Construction begins on $24 million High Valley Transit campus project in Park City by Crystal Howell

by Kayla Winn, KUTV |. Monday, October 3rd 2022

PARK CITY, Utah (KUTV) — Construction began on a $24 million High Valley Transit campus project in Park City on Monday.

During the ceremony, Big-D Construction officially broke ground on the 8-acre transit maintenance and operation campus.

High Valley Transit will be able to improve and expand its already popular regional service across the Wasatch Back thanks to the new facility.

“High Valley Transit is proud to be partnering with Big-D on this exciting project. They have already proven their commitment to High Valley as we have navigated the requirements of FTA contracting. We look forward to the completion of a successful project that will serve the entire Wasatch Back region for decades to come,” said Kim Carson High Valley Transit, Board Chair.

The project will consist of administrative and operational offices, a four-bay maintenance shop with storage spaces, vehicle lifts, and an automatic wash bay, enclosed bus parking for 24 full-size transit buses, covered parking for smaller transit vehicles, a fuel dispensing station, and a facility generator. It will also be spread across approximately 61,277 square-feet.

The new High Valley Transit project is expected to be completed in the spring of 2024.

“Big-D Construction is both excited and proud to work with High Valley Transit, GSBS, and other partners on a project that will serve the residents of Summit County. Having an office in Park City, we understand the needs of enhanced transportation options to the residents. With 55 years of experience working on diverse projects in the beehive state, including transportation facilities across the Wasatch Front, we are confident in delivering this project and meeting the needs and expectations of our owners and partners,” said Executive Chairman Rob Moore, for Big-D Companies.

Since the organization began providing services to the Summit County community in 2021, it had been using a temporary structure.

View the original article here.

A Celebration of Inclusive Success by Crystal Howell

The University of Utah College of Architecture + Planning celebrated the ribbon cutting of the new elevator, ramp insertions and several new student success spaces in the Architecture building.

During the grand opening on Aug. 24., students, faculty, staff and alumni enjoyed remarks from donors, the U director of the Center of Disability and Access, Scott Mcaward, and members of the campus community.

“Tressa Parkes, our undergraduate student speaker said it right; this project makes clear that diversity and inclusion are indeed central to the college’s definition of design excellence,” said Keith Diaz Moore, Dean of the College of Architecture + Planning. “This certainly is another initiative that brings us closer to a more inclusive environment, a value invested by our professional community.”

Spaces

An elevator on the north side of the building, a ramp that transforms the Bailey Gallery ADA accessible, and new studios for classes and collaborative work were launched this fall semester.

The 3rd-floor studio was named for GSBS Architects in recognition of their commitment to inclusive design, exemplified in their lead gift for the elevator project.

“We’re grateful to have played a role in making the CA+P building more inclusive,” said Kevin Miller, President of GSBS. “The college is a great partner for us, and we strongly support all of our GSBS colleagues with varying adaptive needs. That combination really made it easy for our employees and shareholders to get behind this effort.”

For their support of the new student success-oriented 1st floor (“The Commons”), the collaborative studios in the middle were named in honor of MHTN Architects and VCBO Architecture.

“It is an honor to support the college; architecture is a challenging discipline and having inclusive and supportive student environments is essential for advisors and faculty to help students complete their degrees,” said Peggy McDonough, President of MHTN Architects. “Spaces, well designed, give voice to people, and students inspire us as much as we might inspire them.”

For Jeanne Jackson, Principal of VCBO Architecture, partnering on this project illustrates the college’s strong history with its students and alumni community.

“VCBO considers the CAP one of our most important partners. Many of us are graduates of the school, and we are heavily invested in students’ success. We have always been proud to support the program in any way we can.”

The launch of these spaces is part of an ongoing renovation project that contemplates new and improved plotting areas for students, a new video & photo lab secured by the CA+P Student Senate, ADA-compliant wayfinding signages, and multiple new spaces in the iconic Einar Nielson Field House to be completed by spring 2023.

Revitalizing Japantown Street by SHOKO SMITH

Reinvigoration of Salt Lake City’s remaining Japantown provides new opportunities for the future while honoring and remembering the past.


There’s a street in downtown Salt Lake City serving as an urban archive with generations of stories written in brick and concrete. Near the Salt Palace Convention Center and the Vivint Arena, it stretches from Second to Third West on 100 South, bookended by the Japanese Church of Christ and the Salt Lake Buddhist Temple—the remnants of a once-thriving Japantown chronicling the Japanese American community’s 100+-year fight to save the celebrated space and preserve their history.

The Aloha Fountain Snack Bar, 1947

The latest struggle to safeguard this community space began in 2018, when a development dubbed the West Quarter project was proposed and included frontage on the southwest portion of what had come to be named Japantown Street. The massive multi-use high-rise buildings are designed to host commercial and residential spaces, and they had reserved their trash, recycling, and loading docks for Japantown Street—relegating a portion of the block to a back alley. With involvement from the State, Salt Lake County, and the city, the project also included millions in public funding for a large parking structure.

“For Japanese Americans in Utah, it was painful history repeating itself,” says Jani Iwamoto BS’82, Utah state senator and former Salt Lake County Council member. Iwamoto was a founding member of the Japanese Community Preservation Committee in the early 2000s and has advocated for Japantown since. A coalition of public, private, and community stakeholders—including Iwamoto and other U alums you’ll hear from here—collaborated to improve the West Quarter project and made plans to revitalize and strengthen Japantown, looking for ways to honor the history of the neighborhood while transforming it into a pedestrian-friendly hub for festivals, celebrations, and Japanese-centered businesses.

READ THE FULL ARTICLE HERE

Kevin Miller elevated to prestigious College of Fellows in the American Institute of Architects (AIA). by SHOKO SMITH

 

(Chicago, IL – June 24, 2022)  GSBS Architects President Kevin Miller was inducted into the College of Fellows in a ceremony at the 2022 National AIA Conference today in Chicago. Miller’s investiture is in recognition of many years of service to the AIA, in which Miller had a hand in drafting or updating literally hundreds of legal documents used daily by Architecture, Engineering and Construction (AEC) professionals across the country.

Miller is one of a class of 88 inductees in 2022, and the only individual from a Utah architectural firm. According to the AIA, inductees are “architects who have made significant contributions to the profession and society” and only three percent of registered architects ever attain the status of Fellow, within the AIA. In Utah, there are currently 23 AIA Fellows either practicing or emeritus.

AIA Fellows can be nominated for various contributions such as architectural design, public service, or education. Miller’s recognition is for his service and leadership within the AIA Contract Documents Committee. During his 14-year ongoing tenure, Miller had a hand in drafting 204 of the 218 legal documents currently offered by the AIA to aid and safeguard everyone involved in design/build professions. Miller also served as Chair of the committee from 2015-2016.

“Kevin has grown and contributed from a ‘soldier in the trenches’ to a ‘leader in the trenches,’ resulting in widespread impact on the AIA members, the AIA, the Documents Program, and the AEC community,” said nominator Michael Stransky, himself a Fellow in the AIA.

“I do not know of another architect who has given more, nor had more impact on AIA contract documents than Kevin Miller—there is hardly a document among the hundreds that has not benefited under his leadership and action,” Stransky concluded. 

GSBS provides architecture, landscape architecture, interior design, energy engineering, economic analysis, sustainability, and planning services through offices in Salt Lake City, Utah and Fort Worth, Texas. During the last 40 years, the firm has completed hundreds of projects in the fields of recreation, commercial, academic, government, justice, hospitality, and health care, and others.

Legendary Utah Architects: Mike Stransky | AIA Interview 2022 by Crystal Howell

Interviewed by Fran Pruyn.

This is the seventh in a series of architectural legends; interviews with retired architects who practiced in Utah during the second half of the twentieth century. These memories archive the personal careers of these architects, and also speak to the evolution of the architectural industry in the United States.

To watch the interview please click here.

Salt Lake seeks home run plan to revitalize 'overlooked' Ballpark neighborhood by Crystal Howell

Salt Lake Bees ticket account executives Tanner Lund and Sam Cook look at renditions of new plans for the Ballpark neighborhood, including a new library, during a press conference in Salt Lake City on Monday. (Photo: Kristin Murphy, Deseret News)

By Carter Williams, KSL.com | Posted - Nov. 1, 2021 at 5:50 p.m.

SALT LAKE CITY — After Salt Lake City Mayor Erin Mendenhall finished unveiling a plan to revitalize the city's Ballpark neighborhood, she slowly retreated to a tent set up by a local vendor where she grabbed a drink called a "spa water."

"It has club soda, berries, lemon and lime, and it's very refreshing on this November day," she says, smiling as she stares down at her cup. This drink, which she got from a pop-up street festival set up at Smith's Ballpark, in a way symbolizes what she envisions for this neighborhood in years to come.

Mendenhall on Monday unveiled a draft of the city's "Ballpark Station Area Plan," which among other things, calls for a "festival street" — a place near Smith's Ballpark where residents and local businesses in the neighborhood can hold public markets, festivals and other events that drive interest to the south-central part of the city. The pop-up festival was just a "glimpse" of what the city has in mind, the mayor explained.

The plan also calls for a new city library branch to be built in the neighborhood and a reconfiguration of Utah Transit Authority's TRAX station at 1300 South to make it more accessible. In addition, it calls for efforts to make the area more walkable and to find new uses for Smith's Ballpark on nongame days.

Salt Lake City leaders and neighborhood advocates are hopeful that the plan will be a home run for the neighborhood that has struggled with crime and other issues in recent years. They want the game-day atmosphere from the summer to exist year-round outside of the ballpark.

"This plan lays out what is an ambitious vision for the future of the Ballpark neighborhood," Mendenhall said. "I believe this plan includes any of the key elements we need to move the Ballpark neighborhood forward and help it reach its full potential for generations to come."

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Inside the new Utah State Prison: The now $1 billion project is nearly complete by Crystal Howell

Dallas Tucker, Ezarc Building Solutions laborer, works in the receiving and orientation building at the new Utah State Prison in Salt Lake City on Thursday, Oct. 21, 2021

By Katie McKellar | @KatieMcKellar1 | Oct 28, 2021, 8:53pm MDT | Desert News

It’s been over four years since the new Utah State Prison’s groundbreaking.

Four years since state dignitaries — after years of controversy and public outrage over where it would eventually be built — sank gold-painted shovels into the ground of a remote, mosquito-riddled area in Salt Lake City’s west side, celebrating the beginnings of a new era of how Utah would treat its incarcerated.

That groundbreaking ceremony gave way to what would become one of the largest construction projects in Utah’s history — second to its (not so nearby) neighbor, about 9 miles to its east: the over $4 billion new Salt Lake City International Airport.

It’s also been coined one of the largest detention projects in the nation. The construction of a 1.3 million-square-foot, 170-acre expanse of correctional facilities of all security types, all the way up to maximum security. All from scratch, infrastructure included.

Utah’s prison was at one point the largest and most expensive detention project in the nation, but since its groundbreaking other larger projects have been set into motion, including New York City’s plans to spend nearly $9 billion to build a new jail system to replace the Rikers Island complex.

As for the price tag of the new Utah State Prison? Cost escalation has now brought it to about $1 billion.

That’s according to Jim Russell, director of Utah’s Division of Facilities Construction and Management, who noted the final cost of the new prison could come in “just a little bit under or a little bit over” $1 billion depending on final procurement processes.

And construction? It’s almost done.

“You’ll be absolutely shocked when you go out there,” Russell told the Deseret News ahead of a tour of the construction site last week.

The men’s general population building is pictured at the new Utah State Prison in Salt Lake City on Thursday, Oct. 21, 2021.

Despite its massive scope, most Utahns likely don’t know the new Utah State Prison is nearing completion. It’s set so far north of I-80, its sprawling footprint is barely visible to drivers.

But the closer they get, visitors quickly realize the new Utah State Prison is no longer a concept that was at the center of a painful siting process and years of debate. Nor is it just a muddy construction site. It’s reality.

It’s a prison now.

All of the buildings are practically finished. The cells are all but inmate-ready. Inside each building — from the men’s and women’s general population facilities to the mental health and medical unit to maximum security areas — crews were working on finishing touches. Paint, trim, caulk.

Outside, workers were carefully placing the final stretches of about 10 miles of razor wire at the top of the secure perimeter’s chain-link fence. Some recreation yards even already have sod. In the works are basketball courts, volleyball courts and a mini running track.

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Designs for revitalized Japantown stir the souls of Asian community by Crystal Howell

Renderings of a vision for Japantown in Salt Lake City. The one-block cultural hub would be built along downtown Salt Lake City’s 100 South between 200 West and 300 West next to the Salt Palace, in honor of what was once a thriving neighborhood for …

Renderings of a vision for Japantown in Salt Lake City. The one-block cultural hub would be built along downtown Salt Lake City’s 100 South between 200 West and 300 West next to the Salt Palace, in honor of what was once a thriving neighborhood for Utah’s Japanese American residents.

Plans for a new cultural district along 100 South are centered on beauty, remembrance, respect, celebration and gathering.

By TONY SEMERAD

The Salt Lake Tribune

New visions for an overshadowed block in what was once Japantown in downtown Salt Lake City are lifting many hearts, not least in Utah’s Asian American community.

Initial designs unveiled at City Hall call for a series of beautiful upgrades along 100 South between 200 West and 300 West to make into a one-block, Japanese- themed cultural district, showcasing the remaining vestiges of a once-vibrant ethnic neighborhood that spanned several blocks in each direction.

New renderings of Japantown Street, commissioned by Salt Lake City’s Redevelopment Agency from GSBS Architects, show the stretch lined with rows of cherry blossoms and dotted with origami sculptures and other public art on a much-improved and more pedestrian- friendly streetscape.

Supporters say the overhaul would turn a drab block now dominated by loading docks and walls behind the Salt Palace Convention Center into a new city treasure, centered on beauty, remembrance, respect, celebration and gathering.

The segment also would be better buffered from the massive new West Quarter going up to the south, with widened sidewalks, its own distinct entry, themed lighting, public art and Japanese motifs, and upgraded spaces for yearly festivals.

Several people wept in gratitude as they dialed in virtually to a recent RDA meeting and watched new ideas for Japantown spool out.

“It’s been a journey,” said Jani Iwamoto, a state senator and member of the working group created to help develop the design strategy. “We’ve gone through a lot, but we are now here to celebrate, and it’s great to look forward.”

Design plan brings community healing

The refreshed street is just a vision right now, though crafted through nearly 15 months of talks — largely conducted under COVID-19 health strictures — with descendants of some of Utah’s earliest Japanese families, developers, faith leaders, government officials and hundreds of other residents.

The work is envisioned in three phases, guided by the study’s design strategies. Next steps toward making Japantown real include gauging public support for the face-lift, according to backers, and then finding up to $7.5 million — likely from public and private sources — to pay for and maintain the street.

In several ways, the proposed urban upgrades to underscore that enclave’s historic roots are akin to what is afoot on a larger scale nearby along 300 West with the emerging Greek Town project, next to the Holy Trinity Cathedral.

With the Japantown plans surfacing amid a national surge of hate-fueled attacks on Asian Americans, just the conceptual vision for restoring its presence in honor of the once-bustling enclave of businesses and homes has already had a healing effect.

Rolen Yoshinaga, representing the Salt Lake Buddhist Temple on the block, said the city-backed push to remember Japantown might even someday soothe some of the hurt felt by older Japanese Americans in Utah over the government-driven demolition of the neighborhood more than 50 years ago.

“Because of this effort, the conversation is now about where are we going to be 50 years from now,” Yoshinaga said. “It’s just completely flipped the coin into the future.”

Japantown’s early years

Japantown was a recognizable area of Salt Lake City as early as 1907, according to historical research by GSBS Architects, populated by growing numbers of first-generation immigrants — known as Issei in Japanese — who moved to Utah for jobs in mining, farming and railroads.

The neighborhood’s surviving Salt Lake Buddhist Temple and Japanese Church of Christ were dedicated in 1925. By World War II, the area bounded by State Street and 700 West between South Temple and 300 South was filled with noodle houses, hotels, variety stores, laundries, grocers, fish markets, tofu makers and other vendors catering to their needs.

Most Japanese in Utah lived there, the report noted, many of them residing in rooms behind the businesses they ran. Their children — the Nisei — “grew up with the sidewalk and the back alleys as their playground.”

The war and resulting evacuations from the West Coast also tripled Utah’s Japanese population between 1942 and 1946, accompanied by the tragic internment of thousands of Japanese in camps across the West, including Utah’s Topaz. Japantown continued to grow through the early 1960s, with its many eateries, markets and social spots solidifying it as a gathering place for several generations of Japanese in Utah and surrounding states.

“This was the one place where Japanese faces were the majority,” the GSBS Architects study said, “and everyone felt a kinship and a sense of belonging.”

Mid-1960s, construction of the Salt Palace brought the demolition of two blocks at Japantown’s core. Many of its businesses closed permanently. The project spared the two places of worship, some apartments and a few retailers on surrounding blocks, according to the GSBS study, “but the heart of the Japanese American community was gone.”

A strong sense of place outlived the razing. City Councilman Darin Mano, a fourth-generation Japanese American raised in Sandy, said he remembers going as a kid to the Obon Festival, a yearly Buddhist ritual held in Japantown for generations.

“As a young person of color growing up in a very, very Caucasian neighborhood, it was special for me. It was an opportunity to come together with other Japanese Americans and feel at home in a way,” said the 36-year-old Mano, who is also an organizer for Nihon Matsuri, another of Japantown’s cultural celebrations.

Past meets present meets future

Subsequent Salt Palace expansions eventually led community members to form the Japanese Community Preservation Committee in hopes of pushing back against ongoing negative effects for Japantown. Those efforts led to construction of a set of decorative gates and themed street lighting where portions of the Salt Palace face 100 South as well as a small buffer near its docks that has morphed into a Japanese garden.

But it was a huge residential and commercial project pursued in recent years known as The West Quarter on the city’s Block 67 — just south of what remains of Japantown — that truly transformed public debate over the neighborhood’s future.

Two Utah-based developers, The Ritchie Group and Garn Development Co., are already well into building an 11-story tower of 240 luxury apartments to be known as The Charles on that block, part of a project that will span much of the block between 100 South and 200 South from 200 West to 300 West.

The Charles is part of phase one, developers say, in what eventually will include another 11-story, 270-room hotel, other towers, ample retail and office spaces, a tree-lined street threading through the block and a large underground parking structure.

Part of a building boom downtown that is pushing the skyline of Utah’s capital upward, The West Quarter also promises to push the critical mass of downtown farther west. But the developers’ initial plans for Block 67 threatened to touch off a major clash with Japantown supporters and other advocates in the Asian community. They, along with city officials, said the scale, orientation and proposed operations of The West Quarter’s commercial buildings were likely to overwhelm and rob that segment of 100 South of its remaining identity.

“Things like garbage collection, delivery and other sorts of ‘back-of-house’ operations were all on the Japantown side of it,” noted Allison Rowland, a project analyst for Salt Lake City.

In 2018, the City Council essentially leveraged the fact that the developers were also seeking tax concessions for the project — and $15 million in public money for the underground parking garage — to prompt Japantown negotiations. Those talks spawned a nine-member group of Japanese American community leaders, Rowland and the main developer in early 2019, which then took two years to define its goals and secure the design strategy.

Valerie Nagasawa, a principal at GSBS Architects who played a key role in the firm’s analysis, said the resulting process not only deeply mined Japanese culture, the site’s rich history and memories, sentiments and visions of Utah’s Japanese community, but also drew lessons from similarly sustained neighborhoods in Denver, San Jose and San Francisco.

“This is a vision that honors the past,” Nagasawa said, “while focusing on the future.”

Recalling her involvement with other RDA board members in those sometimes- tense early talks between developers and Japantown’s advocates, Councilwoman Amy Fowler shed tears as she took in the latest designs and hopes they can come to pass.

“All the heartache we had in dealing with this is worth it to see this vision coming to life,” Fowler told colleagues. “It’s truly amazing to see the work and passion that have gone into this and to see something that can be so valuable to our community.”

Mano said in an interview he backed the city playing a role in making the plan happen. The councilman agreed, too, that the new Japantown vision has potential to forever change what until now “is primarily a sad story of a community being overrun.”

“It is very indicative of this time right now where we realize how important those spaces are,” Mano said. “It’s perfect that we were now able to celebrate it.

“Even though so many generations of previous leaders of Salt Lake haven’t really paid enough attention to it,” he said, “we’re going to do that now and pick up the pieces of what’s left and try and improve upon that.”

See full article here