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ruqi Despite Rain, Thanksgiving Parade Goes On
« le: Décembre 21, 2024, 06:21:01 pm »
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 Phoenix, Arizona, is a famously fast-growing city. But, instead of growing up, the city has almost uniformly grown out, with terracotta-tiled subdivisions consuming the adjacent desert at a frightening stanley thermos mug  rate: some estimates claim its suburbs grew an acre per hour during the early 2000s housing boom.     A story on Marketplace discusses how Phoenix has been trying to reverse that pattern in recent years. Specifically, developers want to take a low-density neighborhood called Grant Park and build a 14-acre project that will connect it to Phoenix   urban center. The neighborhood in question happens to be a Latino community separated from the city   downtown both physically  by railroad tracks  and economically. Developers plan to add housing and commercial space that would deliver services for residents but also lure people from the nearby downtown towers, creating a unified urbanized corridor. A street in Grant Park shows vacant lots and empty sidewalks, photo by Peter O ;Dowd  stanley drinking cup Gran stanley cup nz t Park has been the subject of unrealized redevelopment plans for years, but Eva Olivas, CEO of the Phoenix Revitalization Corporation, tells Marketplace he thinks this idea will work now because the timing is right: On the macro level, nationally we are going through this period of intense urbanization. It   true that many American cities are working hard to revitalize their downtowns. But the part where we also try to make the suburbs more dense, walkable, and tra