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As much as I hate to say it – I agree with Lokel. Every great, distinctive city mixes the old with the new. It is exactly what has made Ashevegas such a destination over the years – the old, the new, the controversial, the artsy, the forward thinking and the retro. If the Basilica won’t buy the land – let’s all move on.
The only argument I have heard come from anyone on council is: That lot of land is too valuable to just turn into a park, something needs to be done with it that fills a community need. Such as a parking dark…
I’ve talked to some of the folks at City Transit & with the PARC group & there is some thought as to why not make it a transit center & park? Put a low-lying building that occupies part of the space not directly in front of the Basilica that can serve as a transit center, with maps, directions to green-ways, bicycling information, bus tickets, trolley tickets, etc. Then in the remaining park area we could have green space with bicycle parking & lockers. It would promote a lot of the ideas that came out as ‘community needs’ during the downtown master plan discussions & design meetings. We just need to find creative compromise between council’s ‘vision’ & the outcry from the people.
LOKEL – from all of the community members I’ve interacted with on this issue, practically none of them care about the fact that it is a Catholic denomination church. They see it as an historically significant, architecturally stunning sanctuary that all can appreciate.
I love the argument that "the church" makes against such development.
"We are 100 years old."
"This is Asheville."
Travel to Europe much, or ever leave the County?
All over the world there are newly built buildings (some are even churches), that are built beside, behind and, across from existing historical buildings: why should this project be "demonized" by the Catholic Diocese of NC?
If they want the land, then buy it.
Otherwise, shut up about it.
I think the local Catholics have bigger fish to fry right now, like harboring illegal immigrants (for example).