Metro Jacksonville

Community => The Photoboard => Topic started by: Metro Jacksonville on September 17, 2013, 03:01:37 AM

Title: Downtown Beautification: Orlando
Post by: Metro Jacksonville on September 17, 2013, 03:01:37 AM
Downtown Beautification: Orlando

(http://photos.metrojacksonville.com/photos/2763581918_hCDKwQr-M.jpg)

Orlando wants to have a "big city" downtown. While not there yet, it's well on the way.  Over the last decade, the skyline has doubled in size and the number of downtown residents has increased to 12,000.  From Bus Rapid Transit and commuter rail to allowing billboards, sidewalk dining and attracting suburban colleges to invest in the core, the elements of urbanism that Jacksonville continues to struggle to embrace are finding a way to flourish in this urban setting. Nevertheless, what really stands out is the high level of service applied to keeping the streets clean and public spaces well landscaped and maintained.  Metro Jacksonville wants you to see for yourself. Here is a brief look at the streets of downtown Orlando.

Full Article
http://www.metrojacksonville.com/article/2013-sep-downtown-beautification-orlando
Title: Re: Downtown Beautification: Orlando
Post by: vicupstate on September 17, 2013, 05:37:39 AM
I like how you have started numbering the pictures.  It looks like the post-recession era is upon Orlando.  I hope it is coming to JAX soon.

The digital sign that is on the Amway Center is not off-premises, so I would think something comparable would be allowed in JAX at the Veterans Arena or Everbank field, etc. 
Title: Re: Downtown Beautification: Orlando
Post by: Charles Hunter on September 17, 2013, 06:51:23 AM
When down in Orlando for The Who last year, ate at a nice restaurant in the old Kress building (#17) - they've kept some of the old architectural features.
Title: Re: Downtown Beautification: Orlando
Post by: thelakelander on September 17, 2013, 07:31:45 AM
Downtown Orlando's CRA is a major reason for its continued success.  It generates around $30 million/year that is reinvested back into the central business district.  Things this money funds annually include downtown BRT operations and the maintenance of public spaces and streetscape areas.  By comparison, our Northbank CRA is currently subsidized by the General Fund and the Southbank CRA generates $1.5 million annually.
Title: Re: Downtown Beautification: Orlando
Post by: Keith-N-Jax on September 17, 2013, 07:33:43 AM
Nice photo set.
Title: Re: Downtown Beautification: Orlando
Post by: jcjohnpaint on September 17, 2013, 07:46:32 AM
The long building in the front of the creative village also houses UCF's Master of Fine Arts Students. 
Title: Re: Downtown Beautification: Orlando
Post by: thelakelander on September 17, 2013, 08:09:21 AM

Quote from: vicupstate on September 17, 2013, 05:37:39 AMThe digital sign that is on the Amway Center is not off-premises, so I would think something comparable would be allowed in JAX at the Veterans Arena or Everbank field, etc.

What's seen in these early 20th century shots of downtown Jacksonville can't be done today.

(http://photos.metrojacksonville.com/photos/458685307_Byw4o-600x10000.jpg)

(http://photos.metrojacksonville.com/photos/458685264_e6veK-600x10000.jpg)

Amazingly, we still have at least one of these old signs still left, at Laura and Monroe overlooking Hemming.  However, from my understanding the building owner can't do anything with it.

(http://photos.metrojacksonville.com/History/Laura-Apartments-At-Hemming/i-K5ZxdB3/0/M/P1550339-M.jpg)
Title: Re: Downtown Beautification: Orlando
Post by: avonjax on September 17, 2013, 08:16:19 AM
Bottom line: Orlando has left us in the dust. 40+ years ago Orlando was a  sleepy little central Florida town and Jacksonville was somewhat vibrant and alive. Now Orlando is heading rapidly into becoming a really cool downtown and Jacksonville is constantly struggling. But for me you can say the same thing about every Florida city compared to Jacksonville.
Title: Re: Downtown Beautification: Orlando
Post by: vicupstate on September 17, 2013, 08:23:08 AM
As far as the signs go, aren't there two different regulations in play here?  There is the charter amendment, which I thought dealt with off-premises advertising, and the separate DT master plan which regulates signage in more detail but just for the urban core. 
Title: Re: Downtown Beautification: Orlando
Post by: tufsu1 on September 17, 2013, 08:29:18 AM
Quote from: Charles Hunter on September 17, 2013, 06:51:23 AM
When down in Orlando for The Who last year, ate at a nice restaurant in the old Kress building (#17) - they've kept some of the old architectural features.

I hung out for an hour or so at the KRES Chophouse bar....was in an older building with high ceilings...was that it?
Title: Re: Downtown Beautification: Orlando
Post by: MarkynFtl on September 17, 2013, 10:03:48 AM
Recently a friend of mine came to town and remarked on how dark the city is at night.  I remeber not that long ago, that nearly all of the tall buildings were lit at night in one way or another.  Wonder what happened?  Now downtown looks like a ghost-town during the day AND at night.
Title: Re: Downtown Beautification: Orlando
Post by: coredumped on September 17, 2013, 11:21:49 AM
Quote from: avonjax on September 17, 2013, 08:16:19 AM
Bottom line: Orlando has left us in the dust. 40+ years ago Orlando was a  sleepy little central Florida town...

40 years? Downtown Orlando was nothing 15ish years ago. Jax can do this in about the same time frame, we just need to get the stupid out!
Title: Re: Downtown Beautification: Orlando
Post by: thelakelander on September 17, 2013, 11:53:07 AM
Yes, most of Orlando's downtown development has occurred since the late 1990s.  I still believe Jacksonville's urban setting and history is superior.  I mean, you really can't get much better than that having the St. Johns River flowing through your heart and being the rail gateway to a state the size of Florida.  If we can get our act together, there's little reason not to expect great things to follow.
Title: Re: Downtown Beautification: Orlando
Post by: Keith-N-Jax on September 17, 2013, 02:34:26 PM
^^ +1000 Jax downtown setting is pretty nice. Its just a matter of putting it altogether.
Title: Re: Downtown Beautification: Orlando
Post by: fsujax on September 17, 2013, 02:47:03 PM
Quote from: MarkynFtl on September 17, 2013, 10:03:48 AM
Recently a friend of mine came to town and remarked on how dark the city is at night.  I remeber not that long ago, that nearly all of the tall buildings were lit at night in one way or another.  Wonder what happened?  Now downtown looks like a ghost-town during the day AND at night.
I have been saything this for a couple of years now. I know that some of the lights go out after midnight, but for our city to look so dark, is just sad. Couldn't imagine the BofA tower in Atlanta not being lit at night. Sometimes it is the simplest things.
Title: Re: Downtown Beautification: Orlando
Post by: I-10east on September 17, 2013, 03:12:04 PM
I don't know anything about ORL's Chase Plaza; Just looking at the pics, I noticed some vacant spots on the big sign; Has it seen better days concerning some urban decline similar to the Jacksonville Landing (not comparing the two) with the empty stores?
Title: Re: Downtown Beautification: Orlando
Post by: Tacachale on September 17, 2013, 05:08:20 PM
Quote from: coredumped on September 17, 2013, 11:21:49 AM
Quote from: avonjax on September 17, 2013, 08:16:19 AM
Bottom line: Orlando has left us in the dust. 40+ years ago Orlando was a  sleepy little central Florida town...

40 years? Downtown Orlando was nothing 15ish years ago. Jax can do this in about the same time frame, we just need to get the stupid out!

Word. Less than 15 years ago Downtown Orlando was in a comparable state to how Downtown Jax is today (of course at that time Downtown Jax was in a much worse state than now). And "Central Florida" has even more going on outside the city core than we do. There's no reason we couldn't have the same success or better if we got our act together.
Title: Re: Downtown Beautification: Orlando
Post by: coredumped on September 17, 2013, 05:24:42 PM
The BofA tower used to be lit up at night and I think it looked really sharp. Sadly it's not on anymore. It's a small thing, but things like this add up and give downtown a whole different feeling.

(http://i.imgur.com/1q5gsSv.jpg)
Title: Re: Downtown Beautification: Orlando
Post by: thelakelander on September 17, 2013, 09:02:55 PM
Quote from: I-10east on September 17, 2013, 03:12:04 PM
I don't know anything about ORL's Chase Plaza; Just looking at the pics, I noticed some vacant spots on the big sign; Has it seen better days concerning some urban decline similar to the Jacksonville Landing (not comparing the two) with the empty stores?

I don't know too much about it, other than Cameron Kuhn building it, it going through some early leasing trouble and the theater originally struggling. 
Title: Re: Downtown Beautification: Orlando
Post by: I-10east on September 18, 2013, 01:47:23 AM
Quote from: coredumped on September 17, 2013, 05:24:42 PM
The BofA tower used to be lit up at night and I think it looked really sharp. Sadly it's not on anymore. It's a small thing, but things like this add up and give downtown a whole different feeling.

+100
Title: Re: Downtown Beautification: Orlando
Post by: BoldBoyOfTheSouth on January 09, 2014, 09:09:04 AM
When we visit Orlando we try to stay either downtown or in the Thorton Park neighborhood right next to and within walking distance of downtown.
Title: Re: Downtown Beautification: Orlando
Post by: BoldBoyOfTheSouth on January 09, 2014, 09:13:15 AM
Downtown Orlando has a great idea for their Publix. It's on the ground level witht he front door right onto the sidewalk/major street corner, parking above the store and then condos above.  All of this within the same highrise building.

This is so much better than the Publix in Riverside here in Jax.   Riverside Publix is not really street level retail but suburban style of being a stand alone building turning its back on two streets just to have a parking lot & the only door going onto the parking lot. 

Why not zone for all of these to be within the same building and have the entrance to the store be on the sidewalk/street and walk just feet away to the entrance to the parking garage/elevators and just steps away to the entrance to the condos in the building above?
Title: Re: Downtown Beautification: Orlando
Post by: thelakelander on January 09, 2014, 09:22:38 AM
I believe the Downtown Orlando and Riverside Publix are the exact same model.  In Orlando, Publix was given incentives to locate their store in a high-rise project where they created a ground level retail space to fit with what Publix needed. In Riverside, the developer's (I believe it was Sembler) plans didn't include high-rise residential. All in all, zoning wasn't the main difference between what was built in DT Orlando and Riverside.  I'd say market dynamics and the availability of public subsidies were more significant factors.
Title: Re: Downtown Beautification: Orlando
Post by: SunKing on January 09, 2014, 09:33:26 AM
Quote from: avonjax on September 17, 2013, 08:16:19 AM
Bottom line: Orlando has left us in the dust. 40+ years ago Orlando was a  sleepy little central Florida town and Jacksonville was somewhat vibrant and alive. Now Orlando is heading rapidly into becoming a really cool downtown and Jacksonville is constantly struggling. But for me you can say the same thing about every Florida city compared to Jacksonville.
I travel to Orlando quite a bit on business and have an office in an old building right off Central.  Its one of the most deppressing DT areas I have been to and I would say that Jacksonville blows it away. 

12,000 residents?  That must include the homeless population.
Title: Re: Downtown Beautification: Orlando
Post by: thelakelander on January 09, 2014, 10:28:38 AM
Hmm?

For the last 15-20 years or so, DT Orlando has had a decent nightlife scene in the vicinity of Orange & Central.  I'd say, it easily blows DT Jax away when it comes to dining and nightlife within a compact area.  Not only are there several restaurants and bars immediately adjacent to one another, it also has a multi-screen movie theatre. They are also being pretty progressive in using multiple forms of mobility to link their DT with the rest of the MSA. Investment in Sunrail and using BRT as a free downtown circulator will pay off big time for Orlando.

Also, Orlando has been blessed with a lot of residential infill over the last 15 years but like Jax, it's still waiting to turn the corner of attracting a decent amount of concentrated street level retail like Miami, St. Petersburg (and even Winter Park) have successfully pulled off.

However, DT Jax is historically much larger, giving it a more authentically urban feel.  In Orlando, there's no decent concentration of early 20th century highrise and midrise buildings like you'll find on Laura Street. There's no historic showplace the scale of the Florida Theatre (and to think we actually had a theatre district).  You can't find an abundance of old school industry like Maxwell House or North Florida Shipyards either and nothing in urban Central Florida can compete with the setting the river and bridges provide.  DT Jax has all the tools to be a great walkable environment.  We just have to put it together.

Realistically speaking, DT Jax is one of the most depressing big city downtowns (when looking at active 24/7 street level life) I've seen in the last 15 years.  I'd lump it in the same bag with the DTs of Birmingham, Louisville, Rochester, Macon, Toledo and Buffalo. Full of potential but dead as a doornail outside of small pockets.  All are still searching for the right mix of ingredients to finally turn the corner for good, like cities such as Pittsburgh, Fort Worth and Kansas City have recently done.

With that said, you also have to put things in their proper perspective. Being a historically larger city, the general urban core (this includes walkable districts outside of the CBD) of Jax is much larger than Orlando's.  Thornton Park is essentially a smaller version of Riverside/Avondale.  It just happens to be immediately adjacent to DT Orlando, allowing them to impressively feed off one another.  Parramore is Orlando's version of Jax's LaVilla, Brooklyn, Durkeeville, Sugar Hill, etc. It just happens to be on the other side of DT Orlando.

One can look at this situation as a blessing or a curse.  In the short term, you can build a pretty decent compact walkable setting when your "Riverside" (Thornton Park) is immediately next to the heart of your "Northbank" (DT Orlando). Yet, you'll still struggle to pump life back into your "LaVilla/Brooklyn" (Parramore) due to it being not being in the middle of the other two districts.  In Jax's situation, you have a much larger "Thornton Park" (Riverside/Avondale) that's separated from DT (Northbank) by a "Parramore" (Brooklyn) that's rapidly transforming right before our eyes.  In the long term, you'll end up with a much more impressive and large scale walkable central city.

Also, don't forget, DT Jax has a similar situation and opportunity with the Southbank and San Marco on the other side of the river.
Title: Re: Downtown Beautification: Orlando
Post by: CityLife on January 09, 2014, 03:56:21 PM
Orlando is my least favorite Florida city in a lot of ways...but every time I've been to Downtown, its been fairly vibrant in relation to DT Jax. I'd chalk this up to a few things. Orlando has significantly more college students than Jax and the area around UCF is fairly lame for going out (similar to UNF). This leads to more students going out downtown there. While in Jax, many UNF students/young alumni live and play at the beach. Orlando also has a significant amount of young people that move there to perform at theme parks and in the entertainment biz. The areas near the theme parks are also fairly lame for non-tourists, so once again, these young people end up downtown.

Basically, Orlando has a lot more potential downtown bar/nightlife users than Jax without the beach to compete with. That said, all those potential users wouldn't be downtown if the proper environment wasn't created and Orlando seems to have done a lot of things right in that regard.
Title: Re: Downtown Beautification: Orlando
Post by: BoldBoyOfTheSouth on January 13, 2014, 11:20:20 AM
Downtown Orlando was once a ghost town after five pm on most days of the week and not much else going on during weekend nights.  Today, it's a vibrant place after dark and getting even more vibrant by the month.   

This was from a combination of smart urban planning on a human level.