Jump to content

transplant08

Members+
  • Posts

    176
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by transplant08

  1. 2 hours ago, vicupstate said:

    It is not playing favorites as much as it is a zoning issue.  The city did not want BK to open there but they were within the law to do so. 

    Yeah, the BK project straddled two parcels, one RDV and the other C3. BK initially got pushback from the neighborhood, but shifted the building footprint to stay off the RDV portion and thus were able to do what they wanted. That being said, I am not naive enough to think there was no favoritism going on. My larger point is that the city has been picking winners and losers for decades. Up until the creation of the RDV zoning tool, poorer neighborhoods have ALWAYS been on the losing side. 

  2. 38 minutes ago, vicupstate said:

    This is news to me, can you elaborate on what you are referring to. The city, county and state in addition to Aughtry/Hughes all want to see the convention center built.   

    civil case last year.  Trying to dig up the case file. This law firm handled ReWa's case. This hints at it but doesn't name names. https://bannisterandwyatt.com/mr-wyatt-and-the-big-dig/

     

  3. 27 minutes ago, Dino Hassiotis said:

    I was there and so was my attorney.This is not done by a longshot. The city will be answering in court.Depositions starting.

    You absolutely should sue. Aughtry/Hughes sued ReWa for loss of value caused by the Big Dig running a tunnel hundreds of feet under new proposed convention center. If you can show that government has taken value from you, then they owe you the difference. I don't have much confidence in the success of your case (Aughtry/Hughes weren't able to get much), but it is your right to have this in front of a civil jury.

  4. 4 minutes ago, Dino Hassiotis said:

    The city first threatened to condemn our prior building then used eminent domain to  steal it from my father.After we broke ground due to property gain tax situation the city put our prior property up for sale.They gave us $190,000 sold it to Sassafras for $1.1 million.The documentation  is in public records, if you would take some time to do some research.RDV devalues our property  again  because it limits our potential to develop or expand without getting the city of Greenville to approve.

    I agree that the city has a horrible historical record when it comes to eminent domain. Much of Unity Park will take the place of once residential neighborhoods. Those takings were in the name of a bypass road that was never built.

    I also agree that the RDV designation seriously cuts into the value of your property. With a C3 your property would increase in value overnight, enabling you to advertise the parcel to a new business willing to pay a much higher rate than OJs.

  5. I am also a fan of RDV zoning. Without zoning controls, some neighborhoods would be saturated with liquor stores, payday lending, pawn shops, etc. While those businesses may simply be responding to consumer demand, some residents want control over which goods and services can locate in their neighborhoods. RDV isn't perfect (it failed to stop Burger King), but it is often the last line of defense for some residents. 

    For more background on the OJ's parcel, see this greenville journal article from 2 yrs ago: https://issuu.com/cjdesigns/docs/12_14_gj_issuu/4

     

  6. On 4/13/2020 at 3:31 PM, sc smitty said:

    There was a proposal in the 1970's to build a freeway loop around the north and west side of downtown connecting I-385 to I-185, with another spur running north up along the Reedy River.  It would have blazed a multi-lane highway and interchange ramps right through existing neighborhoods along Stone Ave, Hampton-Pinckney, and the West End.  Thankfully this mess was never built.

    https://books.google.com/books?id=Uok2AQAAMAAJ&pg=PP19&lpg=PP19&dq=greenville+gantt+freeway&source=bl&ots=58idvi-sfu&sig=ACfU3U1s37lWAPNluMLRAHAJjNvNXf6FEw&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjN46iFiOboAhWsiOAKHdG1AMsQ6AEwA3oECAkQLQ#v=onepage&q&f=false

    Prep for this never-completed project (acquisition and demo) decimated a large swath of Southernside. It created the empty spaces where Unity Park will be located.

  7. 7 minutes ago, gman430 said:

     I’m still worried about the county throwing away the $26 million for the museum/conference center but it might just be a bluff on their part. Who knows.

    I still don't see the county's leverage with funding for the museum/conference center. Aughtry owns the parcel and Hughes owns the adjacent ones behind it. If they don't get money from city/county govts, they'll eventually put something really big and shiny there on their own.

  8. 49 minutes ago, vicupstate said:

    If he is not happy with a delay, 'upping the ante' isn't going to help matters.  

    I still don't see the County's leverage. The county needs the Roca deal more than the city needs a convention center. I mean, a convention center would be great, but Aughtry owns the acre where it will sit and Hughes owns 3 adjacent acres right behind it. It will get developed, they'll make a lot of money, and the city will reap its share of the property taxes. If everything falls a part (county square, convention center), the county will not get its development AND it will have already sold off the last portion of riverfront property downtown to Aughtry.

  9. Ultimately, I think it will still pass. There is too much money to be made. But I think the county is more desperate than the city. They've already made millions of concessions in just the past few days. Neighborhood opposition will help put the county over a barrel and hopefully result in some meaningful changes that can help the people who stuck it out in those neighborhoods during the down times.

  10. 2 hours ago, gman430 said:

    Ehhh...just a bunch of a NIMBY’s who don’t like high rises. They’ll live. 

    Well, in their defense, Haynie-Sirrine spent years working with the city to develop a master plan that outlined how they would like the county square property developed. The city agreed with the plan. The city put those ideas into the zoning regs.

    I think we can all agree that master plans and zoning regs are a good thing. And if so, we shouldn't disregard them lightly.

  11. 30 minutes ago, Danmire said:

    Also, they are looking to rezone the Victor Mill to a FRD as well.  This is just beyond the Poe Mill skate Park area where the Orange line Swamp Rabbit Trail extension ends.  

    Big plans for this area.

    thought Victor Mill was in Greer. At least before it burned and was torn down.

  12. 9 hours ago, MAJIKMAN said:

    Well I maybe able to elaborate better on that. The city and the residents of the southern side neighborhood have a long standing agreement of not allowing establishments that serve alcohol. That means if you have to get a liquor license, they don’t want it. That’s the reason no one has opened anything in the old nightclub space next to the post office. I personally know of a couple that wanted to open a restaurant there. But couldn’t get the approval of the whole neighborhood. Now in that case. The Hampton-Pinckney folk were in favor of it. But the Southernside folk didn’t. And that’s probably what’s going on here. 

    yep

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.