Friends of Dorothea Dix Park
White Paper and Park Plan
October 23, 2006

And

The ULI Plan

To download these files right-click on link and select "Save Target As"

To view these files online click on links below.

Friends of Dix
300 Acre Park 
"White Paper"
A way to fund a "300 Acre Destination Park" using development on the perimeter, attracting grants, and providing great economic value to the community in the long term without harming the neighborhoods.
Prepared by
Greg Hummel

Jay Truty, Kalyna Procyk, Meg George
and his team at Bell, Boyd & Lloyd LLC
Chicago Illinois

Friends of Dorothea Dix Website

 

Park Design for Dix Park
Prepared by
John Hoal
H 3 Studio
Designers of Forest Park in St. Louis, MO

Large scale showing details of park plan (full size picture 1.6meg)

Small scale view showing surrounding areas (full size picture 1.6meg)

 

 

 

The Urban Land Institute (ULI) Plan 

Link to the ULI slide show final presentation on October 27, 2006
2.9meg PDF file

The ULI Plan in a Nutshell
"Dix Development & Park Plan"

Joseph Huberman

The ULI plan consists of a 248 acre mixed use development and a 215 acre park on state land.

ULI uses all the Dix land, the Farmers Market and some University land which it trades with the Park for the Big Field. The City of Raleigh raises $30 million of public money with tax increment financing (TIF), the citizens raise $10 million from donations, so the City can buy the property with $40 million. The State agrees to a lease arrangement to finance its office space and then gives the $40 million to a Mental Health Trust Fund.

The Mayor appoints the (DCDC) "Dix Campus Development Corporation", from stakeholder groups to oversee the development. To build 3,400 residential units ULI allots 35 acres to single family homes and l65 acres to townhouses. Then 1.2 million square feet of office and retail is built on 123 acres. Finally, they include 25 acres of open space in the development, and housing for the mentally ill in the park.

 


Click map for full size picture in a new window

ULI Land Use Plan of October 27, 2006 in solid colors 
over aerial photos
with existing boundaries shown with dotted lines
By Joseph Huberman

Field Swap suggested by ULI


Click map for full size picture in a new window

These maps are approximate, and are done by matching the various plans over aerial photo basemaps.  
There are likely some discrepancies.  If you let me know, I'll try and fix them.

 

Dix Park As it Is

 

Dix Park or Dix Development

Opinion by Joseph Huberman

The key land use difference between the Urban Land Institute (ULI) and Friends of Dix Park plan is where the development occurs and how it affects its neighbors. In the Friends plan the development is concentrated around the edges of the park. This benefits the existing residential and commercial neighborhoods adjacent to the park and distributes the development opportunities to many land owners and developers.

On the other hand, the ULI plan concentrates all the development to a few developers on the state owned property. The ULI development separates the park from Lake Wheeler Road and creates a barrier to the redevelopment of these neighborhoods by offering new construction on state owned land that will overwhelm the market in the surrounding neighborhoods stalling their renewal for years.

If the "sense" of the park flows through the Farmers' Market, then Dix Park will merge into Centennial Campus, Lake Raleigh and the new Walnut Creek Park adding much more green space to explore. It is this synergy between the 306 acre Dix Park, the University, and the City Park that extends the Dix property so it can become a World Class Destination Park gaining regional significance for the enjoyment of residents and visitors as well as an vital economic engine for the region and the state.

If we default to the ULI plan that restricts the park to 200 acres adjacent to a 250 acre development for 9,000 residents and 20,000 employees it will demote the park from a "World Class Destination Park" to a "Very Nice Community Park", which while fine for the people buying into the new neighborhood and working at the new offices, will do little to attract the amenities that make a park "World Class". It won't be a "Destination". Without the "Destination" attractions the region stands to loose hundreds of millions of dollars a year in new tourist revenue. But worse yet, we will loose our last opportunity to have a grand "Central Park". We will be cutting out our heart-- for what? Another in an endless row of housing developments and shopping centers.

 

 

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