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Old 12-19-2014, 10:59 PM
 
Location: SW King County, WA
6,289 posts, read 8,060,800 times
Reputation: 6279

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Proposed Uptown Oakland Food Hall Is Hilarious Millennial Bait - Eater SF

Ouch. Can't tell if jealous or serious...
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Old 12-20-2014, 07:30 AM
 
365 posts, read 766,377 times
Reputation: 350
Quote:
Originally Posted by 04kL4nD View Post
Perhaps a little of both? If it's anything like the Ferry Building food hall (sans all those pesky tourists) good for Oakland!
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Old 12-20-2014, 03:10 PM
 
339 posts, read 507,899 times
Reputation: 424
Quote:
Originally Posted by 04kL4nD View Post
I mean, it is kinda funny to see a Powerpoint from middle-aged white men discussing the "cool, hip spots".

But, this would be amazing.
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Old 12-20-2014, 07:39 PM
 
Location: Boulder Creek, CA
9,197 posts, read 16,514,203 times
Reputation: 6367
Quote:
Originally Posted by CirclingLogan View Post
I mean, it is kinda funny to see a Powerpoint from middle-aged white men discussing the "cool, hip spots".
Maybe the old farts will be pleased if a Manley's Donuts were included?
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Old 12-30-2014, 04:38 PM
 
339 posts, read 507,899 times
Reputation: 424
Eight developers fight for coveted Uptown Oakland site for housing, hotel

Quote:
A stacked roster of eight developers will compete to turn a vacant Oakland property next to the Fox Theatre into a retail, residential and hotel hot spot that can anchor the Uptown neighborhood.

This is the hottest available property in Oakland and the city just shared the list of developers vying to own the 1911 Telegraph Ave. site. ( My story from the fall should help you catch up on what this site entails.) It's a diverse lineup of affordable housing nonprofits, hotel owners and successful San Francisco housing developers. By the spring, a group of planners and experts will recommend a developer to the City Council and then the terms of a sale will be negotiated.

The amount of interest "bodes well for getting a strong iconic project on the property," said Kelley Kahn, an Oakland project director.
Sounds like Bridge and City-Core have the strongest proposals? I would definitely prefer City-Core. They are proposing a 22 story building vs. Bridge's 8 story. The latter is far too short for a site like that. We need to be building up as much as possible in dense, infrastructure-heavy areas like Uptown. Also, City-Core is offering a boutique hotel, which is what that area (and Oakland) desperately need. I think Bridge's affordable housing is important, but not in a critical spot like this.
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Old 12-30-2014, 11:20 PM
 
Location: East Bay Area
1,993 posts, read 3,553,016 times
Reputation: 911
Quote:
Originally Posted by CirclingLogan View Post
Eight developers fight for coveted Uptown Oakland site for housing, hotel



Sounds like Bridge and City-Core have the strongest proposals? I would definitely prefer City-Core. They are proposing a 22 story building vs. Bridge's 8 story. The latter is far too short for a site like that. We need to be building up as much as possible in dense, infrastructure-heavy areas like Uptown. Also, City-Core is offering a boutique hotel, which is what that area (and Oakland) desperately need. I think Bridge's affordable housing is important, but not in a critical spot like this.
The strongest proposals out of the 3 known proposals, because the other five isn't known yet. But i agree, the part of town needs high rises. I prefer two high rises for the site, one for apartments, one for the hotel.
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Old 01-07-2015, 03:03 PM
 
Location: Oakland, CA
28,234 posts, read 36,157,658 times
Reputation: 28517
Great feature on the new BRT (bus rapid transit) line going up on International Blvd.

Advocates Hope Oakland’s New Rapid Bus Line Will Help Seniors Age In Place | News Fix | KQED News
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Old 01-07-2015, 05:43 PM
 
339 posts, read 507,899 times
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Sounds fantastic.

However, if this is going on International, why is the graphic on Telegraph & 24th?
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Old 01-07-2015, 08:29 PM
 
Location: Oakland, CA
28,234 posts, read 36,157,658 times
Reputation: 28517
Quote:
Originally Posted by CirclingLogan View Post
Sounds fantastic.

However, if this is going on International, why is the graphic on Telegraph & 24th?
Good question! It'll end at 20/telegraph or broadway though which is still excellent. I guess that is close enough.
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Old 01-12-2015, 02:52 PM
 
339 posts, read 507,899 times
Reputation: 424
If happens, really cool idea. Keep the auto dealerships, just build on top.

Profitable Volkswagen of Oakland Dealership Owner, Mike Murphy, Devises Plans to Create an Apartment Complex on Auto Row

Quote:
Mike Murphy, owner of Volkswagen of Oakland, is working with Volkswagen of America to tear down his dealership and build a 500-unit apartment complex called the Villas at Auto Row, with VW and Hyun-dai stores on the ground level.

When the apartments open, around 2018, Murphy expects to charge $3.50 per square foot, or about $2,500 per month for a 700-square-foot apartment, to capitalize on a Bay Area real-estate boom that has spilled over into Oakland. His strategy is unusual. Over the past few decades, U.S. dealerships have largely left city centers and clustered in suburban auto malls. Outside of ultradense areas such as Manhattan, few dealerships have residential units on top.
Murphy's site is well-suited for an urban retail experiment, given VW's popularity in the progressive havens of Oakland and Berkeley, but it also illustrates how dealerships are taking advantage of the trend toward urban living.

Brian Maas, president of the California New Car Dealers Association, said he has heard from urban dealers in the Bay Area that repair shops make the economics work. "They do incredible service business," Maas said, "because everybody wants to drive into town, drop their car off when they go to work and pick it up when they go home."

Volkswagen of Oakland's three-story art deco building has been tied to VW since the 1950s, and its history has tracked with Oakland's decline and resurgence. The building sits along a section of Broadway Avenue dubbed Auto Row after the dealerships that clustered there during Oakland's post-World War II heyday. Auto Row's luster faded between the 1960s and 1980s as blight and crime caused residents and businesses to flee Oakland. A dozen or so dealerships remain, but many have weathered facades, a telltale sign of the economic challenges they have faced.

Now they sit on prime real estate again. Murphy's store is eight blocks from a train station that can get a commuter to San Francisco's financial district in 15 minutes. Trendy bars and shops open every week. A block away is Cat Town Cafe, a U.S. outpost of a Japanese trend in which patrons can play with kittens as they drink lattes. Oakland rezoned the area in July as the Broadway Valdez District, allowing Auto Row's faded showrooms and parking lots to be turned into apartments and retail stores that would boost the city's housing stock and tax base.

Murphy and his partner on the development, Volkswagen of Oakland General Manager Samir Rohayem, devised a plan to build three apartment buildings on five parcels of land, four of which Murphy owns outright. The fifth is jointly owned by Murphy and Volkswagen of America. They plan to begin construction in mid- to late 2016 and finish in 2018. During construction, the VW and Hyundai stores will need to move into temporary homes. Murphy owns a vacant lot across the street and a showroom across the street with a lease ending next year, but the project will mean upheaval for multiple dealerships, some of which are his tenants.

"There's going to be some hassle, no doubt about it," Murphy said. "But at the end of the day it's going to be a very profitable deal."
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