Date post: | 20-Nov-2014 |
Category: |
Technology |
Upload: | sweet-water |
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200 years of history in 2 minutes
A vibrant marshland becomes….
An economic powerhouss, which becomes…
A damaged and underutilized wasteland.
New Infrastructure
300 Acres ofBrownfields Redeveloped
Palermo
Villa IngeteamDerse
Caleffi
Charter Wire
Badger Railing
Taylor
Suzy’s
Ahern
Rexnord/ Falk
P&H
Stadium Parking
Lots
4,700 New Jobs to Valley
10 Million Visitors
Every $1 of public sector funding…
Has already leveraged$3.75 of private investment
1,00,000 SF Sustainable
Development
229% Increase in Assessed Value Since 2003
14 miles of the Hank Aaron State Trail
415,000 people live within three miles, 100,000 of which are under 18.
Nancy Aten
2010 Constructi
on
Circa 1940s
.
2010 Constructi
on
Circa 1940s
.
45 acres of native plants
Nancy Aten
Nancy Aten
Tactics and Guiding Principles
Public / Private Partnership
National Design Competition
Design Charrettes
Market Analysis
Land Use
1. Visionary Planning
100 years from now…
Grounded in Integrated Approach.
“It should be illegal to implement solutions that solve only one problem.”
To revitalize the Menomonee Valley for the benefit of the entire Milwaukee community
Quantified Potential
200 Developable Acres
5,000 Family-Supporting Jobs
$4 Million in Property Taxes
70 Acres of Park and Trails
2. Set Goals, Objectives and Standards
• Development Objectives for Job Density
• Sustainable Design Guidelines
• Recruitment for High Growth Companies
Development Objectives
MVIC Goals
MVIC now
Manufacturing use Preferred → All
Number of fulltime equivalent jobs* 1,294 → 1,302
Number of acres 59 → 52
FTE Jobs/Acre* 22 → 24
FTE Jobs/1000 SF* 1.5 → 1.52
Annual projected wage and salary/acre* 538,193 → 1,062,564
Building/land coverage ratio 0.33 → 0.37
Development Objectives
Incremental evaluation of goals.
3. Engaging Community and Offering Sense of Discovery
Demonstration projects.
4. Value Added After the Deal is Done
• Help businesses grow in place
• Build business to business connections
• Connect businesses to resources
• Create a sense of neighborhood
• Create new amenities
Building connection to place.
Tactics and Principles in Practice
Example: Menomonee Valley Industrial Center
plan comparison
A TRADITIONAL RESPONSE
Piped System = Higher Infrastructure Costs
Individually Planned Sites = Unorganized and Auto-Oriented
Traditional Ponds and Storm BMP’s =
Lower Development Yield and “unusable spaces
No park or open space amenity
STORMWATER PARK-
A MULTIFUNCTIONAL APPROACH
Surface System = Limited Subsurface Pipe
Denser Developments= Walkable Environment
No “wasted” space for Stormwater Management=
Higher Development Yield for Property Owners
Park creates an attractive amenity for neighborhood
The Work Ahead
1. Valley 2.0
Valley 2.0 – The Physical Side
Valley 2.0 – The Human Side
Looking Forward
The Next Decade of Transformation
Transforming a 24-acre brownfield…
2. Menomonee Valley – From the Ground Up
Photo credit: Photographer Eddee Daniel
MILLER PARK
27th Street
35th Street
Menomonee River
MILLER PARK
35th Street
Menomonee River
…into a 24-acre park with a mile of public access along the Menomonee River
Designed to teach.
Designed to improve environmental conditions on land and in water.
WisDOT as partner. Worked within systems to support landscape restoration and habitat creation as project goal.
University teams (MIAD and UWM) participate in the “Living Building Challenge”
Student work inform the final design led by Uihlein Wilson Architects.
Ground Breaking
THANK YOU!
Laura Bray
Menomonee Valley Partners, Inc.
414-274-4654
RenewTheValley.org