Patriots Square Park
Patriots Square Park was the location of a number of community celebrations such as the Arizona Asian Festival and Cinco de Mayo celebrations. The park is also listed as one of the Phoenix Points of Pride. It was originally constructed in 1976 and named in honor of the fighters of the American Revolutionary War, and redesigned in 1988 by Alexander and Associates, including the parking structure. In the years between then and the CityScape project, the space fell into slight disrepair and was frequented by transients.
Redevelopment
Often maligned as being underused and forgotten, Patriots Square Park became a fixture in local news in 2006 when RED Development's ambitious CityScape plan was expanded to include the park, approved by the Phoenix city council. The CityScape project is a large-scale urban redevelopment project that includes retail, hotels and high-rise construction. [1]
Initial reports of the park being subsumed into the private project were met with sharp criticism, with angry residents raising objections over the city's actions. In spite of official statements claiming the plan was key to revitalizing the park, residents rallied against the perceived loss of park-space, and forced RED Development and the city to redraw the plans, unveiled at a public forum. Reaction to the redesign, while viewed as a minor victory by some opponents, was still largely negative.
The park officially re-opened on November 4, 2010, with a free concert over two days headlined by Macy Gray and Third Eye Blind.
References
- ^ Craig Harris. "CityScape plan grows in scope". The Arizona Republic.
- ^ Ginger D. Richardson. "Fight brewing over plans for $900 million project". The Arizona Republic (September 10, 2006).
- ^ Ginger D. Richardson. "Plan for Patriots Square touches nerve". The Arizona Republic.
External links
- Official site City of Phoenix parks page