Rabu, 04 Juli 2018

Sponsored Links

Sugar House Coffee Salt Lake City Utah - Live Music, Food, Drinks
src: sugarhousecoffee.com

Sugar House is an environment in Salt Lake City, Utah, United States. It is one of the oldest neighborhoods in the city and its name is officially two words. Sugar House is a Westminster College site.


Video Sugar House, Salt Lake City



Ikhtisar

Sugar House is home to two shopping centers that collectively feature retailers such as Nordstrom Rack clothing retailer, Barnes & amp; Noble, Old Navy clothing retailer, Whole Foods Market, Bed Bath & amp; Beyond, Petco, Big 5 Sporting Goods, some fast food restaurants and families, and cinemark luxury cinema seats. A small mall is located at the corner of 2100 South and 700 East. South 2100 and East corner 1300 has three low-rise office buildings. Between the shopping center and South 2100 is a small park called the Hidden Hollow Natural Area, created in 2001 as a development project to beautify the city in preparation for the 2002 Winter Olympics. It was rehabilitated on the initiative of schoolchildren. Sugar House Park is a park located between I-80, 2100 South, 1300 East, and 1700 East. This park hosts a big celebration with fireworks every 4th of July.

Maps Sugar House, Salt Lake City



Location

Sugar House is located within the Salt Lake City network system. According to the Community Council, it runs from 500 East to Foothill Drive and north to south from 1300 South to city limits of about 3,000 South. According to the master plan of Salt Lake City, this route operates from 500 East to Parleys Way and 2000 East and from 1700 South to city limits of about 3000 South. Many local businesses and private residences, though not strictly within the confines of Sugar House, use the name for recognition of the name of the region. The business and commercial center of the neighborhood is located at 1100 East 2100 South which is also the northern end of the Highland Drive terminal, where it turns into 1100 East.

In the past, the Sugar House community council largely avoided the big box stores, and a group of curbside businesses along the 2100 South and Highland Drive/1100 East junctions, including an independent clothing and shoe store, music shop, artist studio, public art gallery , two coffee shops, head store named Wizards & amp; Dreams, and an adult flower shop called Blue Boutique. However, the redevelopment of the Granite Block has recently forced many of these shops to move or close. Zoning changes have created fears that new development will be less friendly with local businesses.

Salt Lake City's Sugar House Neighborhood
src: u.realgeeks.media


History

Sugar House was founded in 1853, six years after Brigham Young led Latter-day Saint settlers into the valley. Its name comes from a sugar beet sugar factory from Deseret Manufacturing Company, which was set up at a used blacksmith shop in the area with the help of the Philip DeLaMare-born Jersey conversion. The name came up as a suggestion from Margaret McMeans Smoot, wife of the mayor of Salt Lake City, Abraham O. Smoot.

Sugar House Prison, the first Utah state prison, is located in Sugar House during the 19th and early 20th centuries. The prison closed in 1951 and moved to Draper. All the buildings were torn down and the land converted into Sugar House Park and Highland High School. In 1928, at the endorsement ceremony of the Sprague Library, Mayor John F. Bowman suggested Sugar House at the time referred to as "South East Salt Lake City." This suggestion was rejected.

At the beginning of the 20th century, 1100 East and 2100 South corners were known as "furniture rows" because three furniture stores were there. Two have closed and one, Furniture Sterling, fixed. Rockwood Furniture closed its doors in 1999 and Granite Furniture closed Sugar House premises in 2004, after more than 80 years of operation. (Granite Furniture still owns a West Jordan store in 1475 West 9000 South.)

In 1990, the Sugar House Center shopping center was completed. It brought a large national chain to the area for the first time. In 1998 The Commons , a shopping center located east of the city center ("Granit Block") and adjacent to the "Sugar House Center", was built in response to low patronage and has since been a target of praise and criticism.

Efforts began to build a vintage-style train to connect the Sugar House Business District to TRAX station at 2100 South in South Salt Lake. In December 2006, the Utah transit authorities, Salt Lake City, and South Salt Lake commissioned a Transportation Alternative Study to examine transit possibilities at the Sugar House Branch in old Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad (D & amp; RGW). The study determined that trolleys running along pre-existing rail lines were the preferred alternative. In May 2009, Mayor Ralph Becker stated that the project could be completed in 2012, would cost $ 40 million to $ 50 million, and that he hopes this is the beginning of a new citywide tram system.

S Line (formerly known as Sugar House Streetcar) began operations on December 8, 2013 as planned, and an extension of the 1100 East north line to Westminster College was approved.

In September 2007, owners of the Granite Block development at the corner of 1100 East and 2100 South, where many independent stores, announced plans to rebuild the area. In early 2008, buildings in the eastern part of the Granite Block were destroyed for construction preparation; developer Craig Mecham claimed that the building was "unsafe" because of their age.

Instead, Mecham built a six-story building with apartments and retail/restaurant downstairs. Many residents and business owners in the area disagree with the plan for fear that rebuilding will prevent local businesses from developing and that big businesses and chain stores will dominate inside and outside the court. For several years the fenced off site resulted in craters like scars and a source of controversy in the neighborhood. The Great Resession stopped the project.

On December 1, 2010, developer Craig Mecham proposed a revamped development plan for what was then mockingly called "Sugar Holes", eliminating the previously planned office space and replacing the condominium with an apartment. The street level retails will remain as proposed earlier. Funding for the project was finally secured in 2011 and the project was completed in 2013.

Sugarhouse Park Salt Lake City Utah Stock Photo: 53006281 - Alamy
src: c8.alamy.com


Famous people

  • Jackie Biskupski (born 1966) - Mayor of Salt Lake City
  • Jared Goldberg (born 1991) - Olympic skier

Sugar House, Salt Lake City - Wikiwand
src: upload.wikimedia.org


References


Sugarhouse Park Stock Photos & Sugarhouse Park Stock Images - Alamy
src: c8.alamy.com


External links

  • Sugar House Community Council - Sugar House Community Board Site.

Source of the article : Wikipedia

Comments
0 Comments