabe’s plan includes a low-income apartment complex and other inferior designs that would do little to lift downtown’s image.

Tucson has settled for less for far too long and it’s time to reverse the trend he said.

“We play to mediocrity,” Moore said. “The community is big enough now that we should not try to make it mediocre and not take the easy way out to make a quick buck for somebody.”

For now, Rio Nuevo attorneys and staff will look into the protest and hear arguments from Norville and Schwabe to determine if the protest has any merit, said Rio Nuevo attorney Mark Collins. Collins said the attorneys and staff should make their decision by the beginning of October.

If they decide the protest is viable it would then go to Rio Nuevo chairman Fletcher McCusker and board treasurer Chris Sheafe to decide on whether to accept Schwabe’s claims or dismiss them.

But even after the two board member rule, the matter might not be resolved, as either side could turn to the courts in an attempt to settle the dispute.

Peach Properties already has a pending $1.9 million claim against the property. Peach won a bid for the parcel in 2009 when the city ran Rio Nuevo. But the company wound up filing a $1.9 million claim after, according to Peach, the city reneged on the deal.

A Nor-Gen spokesman said his group was disappointed Peach resorted to fighting what was a “very diligent process.”

“There have been two scorings, and each time the majority of the board favored Nor-Gen,” said attorney Michael Rusing in an email.

“The Peach proposal had a lot of holes and was arguably non-compliant. Nor-Gen was diligently moving forward with the Board to finalize the contract and get the project underway. We only hope this sideshow does not further delay the vision of Rio Nuevo becoming a reality.”
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by Jefe »

http://www.tucsonnewsnow.com/story/2635 ... s-its-boom
East end downtown continues its boom

Nine years ago, standing on the street corner of Fifth and Broadway in downtown Tucson, you could hear a pin drop. "We considered it the fringe of downtown," says Linda Mracek, principal designer for AVIAR design. "We'd lock the doors when the sun went down." Anyone leaving after dark she says "would be escorted to their car."Not any more.

Mracek has lived through all the construction projects downtown, including the streetcar which crosses right in front of her business. And she knows, it's not over yet. Marriott is building an eight story urban hotel across the street and Barrio Cuisine is opening next door. "But I love it," she says. "I'm proud of what's happened here."

She's no longer taking clients from Phoenix out of downtown for lunch. "There are so many wonderful places now for lunch," she says, rattling off the names of her favorites, including On a Roll and Cafe a la C'art.

In September alone, Street Taco and Beer Co., Pueblo Vita Brewing and Los Olivos Pizza will open for business, complementing the many upscale and higher end lunch time restaurants which have opened in the past three years.

It was just two years ago when Ward VI City Council member Steve Kozachik lamented the need for more low end cuisine for the students who will live and frequent downtown, These three fulfill that.

Barrio Cuisine, which will open in early October, will feature dishes from the Tohono O"Odham and Pasqua Yaqui reservations.

There come a time when downtown has reached a saturation pint but now is not the time. Still, nearly all the renovation and innovation is going on on the Eastside of downtown. The West, at this point appears to be neglected. The streetcar was billed as a way to connect the East and West which were split with the Interstate came to town. But if the West side is going to participate in the resurgence, it needs some attention.

Hope needs to give way to reality.
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by Jefe »

Streetcar Standoff!

http://tucson.com/news/local/govt-and-p ... 2bd66.html
A Tucson bicyclist stopped the streetcar in its tracks last month while he notified police of a near-miss accident.

Bicyclist Paul Thomas, 45, was riding westbound on University Boulevard around noon on Aug. 15 when the streetcar raced past, within inches of him.

“I was riding exactly where you’re supposed to ride the bike and this guy just goes blowing by,” said Thomas, who rides 15,000 miles a year and won his division in last year’s Arizona State Road Race Championships.

“Had that been your standard Suzie Sorority with a Starbucks in one hand and a cellphone texting in the other, they would have went down.”


Sun Tran policy dictates a streetcar driver can’t pass if it’s within 3 feet of a bicyclist.

After the near-miss, Thomas chased down the offending driver near Fourth Avenue and blocked the streetcar by standing in front of it while he called the police and waited for them to arrive.

“I’m no activist. But there was no way I was going to let this thing go,” he said.

Thomas said the streetcar line was poorly planned, and is a “disaster waiting to happen.” He said he felt he had to take a stand that day in hopes it could prevent a future accident.

The responding police officer didn’t ticket the driver because traffic laws requiring drivers to give bikes 3 feet of clearance when passing don’t apply to trains that are confined to fixed rails.

The streetcar was blocked for approximately 10 minutes. No information was available for how many passengers were stuck on the train during the delay.

The 3-foot rule the driver violated is a Sun Tran policy implemented to prevent accidents. Both the officer and a Sun Link supervisor, who was also on the scene, told Thomas nobody got hurt and he should get on with his day, Thomas said.

Even though no citations were issued to anyone, Sun Tran suspended the driver for three days for violating policy, said Tucson Department of Transportation spokesman Mike Graham.

The driver no longer works for Sun Tran, but his separation from the company wasn’t related to the Aug. 15 incident, Graham said.

The incident highlights the tension between bicyclists and the streetcar. Thomas said he wasn’t a disgruntled cyclist lashing out at the city, but believes the city could have done a better job designing the route to make it safer.

Streetcar project manager Shellie Ginn said the city has worked with bicyclists since the early stages of streetcar planning through today. She said the city continues to monitor the route, and will make changes if necessary.

“If there’s an area that looks like it’s creating problems, then we’re evaluating that, and we will have made changes,” Ginn said.

The changes so far have been mostly recalibrating traffic lights, such as at East Toole Avenue and Congress Street, to unclog congestion.

As of now, the city isn’t planning on removing cars or bikes from any part of the streetcar route, Ginn said. “It’s going to have to be how each of them can use it as safely as possible,” she said. While streetcar drivers are expected to meet 10-minute headways, Ginn said safety trumps routed times.

She said the suspension and subsequent driver training after Thomas’ incident highlight how serious Sun Link is about safety. As for Thomas, while he was pleased with Sun Link’s response to the incident, he hopes his story would serve as a wake-up call that could make the system safer for bicyclists, motorists and the streetcar.
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by scumdevils86 »

Mostly just sounds like your typical dick cyclist
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by 84Cat »

scumdevils86 wrote:Mostly just sounds like your typical dick cyclist
The streetcar driver was found to be in the wrong. How is that being a dick just standing up for yourself? Streetcar drivers must obey the laws of the road just like everyone else.
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by azgreg »

84Cat wrote:
scumdevils86 wrote:Mostly just sounds like your typical dick cyclist
The streetcar driver was found to be in the wrong. How is that being a dick just standing up for yourself? Streetcar drivers must obey the laws of the road just like everyone else.
The streetcar driver didn't violate a law, he violated company policy.
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by Salty »

I was downtown for a concert last night.

It's incredible how far downtown has come. It's like being in an entirely different city.
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by ASUHATER! »

84Cat wrote:
scumdevils86 wrote:Mostly just sounds like your typical dick cyclist
The streetcar driver was found to be in the wrong. How is that being a dick just standing up for yourself? Streetcar drivers must obey the laws of the road just like everyone else.
the cyclist sounds like he needs to get some therapy for some rage issues. He was probably not staying in the bike lane and thought he owned the road like most cyclists.
i was going to put the ua/asu records here...but i forgot what they were.

i'll just go with fuck asu.
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by azgreg »

It's my experience that cyclist are more versed in the laws of the road than motorist are.
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by Jefe »

http://www.wildcat.arizona.edu/article/ ... of-parking
Customers visiting Fourth Avenue or downtown Tucson next month can expect to pull up alongside new smart meters that will base rates on demand data and will increase the price of parking.

Outcry from business owners upset over workers parking on the street instead of customers has prompted the Tucson City Council to invest in these new meters, as well as raise the base rate from fifty cents per hour to one dollar per hour.

Steve Kozachik, council member of ward six, said he believes that this increase in price will discourage downtown and Fourth Avenue employees from parking their cars on the street.

“Many of the merchants have been asking for us to do this for a couple of reasons,” Kozachik said. “Probably the most important from their perspective is to create more turnover right in front of the places of business.”

Cars parked along Congress Street at meters in downtown Tucson on Monday. Tucson City Council has recently invested in new parking meters in downtown Tucson, raising the rates from 50 cents per hour to $1 per hour .
Kozachik said that the current fifty-cent rate per hour, which would amount to $4.50 for a regular nine-hour shift, makes street parking both attractive and convenient to downtown and Fourth Avenue employees.

“From a business person’s standpoint, they’d like to churn the customers through more frequently,” Kozachik said, who hopes this change will encourage employees to park in the garages.

Austin Gilliland, economic development manager for the Downtown Tucson Partnership, said he agrees with Kozachik.

“This rate increase will hopefully cause employees to start parking in the garage, which will increase the availability of street parking for visitors,” Gilliland said.

Despite this price raise, however, Kozachik insisted that parking rates in Tucson are still cheap. He said that the new prices are not competitive nationwide or even in the Southwest, and said that they are on the low end of the scale.

Gilliland agreed with Kozachik and said that downtown parking rates remain among the lowest in the nation and viewed the price raise as a necessary measure.

To help ensure that customers are maximizing the use of the parking spaces, new smart meters similar to those currently on the UA campus will be replacing the old parking meters in the upcoming month. These meters allow customers to pay the fare with credit cards and a smartphone app. The meters are also uniquely priced based on the current demand for them.

“During high event periods, you can set a higher price, or set a low rate for Sunday mornings,” Kozachik said. “We can do an assessment of when the high demand and low demand periods are, and then that dollar might come down at certain times a day, [or] it might increase at certain times a day.”

Kozachik also said that the investment in smart meters will help debt service in the parking garages.

Despite assurances that Parkwise Tucson had gone through a public outreach process, current downtown employees are not happy with the price increase or the introduction of price meters.

Rachel D’Acquisto, a bartender from Diablo Burger, said she was dismayed at the news of the rates increasing, and yet still planned on parking in front of her job at a street meter. She wasn’t aware of the upcoming introduction of smart meters.

“Of course, nobody is real thrilled with paying more money to park, but these are still very low rates that we’re talking about,” Kozachik said. “I think people recognize that this is a reasonable tweak in rates.”
Money for meters but not pot holes...
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by Salty »

Those meters are great at the U of A. I never have change on me, paying with a credit card is quick and painless.
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by Jefe »

Lovely night Saturday:

Image

From Facebook:
UPDATE***, via Capt. Jim Webb, TPD - Downtown Division:
"2 groups of males ran into each other about 1:30am near 9th st and 4th ave after having left area bars. One group are mostly white Fort Huachuca soldiers. The second group are all black males. A fist fight ensues between both groups of men and one of the soldiers pulls out a knife and the fight breaks up. Both groups begin walking in different directions.
Soon afterwards, a couple black males run back to the white group and one of the black males hits one of the soldiers in the head, possibly knocking him unconscious. The fight is on again between both groups of men and one of the soldiers stabs one of the black men numerous times in the lungs, back and head. Officers arrive and begin advanced life saving measures until TFD arrived. The victim was transported to a local hospital and is in serious but stable condition.
All subjects with the exception of the stabber were detained and identified. Detectives have the name of the soldier suspect and will be following up on contacting him."
*** This is NOT an official media release that would typically be sent from TPD PIO Brandon Tatum, thus the blunt, raw tone of the summary. This description of the events last night was intended to inform downtown merchants what happened until such an official release is sent out to the press.
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by Merkin »

But did they block the street cars?

Black dude would be in the morgue if they attacked sailors instead of soldiers since Salty is always packing.
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by Salty »

Merkin wrote:But did they block the street cars?

Black dude would be in the morgue if they attacked sailors instead of soldiers since Salty is always packing.
Yes, he probably would be.
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by Zero »

I guess it all started at HiFi. They were still cleaning up the blood around 7 in the morning.

That being said me and the lady went to Bianco finally and it was amazing. The owner even brought her a free dessert for her birthday. Downtown is so alive and fun right now. Next weekend is Tucson Meet Yourself. I recommend any locals check it out. Look for the Japanese hot dog booth. AMAZING.
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by Jefe »

My buddies walked out of HiFi at 12:45 and said it was already filled with cops/ambulances. Ya street car was shut down. They were told it started in the OMalleys parking lot, went under the bridge and the stabbing happened near HiFi. They didnt know anything about it until leaving HiFi
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by cats101 »

I was actually in line to get into hi fi when it all started. Some dude wasbrought out with blood running down his face and was obviously pissed. Looked like some more bullshit was going on before we got in. This was my first time goingto hi fi. Just wow, what a first impression.

And yes the street car was blocked, and they forced everyone to go around. Probably won'tbe going back as I was just not impressed. Plus the drinks were super watered down.
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by cats101 »

Actually I might go back if there wasn't a line. Waiting for 30+ minutes for that was not worth it.
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by Merkin »

Congress St closed due to suspicious package:

http://tucson.com/news/blogs/police-bea ... ?id=201408
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by UAdevil »

Not exactly downtown, but a 'transit-based' development. IMO this is exactly the type of urban development we need. Increase urban density.

http://tucson.com/news/local/column/ste ... b36c4.html
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by Jefe »

First car accident? Both came to a stop and then both proceeded to hit each other in slow motion. Sounds like the streetcar driver is being held at fault. Blocked both lanes on 4th for over an hour

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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by Jefe »

http://tucson.com/news/article_6c908561 ... ?id=201408
Bottles hurled at Islamic Center from high-rise

Residents of a high-rise student housing facility have been throwing beer and liquor bottles off their balconies for more than a year, raining glass and other objects down on the nearby Islamic Center of Tucson’s roof and parking lot. But the vandalism and abuse reached a fever pitch during the University of Arizona’s homecoming celebration this past weekend, said Kamel Didan, vice chairman of the board of the mosque and community center, which has been in Tucson since 1962.

“This weekend was absolutely terrible. Someone could have died,” said Didan, who is also an associate professor at the UA. “Imagine kids on the 14th floor, tossing whiskey bottles on people. When I came in Sunday morning, I was shocked at our parking lot. It looked like somebody smashed glass all over the place.”

He also heard that racial comments and obscenities were shouted from balconies at a woman entering the center. The racial comments were a first, he said, and he doesn’t consider the repeated vandalism a hate crime.

“This is mostly kids being very disrespectful, kids being drunk and not realizing how dangerous they are being,” he said.

The Islamic Center of Tucson has been at 901 E. First Street for 25 years. But Didan said leaders have recently considered moving because of verbal abuse, dangerous projectiles and loud partying from three nearby student housing facilities, especially Level, a 14-story facility that opened in fall 2013, he said. It’s located one block from the western edge of campus and many of its balconies overlook the Islamic Center. Within months of the facility’s opening last year, residents had tossed eggs, produce — including pumpkins at Halloween — and glass bottles from the balconies, Didan said. Complaints to management of Level — which is not affiliated with the University of Arizona — seemed to fall on deaf ears until last weekend, when Didan showed the building’s local manager the glass-strewn parking lot, Didan said. This week the building’s management company, Denver-based Cardinal Group Management, flew an official to Tucson to meet with Didan on Tuesday. Cardinal Group took over management of Level and its next-door student housing property, Next, in June.

Alex O’Brien, a principal with Cardinal Group, said he came to Tucson to show how seriously the company is taking the complaints. “We will take disciplinary action against any residents identified in accordance with the lease,” he said in an email Tuesday. Didan said they discussed adding nets to catch falling objects, covering the Islamic Center’s parking lot and adding surveillance cameras to catch offenders. University officials were unaware of the vandalism until contacted by the Star on Tuesday, said Andrea Smiley, associate vice president of communications for the UA. She said the university expects the facility’s management to deal with violations by its tenants, either through fines or eviction.

“We don’t know for sure they’re university students,” she said. “If they are, we would expect the property management to let us know and then we’d pursue our own investigation regarding the student code of conduct” through the UA Dean of Students Office. Tucson City Councilman Steve Kozachik said Tuesday that he is organizing a meeting Monday in hopes of putting an end to the misbehavior. He’s invited the city attorney — to weigh in on whether the behavior could be considered reckless endangerment — as well as leaders of local neighborhood groups, the university, the Islamic Center and the Tucson Police Department.

Kozachik said he agrees with Didan that the bottle-throwing doesn’t appear to be motivated by racial or cultural discrimination. “I don’t think this is a hate crime,” he said. “I think we’re dealing with drunk kids who don’t know how to handle their beer.” Didan said he has so far declined to file a legal claim against management or press charges against any students, even when he’s been able to identify from which room the objects have been thrown. “We always said, ‘Look, we’re neighbors. Let’s work something out,’” he said.

In April he organized an open-house block party to introduce the dorm’s residents to the center, in the hopes they’d show it more respect. He bought tons of food and sent out invitations. “Very few showed up,” he said. Didan has also been disappointed in the reaction of parents of students involved. “It will take someone to die for them to rein in their kids,” he said.
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by scumdevils86 »

Jefe wrote:http://tucson.com/news/article_6c908561 ... ?id=201408
Bottles hurled at Islamic Center from high-rise

Residents of a high-rise student housing facility have been throwing beer and liquor bottles off their balconies for more than a year, raining glass and other objects down on the nearby Islamic Center of Tucson’s roof and parking lot. But the vandalism and abuse reached a fever pitch during the University of Arizona’s homecoming celebration this past weekend, said Kamel Didan, vice chairman of the board of the mosque and community center, which has been in Tucson since 1962.

“This weekend was absolutely terrible. Someone could have died,” said Didan, who is also an associate professor at the UA. “Imagine kids on the 14th floor, tossing whiskey bottles on people. When I came in Sunday morning, I was shocked at our parking lot. It looked like somebody smashed glass all over the place.”

He also heard that racial comments and obscenities were shouted from balconies at a woman entering the center. The racial comments were a first, he said, and he doesn’t consider the repeated vandalism a hate crime.

“This is mostly kids being very disrespectful, kids being drunk and not realizing how dangerous they are being,” he said.

The Islamic Center of Tucson has been at 901 E. First Street for 25 years. But Didan said leaders have recently considered moving because of verbal abuse, dangerous projectiles and loud partying from three nearby student housing facilities, especially Level, a 14-story facility that opened in fall 2013, he said. It’s located one block from the western edge of campus and many of its balconies overlook the Islamic Center. Within months of the facility’s opening last year, residents had tossed eggs, produce — including pumpkins at Halloween — and glass bottles from the balconies, Didan said. Complaints to management of Level — which is not affiliated with the University of Arizona — seemed to fall on deaf ears until last weekend, when Didan showed the building’s local manager the glass-strewn parking lot, Didan said. This week the building’s management company, Denver-based Cardinal Group Management, flew an official to Tucson to meet with Didan on Tuesday. Cardinal Group took over management of Level and its next-door student housing property, Next, in June.

Alex O’Brien, a principal with Cardinal Group, said he came to Tucson to show how seriously the company is taking the complaints. “We will take disciplinary action against any residents identified in accordance with the lease,” he said in an email Tuesday. Didan said they discussed adding nets to catch falling objects, covering the Islamic Center’s parking lot and adding surveillance cameras to catch offenders. University officials were unaware of the vandalism until contacted by the Star on Tuesday, said Andrea Smiley, associate vice president of communications for the UA. She said the university expects the facility’s management to deal with violations by its tenants, either through fines or eviction.

“We don’t know for sure they’re university students,” she said. “If they are, we would expect the property management to let us know and then we’d pursue our own investigation regarding the student code of conduct” through the UA Dean of Students Office. Tucson City Councilman Steve Kozachik said Tuesday that he is organizing a meeting Monday in hopes of putting an end to the misbehavior. He’s invited the city attorney — to weigh in on whether the behavior could be considered reckless endangerment — as well as leaders of local neighborhood groups, the university, the Islamic Center and the Tucson Police Department.

Kozachik said he agrees with Didan that the bottle-throwing doesn’t appear to be motivated by racial or cultural discrimination. “I don’t think this is a hate crime,” he said. “I think we’re dealing with drunk kids who don’t know how to handle their beer.” Didan said he has so far declined to file a legal claim against management or press charges against any students, even when he’s been able to identify from which room the objects have been thrown. “We always said, ‘Look, we’re neighbors. Let’s work something out,’” he said.

In April he organized an open-house block party to introduce the dorm’s residents to the center, in the hopes they’d show it more respect. He bought tons of food and sent out invitations. “Very few showed up,” he said. Didan has also been disappointed in the reaction of parents of students involved. “It will take someone to die for them to rein in their kids,” he said.
I'm not surprised. It is all a bunch of super rich white kids living in that high rise who have never had to be an adult or take responsibility for anything in their lives. And their parents are part of that generation of people born in the late 60s through the 70s that will let their kids do whatever they want with no consequence.
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by Merkin »

Put some cameras on the building and make the apartment renter responsible.

Didn't the Islamic center used to be on the other side of campus back in the early 80s?
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by ASUHATER! »

Jefe wrote:http://tucson.com/news/article_6c908561 ... ?id=201408
Bottles hurled at Islamic Center from high-rise

Residents of a high-rise student housing facility have been throwing beer and liquor bottles off their balconies for more than a year, raining glass and other objects down on the nearby Islamic Center of Tucson’s roof and parking lot. But the vandalism and abuse reached a fever pitch during the University of Arizona’s homecoming celebration this past weekend, said Kamel Didan, vice chairman of the board of the mosque and community center, which has been in Tucson since 1962.

“This weekend was absolutely terrible. Someone could have died,” said Didan, who is also an associate professor at the UA. “Imagine kids on the 14th floor, tossing whiskey bottles on people. When I came in Sunday morning, I was shocked at our parking lot. It looked like somebody smashed glass all over the place.”

He also heard that racial comments and obscenities were shouted from balconies at a woman entering the center. The racial comments were a first, he said, and he doesn’t consider the repeated vandalism a hate crime.

“This is mostly kids being very disrespectful, kids being drunk and not realizing how dangerous they are being,” he said.

The Islamic Center of Tucson has been at 901 E. First Street for 25 years. But Didan said leaders have recently considered moving because of verbal abuse, dangerous projectiles and loud partying from three nearby student housing facilities, especially Level, a 14-story facility that opened in fall 2013, he said. It’s located one block from the western edge of campus and many of its balconies overlook the Islamic Center. Within months of the facility’s opening last year, residents had tossed eggs, produce — including pumpkins at Halloween — and glass bottles from the balconies, Didan said. Complaints to management of Level — which is not affiliated with the University of Arizona — seemed to fall on deaf ears until last weekend, when Didan showed the building’s local manager the glass-strewn parking lot, Didan said. This week the building’s management company, Denver-based Cardinal Group Management, flew an official to Tucson to meet with Didan on Tuesday. Cardinal Group took over management of Level and its next-door student housing property, Next, in June.

Alex O’Brien, a principal with Cardinal Group, said he came to Tucson to show how seriously the company is taking the complaints. “We will take disciplinary action against any residents identified in accordance with the lease,” he said in an email Tuesday. Didan said they discussed adding nets to catch falling objects, covering the Islamic Center’s parking lot and adding surveillance cameras to catch offenders. University officials were unaware of the vandalism until contacted by the Star on Tuesday, said Andrea Smiley, associate vice president of communications for the UA. She said the university expects the facility’s management to deal with violations by its tenants, either through fines or eviction.

“We don’t know for sure they’re university students,” she said. “If they are, we would expect the property management to let us know and then we’d pursue our own investigation regarding the student code of conduct” through the UA Dean of Students Office. Tucson City Councilman Steve Kozachik said Tuesday that he is organizing a meeting Monday in hopes of putting an end to the misbehavior. He’s invited the city attorney — to weigh in on whether the behavior could be considered reckless endangerment — as well as leaders of local neighborhood groups, the university, the Islamic Center and the Tucson Police Department.

Kozachik said he agrees with Didan that the bottle-throwing doesn’t appear to be motivated by racial or cultural discrimination. “I don’t think this is a hate crime,” he said. “I think we’re dealing with drunk kids who don’t know how to handle their beer.” Didan said he has so far declined to file a legal claim against management or press charges against any students, even when he’s been able to identify from which room the objects have been thrown. “We always said, ‘Look, we’re neighbors. Let’s work something out,’” he said.

In April he organized an open-house block party to introduce the dorm’s residents to the center, in the hopes they’d show it more respect. He bought tons of food and sent out invitations. “Very few showed up,” he said. Didan has also been disappointed in the reaction of parents of students involved. “It will take someone to die for them to rein in their kids,” he said.
What in God's name does this have to do with downtown Tucson?
i was going to put the ua/asu records here...but i forgot what they were.

i'll just go with fuck asu.
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by Jefe »

http://www.downtowntucson.org/2015/02/i ... -downtown/

INDEPENDENT DISTILLERY BRINGING CRAFT LIQUOR DOWNTOWN

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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by Jefe »

Also, the top floor of 1 E Congress is being converted into residences. 2,000 square feet plus each and I think they are only doing about 6 of them. Im told they will be approaching $3k month lol
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by 84Cat »

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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by ASUHATER! »

I love that she loves downtown
i was going to put the ua/asu records here...but i forgot what they were.

i'll just go with fuck asu.
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by azgreg »

I love that she has a nice rack.
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by Jefe »

Found the proposal for the Ronstadt Transit Center. Its the bus station right now.

http://www.tucsonaz.gov/files/integrate ... edsize.pdf

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Planning a 7 story, 639k square foot mixed occupancy building. Breaking ground early next year, hope to be completed by the end of 2017

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or

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They want to dedicate over 25% of the structure to age 50+ & an assisted living facility:

Image

Apparently that's what Austin is doing and the demand is huge. I just don't see why anyone that needs assisted living wants to be in the heart of downtown next 15+ bars/night clubs that run till 2a half the week
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by Jefe »

http://www.insidetucsonbusiness.com/new ... 963f4.html

Woh
Keith said noise from the constant flow of Union Pacific trains could make the property less desirable for commercial development.

Perhaps more important are the potential environmental issues.

Keith said an oil plume beneath the surface near the rail tracks could limit development possibilities.

Records from the Arizona Department of Environmental Quality show that several subterranean storage tanks where a dry cleaner once stood north of the tracks had for years leached tetrachloroethene and petroleum hydrocarbons into the soil and groundwater.
While no active wells are in operation in the affected area, the contamination could affect the future of possible development.
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by UAdevil »

http://www.kvoa.com/story/28853618/big- ... own-tucson

TUCSON- Big expansion is coming to the westside of downtown Tucson, as the Gadsden Company will start construction on nine townhouses this summer.

Then in the fall, two more projects will begin.

One is a 128-unit multi use building with both housing and retail. The other is a 94-unit workforce housing building.

All these buildings will be located near the Mercado San Agustin and the streetcar.

“The street car is one of the major drivers. It's one of the reasons we were interested in the property to begin with,” said Adam Gasden, president of the Gadsden Company.

"It just keeps growing down here everything is getting more vibrant such a great area," said Tasha Bundy, co-owner of Mast.

Her company moved to the Mercado San Agustin a year and half ago.

One of the big reasons was the location. She said since the street car started running, her traffic has increase 30 percent.

She is now excited about future development that could bring her even more business.

Michele Cane lives on the westside and uses the street car.

She loves riding into downtown and is excited about the future of the westside.

"This side of town was sort of the other side the tracks, but now it's the place to be, and we are excited about the development downtown, the development here."

The townhouses could be completed by the end of this year and the larger projects could be done and ready for occupancy in late 2016.
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by Merkin »

Looks like Gadsen is getting $2.6M in tax incentives to develop the very low income senior and workforce (low income) properties: http://tucson.com/news/local/govt-and-p ... c4980.html
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Re: Lot happening in downtown Tucson

Post by Merkin »

Fox Theater gets tagged:

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