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Wednesday, July 18, 2018

Lexington: A Vibrant City | International Center
src: international.uky.edu

City Center, formerly known as CentrePointe, is a proposed residential, commercial, and retail project in Downtown Lexington, Kentucky that has undergone multiple setbacks, but is currently under construction. The current plan, as of 2018, consists of a 12-story office tower with 3 stories of residences above it, two hotels, retail spaces and an underground parking garage. The parking garage was completed in 2017.


Video City Center (Lexington)



History

City Center is currently under construction. The project launched in summer 2008, when the existing buildings on the construction site were razed. The original estimated time of completion was in 2010 as it was intended to serve as a centerpiece for business during the 2010 FEI World Equestrian Games. Before the construction of City Center began, many local residents objected to the project as it meant the destruction of Morton's Row, the city's second-oldest commercial district, and a local hot spot, The Dame. In July 2008, the Fayette Alliance -- a coalition of developers, neighborhood associations, and farmers -- revoked its support for the building, due to an apparent reluctance on the part of the developer to work with concerned parties in addressing various issues concerning the development.

In addition to the controversy surrounding The Dame, the use of Tax Increment Financing for the development was debated. Initially concern centered on the application of taxpayer money without the inclusion of ideas from those taxpayers. This opposition arose mostly from a common misunderstanding of Tax Increment Financing, which utilizes the boom property tax value from a redevelopment project to fund improvements locally. The issue went before the city council in September 2008. The council voted in favor of utilizing Tax Increment Financing for the project due to the infrastructure improvements for the surrounding area including sidewalks and underground parking structures.

On June 25, 2009, the process of seeding and filling the City Center construction site began. On September 10, 2013, EOP, the architecture firm behind the fifth iteration of the City Center design announced they were pulling out of the project. Preliminary construction began in December 2013 and blasting for the parking structure and foundation began on March 17, 2014. The 700-space underground parking garage was expected to be completed by late summer 2014, but was not. Developers are currently trying to sell $30 million in bonds solely devoted towards building the parking garage. As of March 26, 2015, minimal construction on the parking garage had been completed. The garage was ultimately finished in late 2017 and then first beam of the above-ground portion of the project was erected on December 19, 2017.


Maps City Center (Lexington)



Design evolution

The original plan in 2008 called for a 35-story, 550-foot-tall (170 m) high rise which would include a hotel, condominiums, retail and office space. The entire development was estimated to cost $250 million and would have become the tallest building in Lexington upon completion. Since 2008 there have been three other designs. The first two entailed one large building that would have covered the entire block. But after Studio Gang Architects became involved in the project in 2011, the latter two proposed designs have entailed one tower and several low rise buildings.

Jeanne Gang, lead architect of Studio Gang Architects, was hired to draft ideas for the City Center project in 2011. She proposed a 30-story tower which would include a ten-floor boutique hotel, ten floors of apartments, seven floors of condominiums, and three floors of penthouses. Her design also called for an eight-story building on the intersection of South Limestone Street and West Main Street along with a row of low rises on West Main Street.

In 2012, the Webb Companies released a design that resembled that of Studio Gang Architects. The proposed design included a 28-story hotel-condominium tower at the intersection of West Vine Street and South Upper Street, four smaller buildings on West Main Street, and a low-rise office building at South Limestone Street and West Main Street.

A revised 2013 plan downsized the main high rise from 28 to 19 floors. It included a 286-room hotel along with 96 apartments and 10,700 square feet of retail space on the ground floor. The office building was planned to have 157,710 square feet of offices as well as restaurants and retailers. The development is estimated to cost US $393.9 million.

The hotel-condominium tower was modified by architectural firm Rabun Rasche Rector Reece in 2014. A terrace on the twelfth floor of the tower was added along with a contemporary glass facade. The first eleven floors will serve as a 205-room Marriott hotel while the remaining seven floors are reserved for condominiums and penthouse suites. The apartment complex, originally to be seven floors, will now be twelve floors with retail on the first floor, 100 extended-stay suites on floors two through five, and apartments on floors six through twelve.


Lexington, Kentucky - Wikipedia
src: upload.wikimedia.org


References


Lexington's CentrePointe is now City Center | Lexington Herald Leader
src: www.kentucky.com


External links

  • CentrePointe Image Gallery
  • CentrePointe Construction Cam
  • Centrepointe at UrbanUp
  • CentrePointe Designs 2008-2014

Source of article : Wikipedia