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chelovek

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Posts posted by chelovek

  1. Had a nice lunch with my district's new councilman, Colby Sledge.  Among various topics, I asked what his thoughts were regarding the redevelopment of the Greer Stadium and Fairgrounds sites.  In both cases, he believes they will both become primarily large parks/green space, with some soccer fields, softball diamonds, large playgrounds, dog parks, jogging/bike trails, half-pipes, pavilions, areas for weekly farmers' markets, etc.  He thinks that as those neighborhoods grow denser with houses, apartment/condo complexes, and more businesses that there will be much greater need for larger park spaces than currently exist on that side of town.  

    DOG PARK is sorely needed! bring it on! They should let people use the Greer Stadium field as an enormous dog park until it is time for demo.

    It would also be nice to step back a little bit and look at the relationship between Ft. Negley Park, the Cemetery, Rose Park and Reservoir Park. Would be great to link all of these green spaces together.

    • Like 4
  2. I see now what you were asking about.    They've removed the sidewalk along Hermitage and it looks like some buried utility work going on, although I'm not sure what exactly.      It may have to do with water connections to the amphitheater park.     There will be restrooms and other facilities at the South end of the site where previously there has been nothing.     

     

    I think MPW is adding a turning lane here

  3. And yet the exact thing I was talking about happened just a few posts later. As a long time member of this site I enjoy the passion many on here feel for Nashville.

     

    But we talk about affordable housing, zoning, building materials, and other things and act like all these things aren't all interrelated. It would be terrific if Stonehenge built buildings made of nice brick that were excavated low enough to properly address the street on their first floor. But this would add millions to construction costs and therefore add hundreds a month to rent, thereby exacerbating housing affordability which is already an issue in prime parts of this city.

     

    I agree that their building are crappy quality. But if this board is just going to be a place to complain about every project being developed, then I want to have no part in it. My point in being sarcastic was this: If you can do it better, then do it. If you can you will make a fortune. These developers are incredibly smart people and know what sells and at what price points.

     

    The stonehenge products are not affordable. 1100 dollars a month for a less than 500 sq ft studio in a building that is already deteriorating (note16) is a cash grab, not affordable housing. You're giving these guys too much credit.

    • Like 1
  4. I wonder if the money would be better spent widening the Demonbreun St. viaduct and making that sidewalk much safer and pedestrian friendly?

     

    It could be sent to the general fund and then used for police, fire, and other safety measures, while also contributing to the city's sidewalk program, which uses a Sidewalk Priority Index to determine where sidewalk maintenance and construction is most needed.

  5. Hey, I'm not on Facebook at all.  I mean at all.  I can't even open it.  So can we post this information somewhere more visible?  I'l like to come.

     

    from their FB:

     

    at 7:45am - 9:00am

     

    Location:

     
    2411 Blakemore Ave, Nashville, Tennessee 37212

     

     

    Join Walk/Bike Nashville and the Sidewalk Foundation/Shade Parade for a coffee and panel discussion with the candidates for Nashville's next mayor. 

    WPLN's Bobby Allyn will moderate a discussion with Mayoral Candidates on sidewalks and the future of our streets.

    Coffee and snacks will be provided.

    Doors open at 7:45am, panel discussion begins at 8:00am.

    Please submit questions for candidates to [email protected].

    Parking will be available at Harris Hillman (1706 26th Ave S, Nashville, TN 37212) or you can walk or ride your bike!

  6. Our next mayor will have a lot on the plate regarding walkability and pedestrian infrastructure.

     

    Walk/Bike Nashville is hosting a candidate forum where the mayoral frontrunners will get a chance to outline their strategy to turn the tide on Nashville's pitiful pedestrian record.

     

    I hope you all will come and bring this discussion about public/private financing, downtown v. neighborhood focus, and facility quality to the people who will be making these decisions in the next administration. Your enthusiasm and expertise would benefit the city.

     

    More details here: https://www.facebook.com/events/359966430823457/

    • Like 1
  7. I think perhaps some of the issue is parking. Perhaps with the new MDHA garage, parking spot rental or purchase may be available, and help push for more upper floor redevelopment.

     

    The other big issue is bringing the buildings up to code during renovations. Its not so difficult to do that for the first story, but retrofitting the upper stories to allow for emergency ingress and egress that is up to today's codes while retaining enough floorspace for lofts or whatever is tough. Kress lofts was able to do it by combining multiple adjacent buildings that now share a fire escape.

    • Like 1
  8. They should use the turn lanes on both viaducts as flex lanes like on hermitage avenue. The extra capacity would be useful during rush hours and special events.

     

    I'm glad we'll finally have some space for bikes here. I also hope that fewer lanes will slow down drivers coming off of the interstate into downtown. As currently configured, church is a speed funnel. The lack of transition from four lane highway to two lane street with lots of ped activity contributes to the high rate of pedestrian injuries and deaths around the 8th and Church intersection.

     

    I would love to see the city put together a church st./elliston place master plan and give the road a complete streets makeover from centennial park to the river. It could easily become the city's favorite street with a small amount of public investment. Throw in some bike lanes, improved sidewalks, public art, and plantings and people would flock to all of the cool old buildings along the corridor in greater numbers than they already do.

    • Like 4
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