Western Boulevard McDonald’s To Be Replaced
Plans have been submitted (.pdf file) to to the city’s planning offices for a new McDonald’s on Western Blvd. The new restaurant plans include a 4,026 square foot building with seating for 74, and 42 parking spaces. The current building is around 3,300 square feet. There will be a 2-feed, Y-shaped drive-thru line separate from pedestrians.
Designing A Better Downtown: Part III
In the first part of this series we toured a section of streets in Atlanta that offer nothing for pedestrians and are completely devoid of human life. In Part II we looked at two such blocks in Raleigh. The problem isn’t limited completely to those two blocks, however. There are several other areas of downtown Raleigh that are on the verge of being problematic.
The accompanying map labels problem blocks for pedestrians in downtown Raleigh. Block borders that contains extended walls and service entrances are labeled in red while blocks borders that contain empty parking lots are shown in pink.
Sidewalks around the NC Museum of History, Department of Revenue, Wake County Courthouse, and City of Raleigh parking garage are some of the areas that need help. Clearly, though, the McDowell Street corridor is in danger of become a high-traffic canyon of misery.
One major contributor to the southern end of this terrible pattern is the new convention center and its adjacent parking garage. Large venues like sports arenas and convention centers pose an ironic dilemma. While they attract large groups of pedestrians downtown, their enormous non-functional exposures create spaces that repel pedestrian life. When the experience is placed in a tight, one acre based grid, there is no room in the facility’s perimeter for pedestrian-oriented programming. Such facilities often create giant vacuoles to the daily urban experience. Careful planning in the surrounding blocks can mitigate these effects.
Both the new convention center and adjacent parking deck facility have three, walled sides, and both will eventually have interests for pedestrians on just their Salisbury Street facades. The convention center’s McDowell Street facade will eventually be opposed by an expansion of convention space, but will be a small outdoor amphitheater in the meantime. The north and south sides of the convention center (pictured) are already a half canyon and a full canyon, respectively. It is imperative for future development on the NE corner of Cabarrus and McDowell to feature pedestrian-friendly programming.
Moving north we find the aforementioned county properties bounded by Martin, Salisbury, Davie, and McDowell. Aside from small entrances on Salisbury, this complex acts as a pedestrian-repelling fortress. The new courthouse design needs to include something for McDowell St. pedestrians near the Martin Street corner. Two blocks to the north we see the AT&T building, and the need for a pedestrian experience in the new Lightner complex which was outlined in Part II of this series.
As one reviews the linked map, it is apparent that many future development opportunities actually exist in this corridor. As these properties are redeveloped it is imperative for architects to understand their roles in righting the fading pedestrian experience on McDowell.
There are golden opportunities in other areas such as the areas of Hargett/Bloodworth, Blount/Edenton, Hargett/Harrington, and Edenton/Dawson/McDowell. As mentioned above, architects should think of creating microneighborhoods with their designs. Surely some service entrances are needed, but it is imperative that they not line up consecutively so as to form complete blocks of boredom.
Zooming out from the map reveals an interesting pattern. We think of downtown proper as an orthogonal square of roughly 150 blocks. In fact the urban form seems to be a diamond-shaped, 45 degree offset pattern.
The next step in this series will cover a few existing problem areas that can be healed.
DMB Coming To TWC
Wednesday July 2 marks the return of the Dave Matthews Band to Walnut Creek (Time Warner Cable Music Pavilion at Walnut Creek). The absolute best way to get tickets is through the DMB fan club, Warehouse . Michael Franti & Spearhead is the opening act. Here’s an update from the DMB site:
DMB is currently in the studio with Rob Cavallo (Green Day, My Chemical Romance, Alanis Morrisette) working on the yet-to-be-titled album. Guitarist and long time friend Tim Reynolds is playing on the album, marking his first recording with DMB since 1998’s Before These Crowded Streets .
Raleigh Bans New Garbage Disposals
Today the Raleigh City Council pulled a surprised move and banned new and replacement installations of garbage disposals . Here is what was on the agenda:
The garbage disposal installation prohibition ordinance is the only remaining part of the comprehensive package of sanitary sewer system program improvements, recommended by City staff to the City Council on October 19, 1999, that has not been approved by City Council and implemented by City staff. The prohibition of garbage disposal units connected to the City of Raleigh sanitary sewer collection system was originally proposed as part of an ordinance regarding the restriction of materials placed into the City’s sewer system. The City Council approved the materials restriction ordinance at the November 5, 1999, Council meeting, but directed City staff to develop this into a separate ordinance. The garbage disposal installation prohibition ordinance was then sent to a public hearing that was held at the December 7, 1999, City Council meeting. After receiving comments at the public hearing, the City Council returned this item to the Public Works Committee for further consideration but no action was taken to approve the draft ordinance.
Personally, I am so angry about this that I should just put the keyboard away. That the citizens never recently had a chance to reiterate their overwhelming opposition on such an enormously invasive restriction is unconscionable.
The city has put ourselves into great sanitation risks. With once-a-week garage pickup, biodegradable waste sits in containers festering with bacteria, especially in warm months. The ban on garbage disposals compounds this problem because not only are fatty food wastes in the normal garbage, so are non-fatty waste products. The changes will result in more unpleasant garbage situations that release harmful gases to residents in warm months.
The move comes after an incredibly weak, 9-year "education campaign" that consisted of a cartoonish message to avoid putting "fats" down the drain. What "fats"? Where was the continuing specific message about what exact foods do and don’t go into the sewer? Where was the education concerning the problems caused by gummy residue of liquid clothing detergents?
So far the Meeker regime has discontinued twice-a-week garbage pickup, imposed water restrictions with no hint of ever lifting them, and banned garbage disposals. If the current plumbing trends continue with this council, we will all be chopping vegetables over slop buckets, finding some place on our own to dispose of garbage, drilling wells in our yards, and using outhouses because the city will have banned any solid matter in their sewer system. Given the patterns, why should we have any reason to believe that we are not being driven toward an 1800s, rural lifestyle? Living in a city should offer lifestyle advantages and better sanitation with progress. Those we aren’t getting.
A step in the right direction would be to pick up our increased biodegradable garbage load twice -a-week. Until then, I’m not holding my breath. On second thought… I will due to the city’s increasingly oppressive stinch.
Carolina Clothiers Mens Sale Coming Wednesday
Beginning at 10 a.m. tomorrow, the Carolina Clothiers sale will begin in the former Storehouse location at North Hills. The sale features "top designer men’s clothing" at discounts of 50 to 80 percent off retail. The sale is expected to run through the end of March.
Van Halen Postponed
Van Halen today postponed Friday night’s RBC Center show due to medical problems with Eddie. The new date is April 13, existing tickets will still be honored that night.
In case you missed my review from the incredible Greensboro show, it’s attached here. In the meantime, you can find many good YouTube clips from this tour. Another way to pass the time is to listen to David Lee Roth’s hilarious vocal-only track from the recording of Runnin’ With The Devil .
‘Project Lightspeed’ to Bring High Speed Data
I just saw this interesting post in a Raleigh area forum where someone was wishing for Verizon FIOS service here:
You are in luck (kinda). I work for AT&T and we are currently working on a project called “Project Lightspeed” which I believe will be FTTC (Fiber to the curb) Where FIOS is FTTP (fiber to the premise) which is a touch faster but not by much. FTTP is ALOT more expensive than FTTC though. AT&T is also working on U-VERSE which is T.V. over your phone lines, so watch for that also. They are rolling U-VERSE out in other areas of the country (such as Atlanta) before it will be offered here.
Walnut Creek Naming Rights Go To TWC
TBJ is reporting that Time Warner Cable has bought the naming rights to Walnut Creek Amphitheater. The five year deal results in a new name for the facility: Time Warner Cable Music Pavilion at Walnut Creek. A positive aspect of the deal includes the intent to broadcast some of the facility’s content on TWC’s Carolina On Demand channel. Live Nation will remain as the chief operator and booking agency of "The TWC".
Site One Hole
Site One, the former eastern half of the Raleigh Civic Center, is currently a hole in the ground. The hole will be filled with subterranean parking garage underneath the Site One complex. For the past two years the hole has been a staging area for the parking garage underneath the Convention Center Marriott, shown in the left side of the 3-photo panoramic picture. The hotel is scheduled to open in July.
The ledge in front of the Marriott is the future extension of Fayetteville Street. One block in the distance, and the space between the tall gray building and the brick building on the right is where the City Square will be located.
Jack Johnson Coming to Walnut Creek
On August 12 Jack Johnson will make his return to Raleigh. This time he’s at Walnut Creek with Rogue Wave and Neil Halstead opening.
Where’s Walter?
The 11-foot Sir Walter Raleigh statue that stood on Fayetteville Street Mall since 1988 is now standing at the northeast corner of the Progress Energy Center for the Performing Arts. It was removed in April 2005 and spent time in Ohio being refurbished before being unveiled at last year’s Raleigh Wide Open celebration. The City’s website gives some background about the statue:
In 1901, school children contributed pennies, nickels and dimes to see a memorial to this man who was responsible for the first English colony in America and for whom their state capital was named. The children from throughout the state gave generously to the Sir Walter Raleigh Commission and the sum grew substantial but was not put to its purpose. A goodly portion of the contributions were lost in a Depression bank failure. Only $10,228 of the Tarheel children’s donations remained.
Sporadic and half-hearted attempts to bring the statue into being surfaced and succumbed over the coming decades, until in 1975 a statue was commissioned to be executed by noted sculptor Bruno Lucchesi of New York. Corporate sponsors from throughout the state contributed to getting the statue created and dedicated during the nation’s bicentennial; the year ahead.
Seventy-five years into the idea stage, Mr. Lucchesi moved the idea of the statue into metallic reality. It was to be a heroically scaled bronze sculpture. The Italian-born artist prevailed upon the Sir Walter Raleigh Commission members to allow his vision of the sixteenth-century genius to be realized. While many of the commission members wanted Sir Walter represented in the “ruff” — the customary curly collar of his time, the artist prevailed with Sir Walter striking a haughty pose in open collar.
ECU 2008 Football Schedule for Your PDA
ECU fans who like electronic calendars rejoice! I’ve uploaded the 2007-2008 ECU football schedule in the .CSV format.
Outlook/Palm Users:
- Create a new folder in your in Outlook calendar (Fball08, for example). Use the File | Import and Export… to import from “another program or file”, then “Comma Separated File (Windows)”. This will set up the Pirate schedule in your new sub-calendar where you can make whatever changes you want.
- When you are happy with the way the subcalendar looks, change the calendar view to “Events” (instead of 7-day or 31-Day or whatever view you’re using). “Select All” from the list, and drag them over to your main “Calendar” (The Treo and other Palm Handhelds only sync to the main calendar – time for Palm to get with the program on that one!). If you want to keep your sub calendar intact, use Ctrl-drag instead of plain drag. That will create a copy of each event to the main Calendar and keep the Fball08 calendar in place. Sync your handheld to copy the events to the handheld.
iCal Users:
- Use iCalTextImport to import the .CSV version of the schedule.
(right click on the link above and “Save As…”)
Note: Use at your own risk. I do not accept responsibility for any consequences resulting from errors in the schedule.
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