If you happen to drive down 6th street in Tucson, you probably have noticed what appears to be a five story tall 2″ thick stick drywall sheeted wood behemoth, just west of Fourth Avenue. This is THE DISTRICT ON 5TH, a LEED Silver ® certified student housing project. Many agree that a significant project was needed for the old YWCA demolition site which was a giant hole for two years. There is little question that it is clean, modern, and brings much needed work to Tucson. Its environmental awards and neighborhood LEED points on the other hand, should not go down without criticism. Just a little over a year ago, The District, won a fight with West University Neighborhood over transitions, shocking residents with what may better show how not to transition into a historic neighborhood. See Edge Development Pressuring Neighborhoods. The scale down is an attempt but there is a bigger story regarding its failure in that regards and its potential contribution to homeowner disinvestment. It is a good project on the drafting boards and in the marketing rooms, but a different story to U of A area residents. Neighborhoods are being lost and de-valued, because their boundaries ultimately are always up for grabs. As for LEED ratings it appears, the USGBC has no limitation as to the use of minimalist wood frame construction for high rise housing as being sustainable. It does raise eyebrows. The District will store a lot of students. It is a fully functional amenity rich private dorm with 7 floor plans ranging in the mid $600’s to $700’s per room per student. It is very similar in concept to modern student group homes that have taken out large chunks of university neighborhoods. See Mini-Dorms. Scale is the difference. There is no question that arterial edges are the place for these, but transition rights need to be real for homeowners. As the heat is on for density, so are the embers threatening to ignite neighborhoods wanting a future they can rely on and compensation from
the effects of heavy handed development. Welcome to the post proposition 207 era, where Tucson is hamstrung to the point that protective planning regulation is near obsolete and citizens are realizing any protection is up to them.
Archive for January 19th, 2012
THE DISTRICT ON 5TH AND NEIGHBORHOODS
Posted in Edges and Overlays, Preservation on January 19, 2012| 1 Comment »
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