City Center Residential is home to a diverse collection of residential communities in Downtown Allentown that boast high-end amenities such as spacious courtyards and state-of-the-art fitness centers. But the best amenity of all is having a bustling city in your backyard that gives you access to an eclectic selection of restaurants, lively nightlife, hockey games and concerts at PPL Center, lush parks, and stunning artwork featured on the cityscape or in the Allentown Art Museum.
Join us in Music City to make your next event an unforgettable experience! From incredible live music to eclectic southern cuisine, Nashville has something to offer everyone and the Music City Center is in the center of it all.
No need to stress about your next event - the Music City Center has been designed from the ground up to meet your specific needs. With 350,000 square feet of exhibit hall space, our facility has the technology and equipment to ensure that your needs are met.
There has never been a better time to come visit Music City. Named "One of the Top Destinatons for 2016" by Forbes Travel Guide, Nashville is booming and the Music City Center is the new pulse of it all. Known for its trendy new restaurants and its eclectic music scene, Nashville has become a popular destination for many.
The Music City Center is Nashville's convention center located in the heart of downtown. The 2.1 million square foot facility opened in 2013 and was built so that Nashville could host large, city-wide conventions in the downtown area.
Our project is in collaboration with Alvole, a social beekeeping company that has been around since 2013. They have partnered with hundreds of schools and companies like ours on beekeeping projects. Each hive creates greater ecological awareness, allowing city dwellers to reconnect with nature and adjust their sense of responsibility towards the environment. This season, we will discover the ties that bind us to bees and the flora and fauna that surround us, right here in the city.
City Center is a safe place that youth and families rely on for vital support. Through programs, activities, and partnerships with other organizations within the community, City Center is leading a movement of hope, fueled by love, at the center of our city.
City Center provides nutritious meals, hygiene items, clothing, and other resources to relieve immediate needs. Additionally, we offer programs to help youth develop life skills, receive educational support, and mentorship.
The Lynnwood City Center is intended to become a vibrant commercial center and an appealing place to live, work and play. There are a wide range of projects completed or underway intended to significantly upgrade the city's transportation network, add new public spaces and parks, building housing, improve cultural attractions, create a pedestrian-friendly environment, and enhance livability in Lynnwood's City Center.
The next five years the City Center will see the Lynnwood Link Extension opening in 2024 as transit oriented development is building the new commercial center. This includes over 500 multifamily units under construction with an additional 1,400 units entitled and over 500,000 square feet of office with another 200,000 square feet of retail planned. The City Center infrastructure is being upgraded with utility and street improvements to enable new urban growth patterns.
The purpose of the Multi-Family Residential Property Tax Exemption Program is to encourage the development of multi-family housing and mixed-use development within Lynnwood's City Center Sub-Regional Area. The program exempts property taxes for eight or twelve years and applies to both apartments and condominium units.
The property tax exemption applies only to residential apartments and condominiums within the City Center Subarea Plan boundary. The value of the land and the non-qualifying improvements does not qualify for the exemption. The MFTE Program is regulated by LMC 3.82, Ordinance No. 2961 and Ordinance No. 2681 provide further information regarding the criteria exemption.
Pursuant to the Washington State Environmental Policy Act (SEPA), adoption of a Planned Action Ordinance serves to streamline environmental review. Planned actions provide upfront programmatic SEPA review in an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS), rather than on a case-by-case project basis. This approach addresses environmental considerations while streamlining project related environmental reviews.
As part of their ongoing commitment to building a more sustainable future, Snohomish County PUD is now offering Energy Design Assistance (EDA) for commercial and multifamily new construction. Features of the EDA program includes:
The City Center Partnership (CCP) is a catalyst for development of the City Center and supports public and private investment in City Center projects, programs, and initiatives that attract a greater number of customers, employees, and residents to the City Center. CCP covers 180 blocks of Downtown Mankato and Belgrade Avenue in North Mankato.
CityDesign Awards
This category recognizes new construction or renovation projects that contribute to the economic vitality of the City Center. The project could be the result of significant investment to develop a new building within the city center or redevelop an existing building or property for an improved use that contributes to the economic and cultural vitality of the city center. Nominations may be made for projects completed in the last 2 years.
Creative Placemaking
This category recognizes projects that include aesthetic improvements such as exterior signage, landscaping and beautification, public art, and exterior furnishings or that integrates arts and culture (permanent or temporary) to foster interaction among community members, spark vitality, or create an environment conducive to creativity and social engagement. Nominations may be made for projects completed in the last 2 years.
In November 2017, City Center Mankato became the eighth designated Main Street Community in Minnesota, joining Faribault, New Ulm, Owatonna, Red Wing, Shakopee, Willmar and Winona in gaining the designation.
This is a special mark of distinction that only the most qualified organizations and communities receive. To receive this designation, these communities follow a rigorous process that must show a proven track record of celebrating community character, preserving local history, and generating economic returns. Our community should be proud of this designation.
Artist on Main Street
The City Center Partnership has participated in three rounds of INFUSE, part of a larger initiative called Artists on Main Street, a partnership between Minnesota Main Street and Springboard for the Arts with support from the Bush Foundation. More at rethos.org/artists-on-main-street.
With a quality blend of 19th-and early 20th century architecture, the Lincoln Park neighborhood was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1995. As it remains today, it is one of the most intact late 19th and 20th century will-maintained residential neighborhoods in outstate Minnesota. It has 249 historically contributing buildings listed on the National Register. Home styles include Greek Revival, Gothic Revival, French Second Empire, Italianate, Craftsman, Queen Anne and Colonial Revival. Examples of vernacular Victorian-era design are common and several examples of American Foursquare style and Prairie School also exist.
In the late 1800s this area was once home to a bustling railway connection. *Fourth Street Depot Grounds included four railroads connected with Mankato, making it an important agricultural, commercial and industrial freight transportation hub.
This is a new development proposal for a mixed-used project at the southwest corner of Broad and Washington Streets. The development applications include Special Exception (SE) application to allow residential uses within a mixed-use project and height bonus. Improvements to existing George Mason Square and 150 S. Washington office buildings are also proposed as part of the overall project.
The application was filed on February 11, 2021, and is currently under City's review. Development proposals of this scale must go through several stages of staff review and receive several reviews and approvals by boards, commissions and city organizations before they are considered for approval by the City Council. A tentative project schedule with upcoming meeting dates is provided below.
On December 13, 2021, the City Council referred the application to Boards and Commissions for review and recommendation to City Council. Boards and Commission review and public meetings will be held in the next several months. For meetings dates and agenda, please visit the calendar or the respective board/commission webpages and contact their Staff Liaison.
The property comprises 4.63 acres located in the block bounded by West Broad Street, South Washington Street, South Maple Avenue and West Annandale Road. The site is zoned B-2, General Business and planned for mixed-use on the Future Land Use Map.
NOTICE: Until further notice, public meetings will be held pursuant to and in compliance with the Virginia Freedom of Information Act, Section 2.2-3708.2 and state and local legislation adopted to allow for continued government operation during the COVID-19 declared emergency. All participating members of the applicable public body will be present at meetings through electronic means; and all members of the public are welcome to view the meeting at meeting specific links provided on the boards and commission pages - links provided below. Please visit the boards and commission pages for meeting time and virtual meeting links. The following schedule will be updated as meetings are scheduled and confirmed:
A city centre is the commercial, cultural and often the historical, political, and geographic heart of a city. The term "city centre" is primarily used in British English, and closely equivalent terms that exist in other languages, such as "centre-ville" in French, Stadtzentrum in German, or shzhōngxīn (市中心) in Chinese. In the United States, the term "downtown" is generally used, though a few cities, like Philadelphia, use the term "Center City" or "City Center".
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