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Over the summer we got to live our best Scottsdale lives with the duplex near Old Town. This trip we are living our best Phoenix lives in a place on Roosevelt Row. I remember when this duplex got built, because the new construction stood out like a sore thumb in this part of the Garfield neighborhood, a decade ago. At this stage, there's a Public Hearing sign outside that has to do with wanting to remove some requirements for the parking lot in the back and the yard/vegetation in the front. I don't know whether that means that this place is now slated for demolition in the near future, but it wouldn't surprise me. The interior layout is nice, but the place is showing signs of wear and tear. It's also still way out of character with the immediate neighbors, but the contrast isn't as stark as the contrast between the old Craftsman houses and the new luxury apartments just to the west of 7th Street.

I have solidly mixed feelings about the new construction downtown, which I've had a lot of time to stare at as I walk the mile to and from the Convention Center for this conference. On the one hand, it's wonderful to see the population density increase in downtown Phoenix, a thing that has been enabled by the copious number of vacant lots, the light rail, and things like the ASU Downtown campus. On the other hand, the majority of the new construction and new businesses are Arizona-gauche: the ugly modern construction out of scale with its surroundings that developers tell us is the only way they can make a profit, and a proliferation of sports bar-type establishments. But there are some good things, like the jazz club that opened in 2019 next door to Carly's, that make me think this place may manage to hold onto some of its history and character.

And I did eventually find one newer building whose construction I actually approve of:
Phoenix

Yes, it's an enormous city block monolith, but the balconies are well-done. Most of the other balconies on surrounding buildings simply jut out of the sides of the buildings, with no privacy or protection, even on the south-facing sides, which tells me that the people who designed them haven't spent any time living in Arizona in the summertime, or they don't actually care about providing the people living in the building with useable outdoor space, just as people raising "free-range" livestock often provide access to the outdoors that the animals never use. The building reminds me much more of the scale and structure of architecture in Copenhagen, where the buildings also have an inner courtyard to provide quiet. I don't know whether that's the case with this building, but a large inner courtyard would also provide a pleasant protected space out of the sun in this climate. So, kudos to whoever designed and built this one project. The rest can go to hell (heh).

The rest of my out-and-about photos are a hodgepodge of views from this duplex and interesting things spotted while walking around, so I'll stick them behind a cut.

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