Reader comments: S.L. Council OKs City Creek skybridge in a 6-1 vote
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Part of having a "green" city is having skybridges.
Pedestrians crossing streets require crosswalks. Crosswalks add stoplight rotations. In the case of downtown, many of those pedestrian stoplight rotations happen automatically. That forces cars (the ones who pollute) to sit there & idle while a few people (or in some cases, no people) cross the street.
By putting in skybridges, you eliminate pedestrians needing to cross the street. Therefore you can eliminate stoplight rotations, drivers are stopped less time. That means less traffic congestion and less idling......which means less pollution and wasted gas.
If you can't grasp that I think I might be dealing with a lost cause.
The perils of a theocracy!
I don't know the religious preferences of all of the City Council, but my guess is that not all are practicing Mormons and some voted for the skybridge and City Creek Project because in their esitmation it will be good for SLC.
There has been substantial criticism of the church for the City Creek project. To the critics I ask: would you have preferred the virtually dead ZCMI and Crossroads Malls to have remained shuttered and empty? How does that help vitalize downtown or mainstreet?
What is this guy smoking? Does he think that tiny little mom-and-pop operations are the answer to revitalizing downtown SLC? Or is he really just hiding a hidden agenda?
Not 6 people making the decision
The Council is out of order voteing for the people
This is Un Constitutional
The Constitution provides for a representative government of elected officials. The Council members were elected by the people for the express purpose of making such decisions.
It's ok. Maybe they didn't teach that in your grade school.
Obviosly this guy doesn't know the church.
approval.6 Council Members acted responsibly, the single oposing Member has absolutely no idea about
successful Downtown Projects in the USA! Mr Garrott
should visit and check with Indianapolis, Seattle,
Mineapolis, Vancouver, SAn Diego, Portland etc!!!!
Nothing is obvious, except that we don't know very much about anyone else's motives. So let's just respect the "lone dissenter" and give him a break. People can have legitimate concerns about issues regardless of their religious beliefs or lack thereof.
Planning commissioners and city council members are easy targets for mostly-uninformed members of the communities they serve.
From everything I've seen, the openess of the City Creek project is a vast improvement from the enclosed boxes of the ZCMI and Crossroads Malls. If the planners are farsighted enough to include so much open space, I trust them when they say that including the Skybridge is critical to the success of the project.
The problem was exacerbated by the siting of the TRAX line on Main. Traffic is now so choked off that only the foolhardy drive down the street. Parking downtown continues to be a joke. In this context, the only thing that is going to save Main Street is something exactly like the City Creek project, because nothing else will have the draw to get people to drive or take transit into the city core.
Of course, the rest of Main Street can only be revitalized if someone puts the effort into making it interesing enough to walk to. And I guarantee you that it won't be a politician that does it.
Umm... Main street is already dead. Anything that brings people to downtown will help main street. Why is bringing back main street back the ultimate goal of downtown? Is the goal of bringing back main street to create the opportunity for more people to view Ensign Peak? I'm not getting it.
I have lived in Utah for 30 years and never thought of Main street as a destination. It may be a quaint thought for those who experienced it in the '30's but for the rest of us it doesn't matter. The goal should be to create a fun and productive atmosphere to downtown. The Gateway has done that to some extent. City Creek will only help.
Walking across main street was the worst part about going to the old malls. As for the shops on main street let them shrivel up and go away, most of them really don't belong in the center of a city they, should be in a strip mall.
The thing that Salt Lake City just doesn't get is that people from outside the city are the ones that are spending the majority of the money in the malls and we go to stores that we want to go to. If someone opens a place on main street that people want to go to then a few staris will not stop us.
The city should take the opportunity now to do something with main street like make a restaurant row with a theater, that is what 90% of the state does for entertainment.
The Gateway skybridges block Ensign, but were approved by Rocky, so I guess they are OK? Oh, and all of the businesses on the ground level of Gateway are going out of business, I suppose.
If the city fathers want to revitalize Main street, they could start by not closing down the street for four years at a stretch while they put a friggin railroad down the middle of the street.
And just because "that's how cities are doing it these days" doesn't mean a mega-mall is the right way to go about revitalizing our downtown. Look at any other thriving city core in the world - they are indeed built on mom-and-pop outlets, not huge shopping malls. If people wanted to go to a mall there are dozens of other options throughout our valley; if we're going to attract them downtown we've got to give them something unique.
I respect the church for putting up this money, and don't believe for an instant their motive is profit. They are in this to revitalize downtown and are doing what they can. (And, surprise, I'm an ardent liberal and supporter of Garrott's vote.)
But this isn't about the Church, it's about Taubman - the developer. Their goal is profit - as well it should be - but we need more than just another mall if this is going to work, and that's what Garrott is fighting for.
Still, it is hard to imagine how one skybridge will be the undoing of main street. People who want to shop stores on main will still shop those stores. Perhaps with the City Creek Center main street will also benefit from more traffic downtown.
What I have seen of the City Creek Center is clearly more than just a mall. There will be housing, open space, paths, a creek, more parking stalls, as well as the retail. The 750 new residential units downtown would surely benefit main street retail as well as City Creek Center.
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Patrons aren't forced to take the Skybridge to the other side of City Creek. Those at ground level can take the crosswalk right there, or just spill out onto Main Street and shop there, or go up and across. The walkthru made it feel to me that this project ties a large portion of the downtown area together into a modern, clean, and open business, retail and residential whole. It will have its naysayers, of course, but I think the overall effect will be very positive to downtown SLC. You'll see.