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rabbit seisin

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Posts posted by rabbit seisin

  1. 15 hours ago, victory said:

    I didn't see a thread specific to the Swamp Rabbit Trail, although there might be one. So, I'll drop this here, as the trail runs to Unity Park. As some of you know, my daughter lives in Greenville. I was up visiting her from Cola today, and she asked to have lunch at the Swamp Rabbit Cafe and Grocery. I don't know if you all have been, but it was really cool. When we first arrived, the little parking lot was full, and there was a big crowd milling about. I almost said, ok where to next, until we realized the Baptist church next door allowed parking, which was plentiful. It was a really cool little spot, and if I had my bike, it would have made for a wonderful little detour. We had sandwiches, and I had a beer, and she, a coffee. Every time I visit, I am impressed with what I find. Keep up the good work! If I had any advice, it would be don't get too big. The charm of downtown is that it is fairly dense, and walkable, and in many parts bikeable (if that's a word). You guys have really got a good thing. Oh..and don't think I didn't notice these new green street signs all over town. Good looking, and easily readable. I wish we had those kind of signs in Cola.     

    Thanks for the kind words! I’m optimistic that the city can continue to manage growth in a way that preserves Greenville’s appeal. 

  2. 58 minutes ago, distortedlogic said:

    Article says "4 storey development" but I'll  be darned if I don't count six.

    "The four-story building at 702 S. Main St., called The Avant, will include units on the fourth floor that have two additional levels"

    It's a four-story building but the fourth story is three stories. Got it? 😂

    • Like 1
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  3. Agree with others who feel that this looks a little uninspired. However it's an improvement (imo) over the previous two-building design. 

    I'll be the forum nutjob and suggest they build a 300 foot tower in gothic revival, in homage to the adjacent Christ Church Episcopal. If you don't think it can be done, google "cathedral of learning Pittsburgh" and jog your imagination. 😉

    • Like 2
  4. I do like OJ's; it's one of a dwindling number of certified Greenville classics. I would hate to see it go. I'm inclined to agree with Dino's assessment that a road diet and/or construction of same would hurt OJ's business. He has skin in the game and he would know. By the way, this can be true even if the planned changes are a net positive for area businesses overall (which I also believe). 

    However the city's goal is to make the area safer and more accessible by foot and bicycle, with the broader goal of knitting the South Main area with West Greenville. Whether or not you agree with these goals, they've been in process for many years with plenty of opportunity for public input.  A cash grab by a private developer would be one thing, but this is a public infrastructure project advanced by elected officials and prefigured by years of public deliberation. The specific impact on a meat-and-three diner, however venerable, is not the determining factor here and nor should it be. Businesses on Pendleton Street will adapt or move. 

    • Like 3
  5. 4 hours ago, gman430 said:

    Building is now available through CBRE according to new signage on site. Told you so. I wonder how much money the Belladina’s owner lost spending his own money on renovating the building only to watch it fall through. Ouch. 

    Yeah this is a shame because I think a cafe/deli in that area has the potential to be very successful. Area already gets a ton of Unity Park traffic and that neighborhood is only going to grow.

    Anyway this is complete hearsay and there are two sides to every story, but the story I heard is that the city nitpicked this one to death. 

     

  6. On 3/11/2024 at 8:14 AM, ingvegas said:

    Shhhhh, please. Let it die, quietly. 

    Sadly I find myself in this camp, although in theory I think an observation tower in the park could be great.

    It would have been nice if the design had shown any appreciation for the people, history, and culture of Greenville. My thought would have been something reminiscent of a textile mill's bell tower (look at Mills Mill, or for a different flavor the bell tower on the old Camperdown Mill #2, which had a bit of a gothic revival vibe going on). Unity Park's other features have industrial motifs already, so it wouldn't have been a stretch. 

  7. Speaking of the Laurens Road corridor, I was recently reminded of this story from 2019 where Greenville County was awarded a small grant to study fixed rail connecting Mauldin to downtown Greenville. Did anything ever come of this? Even if it just generated a .pdf on the County website I'd be curious to see it. Anyone know? 

    • Like 1
  8. 18 hours ago, GvilleSC said:

    They've been doing small piecemeal components for a while now. It would appear that they're  getting creative with how they're spending their money and performing the work. Seems like they're committed to finishing the job, but maybe facing financial constraints (?). This is all speculation and rumors that are floating around the community. 

    This is second-hand info so take it with a grain of salt, but my understanding is that the owner is self-financing. So, like you said, they are completing the project in a piecemeal fashion as cashflow permits.  It looks like a lot of the interior work has been done and they are waiting to do some paving and runoff remediation in/around the parking lot area. 

    • Thanks 2
  9. It would be nice to have a good retail draw in the lobby there. Currently the feeling you get when you hit College/Beattie heading north is YOU HAVE REACHED THE END OF DOWNTOWN 

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  10. 26 minutes ago, GvilleSC said:

    I need more information, but at the moment I'm not impressed.  At face value, there doesn't appear to be a mixture of uses. They're trying to wow the public with the concept (read: Whole Foods), but we need legitimate population density on site. Additional two story buildings (at what I assume is going to be the core of the development) is not going to cut it. Residential should absolutely be above these concepts, or they should have been incorporated with the Lima One building. 

    Will this signal the end of Group Therapy?

    Well said. Gimmick retail with gimmick architecture (the rendering for the bowling place is repellent); each of these “concepts” represents a shortsighted waste of prime real estate. 

    But I’m sure there will be plenty of PARKING 

  11. Quote

     

    Wow - I wasn't expecting this. Decent height and I think the design compliments the existing building fairly well. The blank wall is a shame, but the reality of a zero lot line.

    https://www.greenvillesc.gov/DocumentCenter/View/23336/23-320-PUBLIC-POSTING-201-W-Washington-St

     

     

    This little corner of downtown has a ton of unused potential. Hopefully this gets built and the adjacent lot can be redeveloped too, so we don't have to look at the featureless wall forever.

    I'd also like to see something more ambitious done with the greenlink garage with some street level interest added to Richardson and Laurens streets. The east side of Laurens Street has some gorgeous facades but the west side currently looks like a dungeon. I always thought that area could be a natural extension of the N Laurens pedestrian corridor. Join that with First Pres, Grace, and the historic architecutre of the Summit, calm Richardson St. a little, and I think you would have a very attractive urban space to lure pedestrians off Main St. 

     

    • Like 1
  12. 4 hours ago, hauntedheadnc said:

    It seems like Big, Boxy Betty there has been under construction forever.  When is she ever going to be finished?

    Second question: once finished, how long will we have to wait before demolition? 

    • Haha 3
  13. On 2/14/2023 at 1:16 PM, Horatio Nelson said:

    Does anyone else think if we run the history of the city of Greenville again without the constraint of the ring of mills (Not allowing themselves to be annexed) on its city borders it would not have been as successful?

     

    12 hours ago, Horatio Nelson said:

    I didn't realize that Columbia and Charleston had 3.8-4.5 times the land area of Greenville but only less than 2 times the population.

    For a small southern city, Greenville is pretty densely populated. All of its charm and accolades come from the scale and density of its downtown and the immediately adjoining neighborhoods. That said, in my view the biggest opportunity areas for growth are still within the city limits.  Hopefully the nodes-and-corridors strategy imagined by the new zoning master plan will bear fruit. A more integrated, urban fabric across the entire municipal footprint would take Greenville to the next level.

    Places like Sans Souci, City View, and Judson are natural targets for annexation due to proximity and population density, but I would want a thorough assessment of the costs and benefits first. Unfortunately, infrastructure in many of those neighborhoods is severely decayed and it would require major city resources to bring it into this century. As others have noted upthread, the county has been largely unable to meet the needs of these lower-and-working-class areas for decades. 

    • Like 3
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