Cooltown Studios

Monday, June 11, 2007

Pasadena’s urban village a result of city’s vision

Westgate, Pasadena, California

A year and a half ago we profiled Pasadena’s Central District Specific Plan as a model for visionary urban planning. A year or so later the city welcomes Westgate Pasadena, some of the fruits from that labor, in the form of a 12-acre urban village emerging from currently abandoned brownfield industrial buildings and parking lots.

Located right at a transit station, the award-winning three-block development consists of 22,000 s.f. of retail and 820 new condos and apartments, 110 of them affordable - the most in a market-rate project in the City’s history.

Look for Westgate to be

green as well, since on March 13, 2006, the city passed a green building ordinance

requiring the following to be LEED certified:
- All city buildings with 5000 s.f. or more of new construction.
- Non-residential buildings with 25,000 s.f. or more of new construction.
- Mixed-use and multi-family residential buildings that are four or more stories.


Posted by Neil Takemoto in • Mixed-Use Developments | (0) Comments | (0) Trackbacks | Permalink
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