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What downtown Los Angeles is
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What downtown Phoenix is doing:
Another Cook County Hospital not
in downtown Chicago, but in downtown Phoenix. |
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The
Phoenix Downtown Con: Instant Gratification
PHOENIX (By
Jon
Garrido, The Jon Garrido News
Network) October 16, 2006 (now
being updated) The phone lines at the
downtown Phoenix Hyatt Regency are all
lit up as reservations are being made
from callers from all over the United
States and beyond as news spreads across
the globe the Cronkite School is
coming to downtown Phoenix.
Instead of families planning on visiting
Baltimore's Harbor Place,
Faneuil Hall Marketplace, Disneyworld,
the San Antonio River Walk, Pike Place
Market in Seattle, or the San Francisco
Cable Car Tour, everyone is now
adjusting travel schedules booking
visits to downtown Phoenix to visit the
Cronkite school.
Not just visitors planning summer vacations but even more
jubilant, the Arizona Convention Bureau
is biting at the bit planning market
campaigns to further the draw of the
Cronkite Center to tourists from all
over the world. If lines are too long to
get in to the Cronkite school, visitors
will have access to visit the medical
school and watch fourth year students
scrub up for surgery.
Developing downtown Phoenix into a college campus with
medical school and supporting hospital
is not the way to build a vacation
destination to advance Phoenix into the
realm of world class cities.
No one questions building a medical school and supporting
hospital campus is needed in the Phoenix
area but building such a complex on the
most valuable land in Arizona and
consequently, diminishing available land
to build a downtown that will attract
visitors from all over the world to
visit a destination center in downtown
Phoenix is certainly questionable.
A medical campus should be built where land is readily
available, affordable and most
importantly, where land use will not
diminish opportunity for destination
uses of downtown Phoenix land.
In fact, one does not need to visit other cities to see
quality development success. A drive to
the corner of 24th Street and Camelback
will be a visit to a first class
showcase development. Hard to imagine
but all done without public subsidies.
24th Street and Camelback is high end
superb development the kind of
development that should be driving
downtown Phoenix development. These are
very different market areas
demographically but imagine what
downtown Phoenix would look like if it
was similar to 24th Street and
Camelback.
Put another way, the number of supporters to further develop
24th Street and Camelback as a college
campus including medical school and
hospital can be counted on the fingers
of one hand.
If the Camelback corridor came together to fight Trump on
height, think how this power community
group would react to what the City of
Phoenix is now planning and doing in
downtown Phoenix utilizing all available
downtown land for a college and medical
campus.
Cook County Hospital in downtown Chicago
is a prime example of not being a
destination center for Chicago. It is
the ever winding river with numerous
bridges that has made downtown Chicago
famous particularly during Christmas
with the use of twinkling lights
everywhere.
Those involved in marketing Chicago never mention Cook County
Hospital as an attraction yet Phoenix
seems determined to build its own Cook
County Hospital on land that should be
earmarked for greatness rather a surgery
room.
Instant gratification is no answer to
downtown Phoenix development that in the
end will bring demise to what was a
golden opportunity to make Phoenix one
of America's premier cities. Instant
gratification makes for headlines and
great sound bites but the only way to
develop downtown is to look long term at
quality destination projects that add
synergy to additional development
thereby increasing property and sales
tax revenue.
Questionable downtown develop is not new
to Phoenix. It began with the property
on the north side of the Phoenix Civic
Center which is a block owned by the
Catholic Diocese of Phoenix.
To develop this key parcel, Bishop
O'Brien gave the assignment to the once
prima donna of the Diocese: Monsieur
Dale Fushek whose only development
experience was limited to developing a
youth movement. The Diocesan parcel
abutting the civic center on the north
side would have had any savvy developer
drooling at the possibly of maximizing
the site with a high density multi use
convention hotel, class A office space
and retail structure. Even high rise
condominiums would have worked in the
tower. Directly behind Saint Mary's
Cathedral is where Saint Mary's High
School once was located and had it been
restored to historical architectural
significance, the restored school could
have provided class A office space to
chancery staff.
Parking for the renovated Saint Mary's
school diocesan center could have been
accommodated underneath the tower
structure to the east along with
providing underground parking for tower
users.
The tower could have easily duplicated
the amount of space built as the Arizona
Center with location being more premium
for its location directly across a small
collector street from the Phoenix
Convention Center, a premium ideal site
for a convention hotel complex.
The ideal scenario would have been to
execute a unsubordinated land lease to
develop the underground parking garage
and tower above accommodating the
convention hotel and office space. By
leasing the church land, the Diocese of
Phoenix without risk would have receive
in excess of $20,000,000 annually
indexed by the CPI which could have been
used by the Diocese to cover increasing
operating costs and increased charitable
services. A golden opportunity lost
because of the lack of foresight and
development experience of Monsignor Dale
Fushek, a parish priest now waiting for
his faith to be decided in court on
charges of molesting youth in his care.
Similar to Fushek is Phil Gordon, former
photography shop operator, now making
decisions on downtown development as
indicative of having development done by
persons with no development expertise.
Similar to the loss of development
opportunity by the church is to use a
prime piece of property in close
proximity to the convention center for
restoring a handful of low density
buildings to accommodate 24 students to
attend a medical school.
The crux of the problem is public
officials without development experience
are responsible for Phoenix downtown
development.
If anyone thinks city staff will provide
balance then you do not know how a city
functions.
No one on staff is going to go against
the grain and voice another direction
because no one bites the hand that feeds
them.
This of course assumes city staff has
private sector development expertise. No
Phoenix staff person has this depth of
expertise. No one has "risk" experience
for all are to quick to use "public"
money that has no risk.
Then comes parking. Every structure will
have to deal with parking. Remember it
was lack of parking that killed the
Mercado.
As beautiful as the Mercado complex is
that was planned for primarily
restaurant and tourist retail, the
complex was planned and developed
without regard for parking. On the same
day the Mercado gave birth to
restaurants and other tourist type
retail the Mercado died. There was no
parking for visitors.
Parking is critical and Phoenix does not
have a good record in this area.
Most regional malls are placed in
suburbs not only because this is where
consumers live but also because of the
cost of land makes numbers work in
developing regional shopping centers
that require a sea of at grade parking
surrounding each center avoiding the
cost of constructing a parking
structure. Down or above grade the
numbers are nearly the same, $15,000 per
parking space.
Who then is going to pay for a parking
structure to accommodate the Phoenix
medical school and hospital's parking
needs? Again, the public developer will
turn to the public to finance this cost.
Translation: Taxpayers will pay this
cost.
Taxpayer subsidies are bad enough but
the real villain is utilizing land use
for public structures diminishes land
available for destination type land
uses.
All private development professionals
strive to maximize development
opportunities by placing the highest and
best use for each property. It is
highest and best use that drives
development at 24th Street and
Camelback. It is the market place that
determines highest and best use also
known as laissez-faire that the
free market is best left to its own
devices, and that it will dispense with
inefficiencies in a more deliberate and
quick manner than the Phoenix mayor and
city council ever could. Particularly
because Phil Gordon and the city council
members are clueless and lack
development experience.
Adam Smith argued the invisible hand
of the market would guide people to act
in the public interest by following
their own self-interest that drives by
market demand as evidenced by increased
tourism found in major cities. Simply
put even for a clueless mayor and
council build it and they will come.
This premise attracts millions of
persons to Las Vegas each year as does
the San Antonio River Walk.
For a city, the traditional litmus test
does the proposed use contribute to
critical mass to spur additional
development with the ultimate test: will
the development significantly add to
property and sales tax revenue for the
city? The Las Vegas hotels and casinos
do this. The San Antonio River Walk does
this.
The ASU downtown Phoenix campus along
with the medical school and forthcoming
hospital will not do this. The ASU
downtown Phoenix campus is a disaster in
the making.
The market drives 24th Street and
Camelback; consequently, there is no
need for public subsidy. Which begs the
question why is public subsidy always a
requirement for developers in the
downtown Phoenix area? It is only
because developers know the City of
Phoenix is an easy touch on downtown
development.
It appears public subsidy in downtown
Phoenix is the equity contribution of
the Phoenix mayor and city council who
have no risk development experience
other than maybe not winning in the next
election. Yet, if no one questions, then
all public subsidies freely flow.
It is when private developers know
public subsidies are readily available,
developers approach the mayor and
council for free hands outs for projects
that could never get off the ground
supposedly unless they receive "gap"
financing to make the numbers work. The
more public money that is available, the
greater need for subsidy that is
requested.
The payoff for city officials without
development experience, the public
recognition of spearheading less than
highest and best use development to win
elections.
Gov. Janet Napolitano said, "What we are
doing here is not just creating a
medical school, we're creating a
biomedical campus for the 21st century."
An appropriate downtown use?
Sounds like Phil Gordon, Dale Fushek and
now Janet Napolitano with no development
experience that instantly become experts
on downtown development.
Then there is the Pied Piper of Hamelin
or rather of ASU.
"Pay the piper"
The tale has inspired a common English
phrase, "pay the piper," which
means to face the inevitable
consequences of one's actions. In
downtown Phoenix it will come to mean a
golden destination opportunity lost as
available land is gobbled up insensibly
to placate instant gratification.
Building a school campus on the most
valuable land in Arizona does not
contribute to the convention and sports
event focus working as a magnet for
downtown activities. A downtown campus
will do nothing to attract major
conventions and tourists.
A development overlay should be approved
by the City of Phoenix to insure only
development that adds to the convention
and tourist focus should be approved
with a jaundice view of all other
development. If developments do not
sustain convention, tourist, and first
class office, they should not be built.
The ASU Phoenix downtown campus is short sighted or rather
work in progress of instant
gratification. Downtown Phoenix should
be for spenders not students. Students
do not support affluent spending. The
ideal city is a combination of New York
City, Chicago and Miami. Work, home and
play in one area: downtown. Retail did
not work at Arizona Center for it was
ahead of its time without affluent
consumers. It is doubtful it is going to
work for ASU. It will end up looking
like retail near the Newman Center in
Tempe dismal. Schools can not pay
rents required by first class office or
retail space. Thus, school space can
never be justified in a central business
district where highest and best use is
an absolute requirement.
And if any one thinks the Phoenix
downtown ASU campus will revitalize the
downtown Phoenix core area with major
income producing properties need only
drive to the ASU main campus in Tempe.
I was there last month and I failed to
see a Nordstrom. I did not even see a
Gap. In fact the only retail I saw was
very small four store fronts on the
north side of the Newman Center.
Nordstrom and the Gap are market driven.
Where there is demand with shoppers
having high disposable dollars, these
stores that cater to the affluent will
be built.
Students have few disposable dollars
compared to first class office building
workers and affluent home owners.
To further magnify the type of retail
supported by students, drive the ASU
Tempe campus east to Scottsdale
Road/Rural Road then south to Apache
Blvd. This area looks like Iraq. Not a
pretty site and as for retail, how does
anyone justify students without high
disposable incomes needed to generate
economic multipliers? Student incomes
will not generate leverage supporting
the types of retail development found at
24th Street and Camelback.
And without this type of retail, the
illusion of high rise luxury
condominiums in downtown Phoenix will be
limited.
When I was the executive director of
economic development for the City of El
Paso, I joined the prestigious Urban
Land Institute, bought the entire ULI
development library, read every
publication, attended numerous
development workshops and conferences
and most importantly, toured nearly all
major cities to see first hand how
downtowns were successfully
developed. These type experiences were
not new for I began doing this when I
was the economic development coordinator
for the City of Tucson and continued
when I was the v.p. for planning and
development for once the largest real
estate development company in Arizona.
The most classic being the
transformation of the Trinity River into
San Antonio's River Walk. This is a
prime example of revitalizing a down
town and Indianapolis Circle Centre Mall
creatively and ingenuity placing a
regional mall above the central business
district along with adjacent sports
facilities. The most noted being Baltimore's Harbor Place and Faneuil Hall
Marketplace in Boston. My favorite is
Chicago's downtown area especially with
a flood of Christmas lights twinkling
above the river making downtown
spectacular. Even San Diego is noted
for revitalization of its downtown area
with the historic Gas Lamp Quarter.
The point being made in each of these
examples is tourist cities all have a
destination downtown. This is what is
lacking in concept for downtown Phoenix.
A university campus with medical and a
journalism school does not even come
close.
The recently approved Phoenix CityScape
is not a destination. It will provide
for those that work in the downtown area
and to the few that live in downtown. It
is not a River Walk. It is not a Faneuil
Hall or Baltimore Harbor Place. No one
working and living in Scottsdale will
ever drive to downtown Phoenix to shop
at Phoenix CityScape. Neither will
anyone living in Superior or Globe drive
to downtown Phoenix to shop at Phoenix
CityScape. This should illustrate
Phoenix CityScape is not a destination
and the premise made in this writing: a
destination is absolutely required to
take Phoenix into the realm of great
cities.
Someone much wiser than I said they are
not making any more and to utilize some
of the most valuable land in Arizona for
a few two story buildings to house 24
students is even dumber than utilizing
the block north of the civic center for
a low density two story building to
house the Diocese of Phoenix.
This prime piece of real estate in
downtown Phoenix now occupies a two
story low density building with no
architectural significance.
This in itself illustrates the City of
Phoenix who in essence believes in
instant gratification. By utilizing the
most valuable land in Arizona achieves
nothing to increase the critical mass
needed to revitalize downtown Phoenix.
This madness has got to come to a halt.
Soon all downtown Phoenix will be one
huge campus. It is time to quit
following the Piped Piper and send him
far away.
Maybe in the short term, the downtown
area will go from empty blighted parcels
but eventually, downtown Phoenix instead
of high rise office and a destination
project that would have attracted
housing and then retail is not going to
happen.
Why not use the medical school to anchor
a medical campus near Mayo in north
Phoenix? Everyone concerned with
development should take a look at Cook
County Medical Center in Chicago and ask
themselves is this the best use of prime
Phoenix downtown land? If anyone has
difficulty with this, ask yourself if
any medical hospital campus located at
the corner of 24th street and
Camelback is an appropriate land use?
I for one think downtown Phoenix should
surpass 24th Street and
Camelback with a imaginative destination
center if we want Phoenix to become a
premier city.
The City of Phoenix is in desperate need
of leadership that understands
development. Instant gratification for
the sake of a campaign slogan is not the
long term answer. Following the Piped
Piper is not the answer.