Largest mall developer in phoenix do they Pressure wash

Ron Musgraves

Exterior Restoration Specialist
Staff member
The gold rush is on. Developers are racing to build new residential and commercial projects to meet what is expected to be a doubling in the region's population in the next 15 years. But they aren't plowing ahead blindly. Instead, the term "city-building" gets thrown out a lot. Developers in different disciplines are working together. The result is that Phoenix's growth will be through construction of a dozens of master-planned communities spreading West and North of downtown.

Westcor, which has long made Phoenix its home, is positioned at the heart of the growth and has its hands in nine projects around the city. The company has more than 2,000 acres of commercial development slated around Phoenix. David Scholl, senior vice president of development for Westcor, offered the development of the Irvine Ranch in Calif., into a city that now houses 170,000 residents, as a loose example for what Westcor is looking to achieve. But even that's not a perfect fit since the ranch covers 120,000 acres.


In most of its work, Westcor will be working with joint venture partners who will build the residential components. It will also team with RED Development--which also has a Phoenix office--to help build the retail.

Other developers are there as well. Thomas J. Klutznick Co. Related Urban Development, are working on City North in Desert Ridge--one of about 20 master planned communities in the region. The mixed-use development will encompass more than 5 million square feet, including 1 million square feet of retail.

"This is city-building," says R. Webber Hudson, executive vice president of New York-based Related Urban. "Another 40,000 people will be living in the area as the government release more land, but the market is already large enough to sustain City North."

-- David Bodamer
 
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The gold rush is on. Developers are racing to build new residential and commercial projects to meet what is expected to be a doubling in the region's population in the next 15 years. But they aren't plowing ahead blindly. Instead, the term "city-building" gets thrown out a lot. Developers in different disciplines are working together. The result is that Phoenix's growth will be through construction of a dozens of master-planned communities spreading West and North of downtown.

Westcor, which has long made Phoenix its home, is positioned at the heart of the growth and has its hands in nine projects around the city. The company has more than 2,000 acres of commercial development slated around Phoenix. David Scholl, senior vice president of development for Westcor, offered the development of the Irvine Ranch in Calif., into a city that now houses 170,000 residents, as a loose example for what Westcor is looking to achieve. But even that's not a perfect fit since the ranch covers 120,000 acres.


In most of its work, Westcor will be working with joint venture partners who will build the residential components. It will also team with RED Development--which also has a Phoenix office--to help build the retail.

Other developers are there as well. Thomas J. Klutznick Co. Related Urban Development, are working on City North in Desert Ridge--one of about 20 master planned communities in the region. The mixed-use development will encompass more than 5 million square feet, including 1 million square feet of retail.

"This is city-building," says R. Webber Hudson, executive vice president of New York-based Related Urban. "Another 40,000 people will be living in the area as the government release more land, but the market is already large enough to sustain City North."

-- David Bodamer

This has Changed dramatically
 
Im guessing you mean the economy along with the census has changed their projections.

I remember reading about a growing city here in Ar a few years ago. With the housing boom they had projected it to triple population by 2020. I read in the paper today that it lost a 1/2 a percent for the last decade...
 
One night Shelly and I were having dinner at the top of a casino and from where we were sitting we counted 36 full sized cranes at construction sites. That was 2006.

Last week we drove around picking people up for the ASHRAE show and taking them to dinner and could only find one on the whole strip.

Casinos put out 10 year plans IN ADVANCE for construction. There are NO plans submitted for the next ten years. Zero.

I don't thinks that's necessarily bad news for survivors. But it's devastating news for many.
 
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