Sunday, February 27, 2011

KEITH MYERS -- URBAN PLANNER PROFILE 2



KEITH MYERS

By Steve Wright

The contrasting styles shaped a designer who literally built a neighborhood where there was none in downtown Columbus Ohio – a capital city sprawled in every direction with over-engineered one-way streets aimed at getting cars out of the urban core and off to the farthest flung suburbs as quickly as possible.

Myers and his firm played a lead role in planning the Arena District for Nationwide, the insurance giant based in Columbus. The district is anchored by Nationwide Arena, home of the city’s only big-four professional sports team – the Columbus Blue Jackets of the National Hockey League.

The District features a grid pattern, throwback brick buildings and: 1.5 million square feet of office, retail and entertainment use where more than 3,600 people work and nearly 1,000 will live.

“The residential uses in the Arena District have been much more successful than we had ever dreamed, said Myers, a landscape architecture graduate of the Ohio State University. “The original master plan was for 350 units and we will likely double that or more. The rental units are getting the highest rates in the market and the for sale product went very quickly. “Over $650 million of private investment has off set the meager $43 million of public investment. The City of Columbus made the best business deal in America.”

The city’s land investment and Myers’ master plan turned the grounds of a huge abandoned penitentiary and adjacent largely vacant former industrial zone into a highly popular mixed use destination.

In a downtown that used to die after 5 p.m., the Arena District comes alive year round with a restaurant row, indoor-outdoor live performance venue, the NHL arena, a compact urban multiplex theater and a waterfront park featuring a Daniel Burnham-designed arch salvaged from a nearby building that was sadly razed during Columbus’ less enlightened era.


TOMORROW: New Urbanism

Wright has written for a living for 25 years, with nearly 5,000 published articles. He lives in historic Little Havana and is very active in Miami’s urban issues. He and his wife of 20 years also are involved in making new and old towns more accessible for people with disabilities.

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