Cooltown Studios
The official blog for crowdsourced placemaking

Monday, April 30, 2012

Charlotte, NC builds a live music village

A transformed 1900s textile mill, Charlotte’s NC Music Factory may not be located in the heart of the city, but once you’re there, many of the locals find it has the heart of a city. Why? Because one can spend the entire day there without getting bored.

Opened in 2006, but not maturing until more recently, the 300,000-square-foot (28,000 sq m) complex accommodates audiences of 1500 indoors and 5000 outdoors, amid a creative variety of lounges, restaurants, pubs, coffee shops, with 50,000 s.f. of fully-leased offices and 31 music rehearsal spaces.

In other words, this is the creative class version of the corporate cultural district exemplified by the chain-driven Live! entertainment blocks developed by The Cordish Companies.

There’s no shortage of things to do and places to hang out, with upscale dining, downscale dining, a college hangout, a bar/restaurant/music club, the ‘world’s smallest bar’, a refurbished New Jersey diner, a German-style beer garden and the Fillmore and Amphitheater live music venues. As one patron put it, “What I can say is that this place has just about everything a person in Charlotte is looking for - a comedy club, live music, dancing, bar, saloon, etc. One can easily spend all night here and not get bored due to the variety of establishments here.“ As far as living, townhomes and condos in the 800-900-s.f. range, selling for $150,000 to $200,000 are on the horizon.

Father and son Rick and son Noah Lazes began planning the development of the Music Factory in 1999, owing the project’s financial success in the midst of the economic downturn to the relatively inexpensive land, having no debt, and allowing tenants to pay rent at less than $20 per square foot, half the rate of more prime retail streets. Securing Live Nation on the outdoor amphitheater and Fillmore for the indoor live music venue were huge factors as well, and are as far as the destination goes in terms of national anchors.

The developers also made sure to involve the local neighborhood community during the planning phase, as the video below will attest. As one resident put it, they’re as much a part of the Music Factory as the Music Factory is a part of their neighborhood.


Posted by Neil Takemoto in • Entertainment & Arts | (0) Comments | Link

Friday, March 30, 2012

Pedestrian-only street vision for Prize2theFuture by MoodyPaints

City of Birmingham hints at crowdsourced placemaking

While we have examples of the private sector crowdsourcing places and the public sector crowdsourcing ideas for placemaking, have we seen the public sector crowdsourcing ideas for places yet? The City of Birmingham, Alabama is at least hinting at it.

The Community Foundation of Greater Birmingham and the City of Birmingham partnered to create a Prize2theFuture contest to provide anyone in the world the opportunity to inspire what happens on a small city block in downtown Birmingham. It

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Posted by Neil Takemoto in • Crowdsourced PlacemakingGovernment Innovation | (0) Comments | Link |

Monday, February 06, 2012

Rockville Town Square, Maryland

Rightsizing, not downsizing, is what the next gen is about

While ‘one size fits all’ may have been the mass production model of the industrial revolution, it’s encouraging to know that the model driving the creative, information, knowledge economy of the present is based on providing what people truly want. That ‘right size’ we’re looking for is finally being provided as an option.

Rightsizing Living
Regular readers know this has been well covered in this blog, that the next gen wants smaller homes, that the housing crisis needed a correction as

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Posted by Neil Takemoto in • Market Development | (0) Comments | Link |

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Our Downtown Hilo website at ourdowntownhilo.com

Hilo, HI: First crowdsourced placemaking municipality

Crowdsourced placemaking had been a private sector sponsored success in Bristol, CT, but what about coming from the public sector?

To many, public sector sponsored crowdsourced placemaking sounded rather impossible, with such arguments as:

- A municipality doesn’t do placemaking, or implementation, the private sector does. It’s the actual physical implementation of building real places that sets crowdsourced placemaking apart from just crowdsourcing.
- The city government is obligated to

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Posted by Neil Takemoto in • Crowdsourced PlacemakingGovernment Innovation | (0) Comments | Link |

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Popularise

‘Popularise’ looks to crowdsource storefront businesses

The sons of a big-time developer in Washington DC learned enough about the real estate industry to the point they feel it’s ‘broken’. So, rather than continue the ‘Big Head’ oriented path of the real estate industry, the chose to forge a new one via the ‘Long Tail’. That is, they’re looking to crowdsource what gets built, starting with ground-floor businesses in Washington DC.

From their website: “Today, neighborhood development is dominated by large institutional companies that use Wall

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Posted by Neil Takemoto in • Crowdsourced Placemaking | (0) Comments | Link |

Monday, November 07, 2011

Locavesting, crowdfunding local businesses on the rise

We’re reaching the tipping point where our investment and tax dollars are going to start benefitting our local economies rather than private investors, with the ‘Long Tail‘ leading the way. Crowdfunding, a natural extension of crowdsourcing, emerges from the Long Tail and is coming to small businesses. It’s about time!

Cities are wising up in prioritize investing in independent businesses districts over chains. According to a BusinessWeek article, subsidies for chains are not effective. Big

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Posted by Neil Takemoto in • Economic GardeningInvestmentRetail Venue Development | (0) Comments | Link |

Monday, October 31, 2011

Big Head vs. Long Tail

‘Big Head’ and ‘Long Tail’ both key to placemaking

As we’re witnessing in communities from the Middle East to Wall Street, people are taking it upon themselves to organize and effect lasting change on behalf of the triple bottom line (being economically, socially and environmentally beneficial). These groups aren’t advocating having swarms of people as a better structure for governance, they’re just tired of what’s known in business as the ‘Big Head‘ (represented by the red in the graph above) having too much control, such as in

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Posted by Neil Takemoto in • Cool DevelopersCrowdsourced Placemaking | (0) Comments | Link |

Friday, October 14, 2011

The crowdsourced placemaking grant list

Demand sparks supply, so let’s get a list of cities that want to see crowdsourced placemaking in their city, town and/or neighborhood. Then we’ll look into how we can secure grants for them, whether it’s through a new national/international nonprofit or through a local nonprofit. See this NY Times story on Bristol, CT,“You ‘Like’ It, They Build It” for an example of results, which should be a compelling story for potential funders for programs initiated by the local community.

What would the

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Posted by Neil Takemoto in • Crowdsourced Placemaking | (0) Comments | Link |

Thursday, September 01, 2011

Clockwise from top left: Granville Street, Vancouver; South Lake Union, Seattle; West 7th, Fort Worth, Texas; Corktown, Detroit

Pop-up placemaking and next gen urban neighborhoods

Trendwatching.com reports that with 180,000 people moving into cities daily, a rising creative urban population they refer to as Citysumers are defining a new generation that’s more demanding, open-minded, connected, spontaneous and more try-out-prone than ever. What that means is if there ever was a time to experiment with forward-thinking placemaking, the time is now.

The current manifestation of that mentality is with ‘pop-up’ placemaking. It allow cities to try out innovative placemaking

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Posted by Neil Takemoto in • Market Development | (0) Comments | Link |

Friday, August 05, 2011

Proposed central plaza next to a market square (seen in distance) for the Village of Hempstead, New York

Revitalizing a struggling downtown: Crowdsource it… or not

With the Village of Hempstead, Long Island, New York, when a development team implemented crowdsourcing into the development process in 2011, the Village approved it unanimously. Not so when it wasn’t part of the process in 2007, which resulted in rejection.

In 2007, a development company presented the Village of Hempstead residents (pop. 53K), struggling economically at a medium income half of the immediate area, with 5200 construction jobs, 1200 permanent jobs and $35 million a year in new

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Posted by Neil Takemoto in • Crowdsourced Placemaking | (0) Comments | Link |

Friday, July 29, 2011

Del Mar Station development, Pasadena, California

What is triple-bottom-line real estate development?

Many of us know that the triple bottom line means “people, planet and profit”, being economically, socially and environmentally beneficial. That is, expanding the traditional reporting framework to take into account ecological and social performance in addition to financial performance (Wikipedia).

So what does this mean for real estate development? What would triple bottom line real estate development look like? Keep in mind this is about the real estate development industry, not about the

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Posted by Neil Takemoto in • Investment | (0) Comments | Link |
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