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Mixed Use or Mess Use?

The rich tapestry of the urban fabric of a city is composed of a mix of uses. These uses may be mixed vertically with shops on the ground floor and housing above, or horizontally with the corner store embedded into a residential neighborhood. This mix of uses is a prerequisite for sustainable communities.

Contemporary design and project financing also encourages mixed use. The variety of uses provides a diversified portfolio. Market demand can also be guaranteed if you can generate trips or complementary uses within a development.

However, the combination becomes more of a mess than a mix. During my recent travels to Louisville, Kentucky for the Congress for the New Urbanism, I came across one of these messes. I am not sure if we should reward the leasing agent or the developer for the most ingenious and least complementary mix of uses in a single building.

Located on 4th Street in the heart of the Theater District, I found this incredible mix of uses: Parking Garage, Day Care, and Bar, combination. The daycare occupies one-half of the street frontage. Throughout the day, you could see through the shopfront windows the children happily at play. Late into the afternoon, the other half of the building comes to life with music, food and cocktails. Layered on top of all of this are several floors of parking.

In general, a mix of uses within a single mixed-use development are complementary or supportive of each other. In this case, I have to stretch the mind in complex gymnastics to understand the connections.

Let me break it down.

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