About N.32

What’s going on in the community?

Wondering about the latest updates in the 32nd St Revitalization project?

Check here for the latest updates.

32nd St Neighborhood- did you know?

The Basha’s at 32nd street and Shea used to be a Harkins movie theater?

Here is a flyer from their opening weekend.

Shea Plaza 1971 09 29

It opened September 29th 1971. It was the 5th Harkins to be opened in Arizona.

Before 1983 it was a larger, single screen cinema. Then it closed are re-opened with two smaller screens with a seating capacity 400 seats.

The theater closed in the mid 1990’s. Do you remember when the theater was there?

 

 

 

32 View Apartments meetings

Please join the community conversation about the proposed 32 View apartments.

The next community Meeting will be Monday March 16th at 6:00 pm at Shadow Mountain High School-media Center.

Discussions will include an overview of the application, Site Plan and Building elevations, updates and revisions since the first meeting that took place February 3rd, and answers to questions.

Here is a picture of the proposed landscape and elevation.

preview

 

The site of the 4.06 gross acres is located at approximately 600′ north of the Northeast corner of 32nd Street and Shea Blvd.

The purpose and intent of the planned unit development, View 32 is to enable the redevelopment of this challenging long rectangular shaped- underutilized infill site within the North 32nd Street corridor, View 32 is planned as a high quality, gated multi-family development of 147 residential units.  There is an existing retail/office building that will be demolished.

The City of Phoenix Village Planner assigned to the case is Racelle Escolar. If you have any questions she can be reached at 602-262-6949 or racelle.escolar@phoenix.gov.

Come have your voice heard at the meeting on Monday.

 

 

 

North 32nd Street Revitilization news

32nd streetThe Phoenix Business Journal wrote an article abut the North 32nd Street revitalization.

Phoenix revitalization vision could redevelop strip malls

The city of Phoenix is looking at a plan to revitalize neighborhood commercial areas and help landowners revamp or remove excess or outmoded strip malls.

The recession was a death knell for many strip malls. Today, they have high vacancy rates and some four-corner locations have more shop space than shop potential. As the centers decline in occupancy, quality of stores and viability, the buildings do as well. Phoenix is considering an initiative that will reverse the trend.

“Freeways put an end to that drive-by traffic,” said Phoenix Community and Economic Development Director Christine Mackay. “Take 32nd Street from Shea Boulevard to Union Hills Drive. After SR 51 opened, traffic on the street dropped from 50,000 vehicles per day to around 10,000 vehicles. That’s taking 80 percent of the customers away from the stores.”

Most often referred to as “strip malls” to reflect the linear design, the centers typically featured plenty of local or neighborhood-oriented business. Customer traffic came from nearby with the growing number of commuters spilling out of subdivisions further up the road.

But as freeways began to snake across the Valley — starting in 1990 when Interstate 10 was extended through the city — the centers started drying up as commuters took to the highways.

“The movement of traffic away from the neighborhood centers really cut into businesses’ abilities to survive,” said Mackay. “It also hurt revenue streams for shopping center owners. Space became vacant and some centers started to look shabby.”

For 32nd Street, the effort is ongoing because there are no funds to improve the segment. That is not stopping stakeholders from putting ideas on the table through council members Jim Waring and Bill Gates.

“We’ve been meeting in other neighborhoods as well, and people are saying that they want to have a neighborhood ‘center’ that’s walkable,” Mackay explained. “The city is going to take a look at the various blocks and work with land owners to see what kinds of different development might be better to bring back vitality.”

Mackay said residents would like something to provide a neighborhood anchor or attraction.

“We could look at a business or city service branch moving into a neighborhood as one idea,” she explained. “In other cases, where a neighborhood center may be obsolete, we could explore changes in zoning to better use the property to meet current neighborhood and market needs.”

As a community we can help turn the neighborhood around.

32nd Street Bike Event

Cruisin’ with Bill Gates North 32nd Community Event

Join us March 21st 8:00am- 12:00pm for a 32nd Street Bike Event

8:00 AM – Noon: Local Business Open Booths (Home Fur Good, Goodwill, Pinot’s Pallet, and more)
8:00 – 9:00 AM: Registration & Refreshments, Bike Rodeo & Car Seat Safety Check; Bike Helmets (ages 5-18 while supplies last)
9:00 AM: Bike Raffle Giveaway
9:00 – 10:00 AM: Community Bike Ride​​​​

bike route

10:00 – Noon: Open Booths (Home Fur Good, Goodwill, Pinot’s Pallet, and more)

Enjoy refreshments from Original Breakfast House, Basha’s, La Playa, and more. There are raffles and giveaways.

Bring the whole family!

 

bike event

Light Rail Coming to 32nd Street?

Interested in having the light rail come to the neighborhood? Attend one of the transportation meetings.
The city of Phoenix Public Transit and Street Transportation departments will host some open houses in downtown Phoenix to gain resident feedback on priorities for city transportation improvements.
OPEN HOUSE SCHEDULE:
6-8 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 28

Pecos Community Center, 17010 S. 48th St
6-8 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 29

Parsons Center for Health and Wellness, 1101 N. Central Ave., West Lobby

5:30-7 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 5

Emmet McLoughlin Community Training and Education Center, 1150 S. Seventh Ave.

 

Individuals can get more information or share their priorities by calling 602-262-7242, e-mailing talktransportation@phoenix.gov, or visiting www.talktransportation.org. No RSVP is required to attend. Thanks in advance!