Mothballing: simple costs

Started by sheclown, March 19, 2012, 02:27:47 PM

Kaiser Soze

Quote from: stephendare on March 26, 2012, 11:50:29 AM
Taxes belong to all of us, thats what a democracy runs off of.

Its not 'other people's money', it is public money, to be spent on maintaining our infrastructure, and whatever we as taxpayers decide it should be spent on.

Here's the thing: this building could have been demolished 12 years ago with private money and the property put to good use.  Instead, now its sits there, rotting away with the occasional fire to help hasten things along.  Its been rotting away for over 40 years. 

So, now, the very people who argued against demolition want to spend public dollars to mothball it so it can be protected for some unknown, future use.  Never mind that , during its 40+ years of being vacant, during multiple economic and buildings booms, no one has found a profitable use for PS4.  Regardless, we should spend public dollars to mothball it.  No thanks.

Kaiser Soze

Quote from: stephendare on March 27, 2012, 09:44:47 AM
[
And all of us are still waiting for you to identify the funding source and developer who is waiting in the wings to turn this property into something awesome with a new building?!

Here you go http://www.metrojacksonville.com/article/2009-oct-ruins-of-jacksonville-annie-lytle-public-school  The opportunity was there 12 years ago but folks like yourself ran them out of town.  Now, PS4 still sits there, in even worse shape than it was.  The developer was there.  Folks like yourself chased them off.  Congrats on that. 

Kaiser Soze

Quote from: stephendare on March 27, 2012, 09:41:36 AM
Its hard to make a convincing point on this subject when a similarly abandoned school, John Gorrie, has been transformed into a pretty awesome project, don't you think?
Don't you think the locale of those two structures is a little different?  Even you must see that.

Kaiser Soze

I actually know a lot when it comes to that particular project.  You are wrong.

Timkin

Quote from: Kaiser Soze on March 27, 2012, 09:06:07 AM
So, I still am waiting to hear where the money to mothball PS4 comes from.

Don't get me wrong - I would love to see PS4 renovated into something useful.  Unfortunately, numerous groups have looked into it and determined that it is not doable.  Its been vacant since 1971.  Time to take a look at knocking it down and getting anew building on the property.

Interesting.. your post on the previous page indicates the contrary.  "That eyesore should be torn down immediately"

Actually a few years ago , a developer wanted to do just that.
Demolish it.  Put a retirement facility in its place.  That was 2006.  I suppose the developer , had they actually had a plan in place that would have made the project viable, could have accomplished that, despite public outcry , including , most definitely , mine.

To answer your question, I do not YET know where money to mothball the building will come from.   But one thing is clear. you are apparently undecided on exactly how you feel about the school .  On one page you say tear it down, the next you indicate otherwise.  Which is it?   

Following the fire set in the building in January you came on here and posted that something I stated was not true, and being that I sent interested parties to the , then owner.  That is a fact.  The owner, being under a contract with the developer at the time, obviously probably could NOT talk to this person, who by the way does loft conversions on Schools and has successfully for years.  I think ( don't know) the developer with the option on the property probably wouldn't talk to this person at all. Again not certain of what exactly did or did not happen. Point is I most certainly HAVE been seeking solutions for that building, as have many bright minds prior to my involvement for decades.  At least I am trying.

You are so quick to name call, be negative, call the building an eyesore, and like many in our community , could not be bothered to volunteer, or give positive input, hence the reference I made that you sound like another poster on the forum. Didn't call you names. Respect but do not agree with your opinion.  As I previously stated, we are not looking to the taxpayer to foot the bill. The fact that the city is on the hook to attempt to secure it , you can thank it's negligent owner for.  The building did not go into rack and ruin on its own. It was from basic neglect / maintenance and just as much from vandals who care nothing about that building , or any other, or your home, for that matter.

We are looking for a solution that will not involve removal of the building.  To take it out is VERY COSTLY.  for a potential new build, there is before anything gets built ,a substantial impact fee just to put a building there.  Because of the lot size remaining, it is doubtful that a building even comparable to that size and certainly not of the quality of construction, could be put in its place. Say what you will about the School.  Its construction has stood the test of time and withstood abuse and negligence for close to a half century.   It needs a lot of work but I differ with your opinion that it is an eyesore.  In fact, ENOUGH people disagree , that it was granted historic landmark status.  Enough people disagreed with its removal, and plenty , I assure you STILL STAND BEHIND the FACT that it can and eventually will be saved and re purposed. 

Timkin

Well he seems to have an axe to grind with me. Presumably because I support saving the building and always have.

Its not okay (in his estimation)  to spend taxpayer money on THIS PARTICULAR BUILDING ( don't know why)  if it is in an effort to preserve it but I guess it would be okay if we spend that money to demolish it.....to the tune of a heck of a lot more money.  Such has been , for decades, the way things are done in this city.  If it is old , or significant, and people happen to like it .. For heaven's sake lets occupy landfill space with it ,and build something in its place that is not interesting , or significant, or DURABLE.

Timkin

#36
I do!   For that matter his last post was :

Quote from: Kaiser Soze on March 27, 2012, 12:49:06 PM
I actually know a lot when it comes to that particular project.  You are wrong.

Please, Kaiser , do enlighten me on what exactly it is that you know about and how Stephen is wrong?


What I do know is that around the end of the 1970s , Mr. Milne purchased a building that was in need of a little work (by comparison of where it NOW stands)  It was not perfect , but it was most certainly intact.  In around 1984, I walked through the building.  There was no posted No Trespassing signs,  The building was unlocked, I was certainly not there to do damage, just curious what it looked like inside.  And it was beautiful .. Especially the most damaged part of the building now.. its Auditorium.  Intact.

I know none of that matters now. What does is , the quality of this building is just not produced in modern building , and if it were, the cost to new-build such a structure would easily exceed the cost of renovating this one.  That the expressway shadows the building probably does kill the possibility of it for residential.  But there are other ways the building potentially could be used , whereby the interstate in front is not an issue.    The most common proposals I know of , always seemed to center around residential.  Consequently the most expensive price tag to renovate the building would be for residential.  Perhaps it could be that the wisest use for it is to overhaul it and turn it into what it always was intended to be used for.  A Private School or College.  Perhaps this is the least expensive way to make the building viable.  And whether you agree or not Kaiser,  many of us in the community feel, especially, given the endless and very extensive list of historic landmarks that were mindlessly razed , to be replaced by empty lots which add nothing to the tax base, that this is one that is structurally sound enough that it is feasible and practical to save it.  Residential is obviously not the answer in that location.  The fact that the building is adjacent to a beautiful park , a vibrant 5 points shopping district, the Riverside Arts Market, etc, seems to point to the possibility that it could , potentially become a destination of some kind.  History has proven that the building is intriguing , maybe for wrong reasons in the last few decades. Perhaps we will eventually happen upon the perfect fit for it, which makes it both viable and a destination. That I am aware of, this purpose has not  been pursued.

Kaiser Soze

Quote from: stephendare on March 27, 2012, 11:01:52 PM
Quote from: Timkin on March 27, 2012, 10:39:22 PM
Well he seems to have an axe to grind with me. Presumably because I support saving the building and always have.

Its not okay (in his estimation)  to spend taxpayer money on THIS PARTICULAR BUILDING ( don't know why)  if it is in an effort to preserve it but I guess it would be okay if we spend that money to demolish it.....to the tune of a heck of a lot more money.  Such has been , for decades, the way things are done in this city.  If it is old , or significant, and people happen to like it .. For heaven's sake lets occupy landfill space with it ,and build something in its place that is not interesting , or significant, or DURABLE.
Well whatever ax he might be grinding, I wonder why he can't answer those basic questions.  I don't think his posts should be taken seriously on the subject until he does.  Don't you agree?
I wish that I could discuss my knowledge of that project.  I really do but I cannot.

Timkin, trying actually reading what I write before responding to it.  There was private money available to tear it down.  Timkin, you seem to be the biggest advocate of saving that building.  Rather than pushing for the expenditure of public dollars, how about you put a group together and raise the money to purchase and rehab the property yourself???  Why be a hindrance to others' plans for the property.  If you think it can be rehabbed and turned around, go for it.  I am sure you and Stephen have all sorts of good ideas for its use.

Kaiser Soze

Quote from: Timkin on March 27, 2012, 11:38:31 PM
I do!   For that matter his last post was :

Quote from: Kaiser Soze on March 27, 2012, 12:49:06 PM
I actually know a lot when it comes to that particular project.  You are wrong.

Please, Kaiser , do enlighten me on what exactly it is that you know about and how Stephen is wrong?


What I do know is that around the end of the 1970s , Mr. Milne purchased a building that was in need of a little work (by comparison of where it NOW stands)  It was not perfect , but it was most certainly intact.  In around 1984, I walked through the building.  There was no posted No Trespassing signs,  The building was unlocked, I was certainly not there to do damage, just curious what it looked like inside.  And it was beautiful .. Especially the most damaged part of the building now.. its Auditorium.  Intact.

I know none of that matters now. What does is , the quality of this building is just not produced in modern building , and if it were, the cost to new-build such a structure would easily exceed the cost of renovating this one.  That the expressway shadows the building probably does kill the possibility of it for residential.  But there are other ways the building potentially could be used , whereby the interstate in front is not an issue.    The most common proposals I know of , always seemed to center around residential.  Consequently the most expensive price tag to renovate the building would be for residential.  Perhaps it could be that the wisest use for it is to overhaul it and turn it into what it always was intended to be used for.  A Private School or College.  Perhaps this is the least expensive way to make the building viable.  And whether you agree or not Kaiser,  many of us in the community feel, especially, given the endless and very extensive list of historic landmarks that were mindlessly razed , to be replaced by empty lots which add nothing to the tax base, that this is one that is structurally sound enough that it is feasible and practical to save it.  Residential is obviously not the answer in that location.  The fact that the building is adjacent to a beautiful park , a vibrant 5 points shopping district, the Riverside Arts Market, etc, seems to point to the possibility that it could , potentially become a destination of some kind.  History has proven that the building is intriguing , maybe for wrong reasons in the last few decades. Perhaps we will eventually happen upon the perfect fit for it, which makes it both viable and a destination. That I am aware of, this purpose has not  been pursued.
Bunch of great ideas here.  If they are doable, put them to work and make a lot of money.


Kaiser Soze

Quote from: stephendare on March 28, 2012, 09:10:17 AM
Quote from: Kaiser Soze on March 28, 2012, 08:51:25 AM

I wish that I could discuss my knowledge of that project.  I really do but I cannot.

Rather than pushing for the expenditure of public dollars, how about you put a group together and raise the money to purchase and rehab the property yourself???  Why be a hindrance to others' plans for the property.  If you think it can be rehabbed and turned around, go for it.  I am sure you and Stephen have all sorts of good ideas for its use.

There was private money more than a decade ago you say.  But where would you propose this money would come from now, Kaiser?

And what group is looking to redevelop on that property that cant find plenty of empty lots nearby?

Im not concerned about School Number 4 in particular.  There are people who love that building and who defend it.  My responses have mostly been on the larger point.  This mentality that we somehow have to prune building stock as though it were a particularly sensitive grape vine is just ridiculous, in my opinion, and a piss poor stewardship of the public purse and power.
You are making my point for me.  Yes, there was private money a decade ago.  Folks like Timkin killed that.  So, now what do we do?  Mothball it?  Great.  I has not been used for 40+ years.  Should we mothball with public money for another 40+ years to wait for a solution that will never come?

I-10 and I-95 killed that building years ago.  Timkin and his ilk killed any private projects on the property a decade ago.  How about Timkin and friends take their shot at making the property work for the community since they have been so successful in roadblocking others.

Kaiser Soze

Quote from: stephendare on March 28, 2012, 09:47:51 AM
Quote from: Kaiser Soze on March 28, 2012, 09:27:40 AM
Quote from: stephendare on March 28, 2012, 09:10:17 AM
Quote from: Kaiser Soze on March 28, 2012, 08:51:25 AM

I wish that I could discuss my knowledge of that project.  I really do but I cannot.

Rather than pushing for the expenditure of public dollars, how about you put a group together and raise the money to purchase and rehab the property yourself???  Why be a hindrance to others' plans for the property.  If you think it can be rehabbed and turned around, go for it.  I am sure you and Stephen have all sorts of good ideas for its use.

There was private money more than a decade ago you say.  But where would you propose this money would come from now, Kaiser?

And what group is looking to redevelop on that property that cant find plenty of empty lots nearby?

Im not concerned about School Number 4 in particular.  There are people who love that building and who defend it.  My responses have mostly been on the larger point.  This mentality that we somehow have to prune building stock as though it were a particularly sensitive grape vine is just ridiculous, in my opinion, and a piss poor stewardship of the public purse and power.
You are making my point for me.  Yes, there was private money a decade ago.  Folks like Timkin killed that.  So, now what do we do?  Mothball it?  Great.  I has not been used for 40+ years.  Should we mothball with public money for another 40+ years to wait for a solution that will never come?

I-10 and I-95 killed that building years ago.  Timkin and his ilk killed any private projects on the property a decade ago.  How about Timkin and friends take their shot at making the property work for the community since they have been so successful in roadblocking others.
huh?

Sorry, but you arent making any sense at all.

And you still havent answered any of the questions.

Are you willing to pitch in for the lost tax revenue until something replaces the building after it is demolished?  Or are you just expecting everyone else to pitch in and cover that loss?
See if you can follow this: private money was there, you folks killed it, now the public will have to pick up the tab (whether its demolition of mothballing).

What lost tax revenue?

ChriswUfGator

Quote from: Kaiser Soze on March 28, 2012, 08:51:25 AM
I wish that I could discuss my knowledge of that project.  I really do but I cannot.

Does the CIA have a covert ops center in the basement of PS4 and you're sworn to secrecy?

Like the secret MI6 headquarters in the sunken ship in Man with the Golden Gun?


Kaiser Soze

Quote from: stephendare on March 28, 2012, 10:41:13 AM
that you are even asking that question kindof demonstrates the problem doesnt it.

What gives less tax revenue?  An empty lot or a property with a building on it?

And there is no use crying over what happened ten years ago, as you say.

20 years ago it was possible to rehab the building inexpensively, but you people killed that by preferring new, cheap construction over well built historic structures, right?

So when the tax base decreases because the property becomes an empty lot, are you refusing to pitch in and cover the loss in tax revenues?
The tax revenue generated by that building is minimal.  You know that.

And there absolutely is use in being angry about what happened ten years ago.  We should be learning from our mistakes.  I don't want to see the same people that wrecked potential new development on the PS4 property to wreck the re-vitalization of King Street. 

There are many buildings that should be saved.  When they can be put to good use, I am absolutely all for it.  When the building is a decrepit structure crammed against an interstate, it simply will not work.  PS4 was a beautiful building but it dies when the interstate was constructed.  Its time to move on and I don't think "move on" means either: (i) leaving that building standing in its current state such that i can be inhabited by the homeless and junkies, or (ii) spending public funds t mothball it when no future plans are in sight.

avs

Albeit being located next to the interstate isn't an ideal location but is not the death of a building.  Look at the great commercial areas developed in Seattle, Vancouver, and Chicago beneath similar transportation structures.  Look at RAM.  Buildings beneath transportation structures don't mean death.  They are invitations to innovate

Debbie Thompson

As long as DOT takes care of the scum pond in front of it, I'd be willing to buy there, even in the shadow of I-95. (That is, if you could pry me out of Jacksonville's best neighborhood where I already live.)  In fact, when they first announced the condos years ago, I inquired about them.  There are windows that will take care of the noise factor.  The fence under the interstate could come down, and you would have Riverside Park as your front yard.