Rambling mess lmao. I clearly addressed every issue you bulleted. keep saying there would be no park space, and keep lying. I don't waste time on dishonest actors.What rambling mess.
- My point about Trillium Fenway had nothing to do with density. The pavilion style brewery exists literally right next to a food hall. They're different types of businesses. They're not competitors regardless of whether the population density is 35,000 people per sq. mi or 10 people per sq. mi. Nobody is ditching a brewery to go to a food hall. Again, they're very different things. In fact, they compliment each other (people bring food from the hall into the brewery to eat it with a beer). The Guild garden will continue to thrive in the summer and it'll do well in the winter with a new indoor space, just like good breweries state, region, and nationwide continue to. A food hall on the other side of downtown isn't going to somehow hurt the brewery. That's complete nonsense. There are plenty of existing fast-casual food options and drink options nearby already (inc. Plant City right next door) and somehow the brewery has managed to do just fine.
- Parcel 42 is exactly that - a separate 195 parcel, and not part of the 195 District Park. Sure, it's currently a grass lawn and connected to the park., but it was never been intended to be part of the park forever. It has always been slated for redevelopment. The pavilion is a park structure in the middle of what is and will always be the 195 District Park. How is it that hard to understand?
- If you're advocating for building housing where the pavilion is going, you're advocating for getting rid of part of a public park in favor of private housing because the pavilion is in the middle of the official 195 District Park. You can't build housing on that location without eliminating a central chunk of the official park. It's that simple. There's a ton of room for housing in the vicinity of the park. There's absolutely zero reason to building housing in the location of pavilion.
- People (myself included) want housing. Lots of it. And they want it in great density in the Jewelry District and 195 parcels. They don't want it in place of a public pavilion in the middle of a public park. It's entirely possible and reasonable to both support increasing housing and also support keeping and preserving public parkland. They are not mutually exclusive concepts and building housing where the pavilion is going is not going to be the difference maker in the continued evolution of the Jewelry District and the 195 parcels. The fact that you continue to argue that supporting a pavilion in a public park equals being "anti-housing" is either completely dishonest or a huge shortcoming in the ability to understand nuance. I'm not sure which would be worse.