Dustin5566 wrote:Not gonna hold my breath, but IMHO the best outcome for the city would be a complete entertainment and tranportstion hub at the railyards. Movie theaters retail spaces food bars comedy clubs and maybe a real Dave and buster and not that crappy baby onge they have in. Roseville. All anchored by the brand new Palms Palace Arena.
I disagree and here's why. There are so many empty buildings on K st that there needs to be something done there. Downtown is a ghost town. Sacramento is still a place where people get in their cars, drive in, and when the event is over they drive home.
Putting it on K St:
1. Cleans up K St between 7th & 13th
2. Gives that area a confined place where people can go "to be entertained." There's no commuter traffic on K st other than the train. Therefore people can walk it.
3. Makes the Downtown Plaza attractive again.
4. If gives Sacramento a tourist destination. Every city has a place where "you take someone" when they aren't from here. Old Sac...really?
5. If you create more housing, more business spaces, more buildings you're just depreciating the value of all the other empty ones.
6. This is the kicker. Once the railyard is finished they will try to become their own community. It's so Sacramento to become "exclusive." Look at Folsom, Elk Grove, North Natomas, Roseville....wait now Rocklin. All these "new" communities have that I'm better than you feel to them. K street is in the heart of the city. The railyard, but proximity, is just as close to West Sac, or Natomas as it is the Capitol.
The assumption is once you build the railyard that it will be an extension of downtown. That's like saying the city of Sacramento gets zoning right.
There's already a train station on 5th and & I. Expand it. You can walk four blocks to the arena. With all this talk of a transportation "hub" who's riding light rail??? The rail doesn't go where people are commuting from (Elk Grove, Roseville, Natomas) but it does go to Folsom now. It's not an alternative to driving your car. RT is BROKE. They aren't expanding.
With Midtown in the area, and creating the railyard you're putting K st on a death blow. The other reason the city, et all keep pushing the railyard is there's so much toxic waste there, and no infrastructure that the only way anything will be built there is if we (tax payers) clean it up.
I envision the railyard becoming it's own community, and it will fight hard to separate itself from downtown.