2009/06/19

Opponents blast Northwest Quadrant housing project

Santa Fe's northwest quadrant housing project has all of the smells of the malling of Beavercreek, Ohio. City staff will just keep asking for approval until they get the answer they want.

Opponents blast Northwest Quadrant housing project:

"Other residents questioned [...] a plan to pump sewage uphill and other facets.
The housing project on city-owned land would be concentrated on about 122 acres of the 540-acre Northwest Quadrant. The proposal calls for construction of more than 750 housing units, including single-family homes and multi-family complexes that would rise up to three stories tall [emph. added] as well as up to 110,000 [square] feet of mixed-use development that could include commercial uses. "


<Incoherent Pre-coffee Ramblings>

Up to three stories tall... on top of a ridge line. There goes the neighborhood.

Would there be no value in turning this land into public space?

When I first moved to Santa Fe ten years ago, I could walk to the top of the ridge above my apartment and take in a view that encompassed Los Alamos, the Sangre de Cristos, and the Sandias more than fifty miles to the south. The view is still available, and it's on land which city staff wants to bury under multi-story housing.

These days I live "in the hole" of Casa Solana, just to the south of the proposed development. The targeted land is still the best place, for miles around, to watch the fog of a morning storm turn into ragged, fast-moving tufts of cloud.

Of course, when I first moved here the open area was also filled with old mattresses, broken beer bottles and old engine blocks. Human nature is everywhere the same.

Perhaps awesome views are of value mainly to those who have lived too long amid urban sprawl. Even city planners, who must know that scenery is one of the reasons people visit northern New Mexico, believe they will gain more from taxes on developed land than from natural beauty.

"You can't eat scenery." — Victor, "Local Hero"

</Incoherent Pre-coffee Ramblings>

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