Thanks for Watching! The Point - Framework Plan: p9s94f.p3cdn1.secureserver.net/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/The-Point-Framework-Plan-Final-Report.pdf 🤔 Thinking about Moving to Utah? Let me help! 📲 Call or Text: 801.898.2450 📨 Email: scott@motivrealestate.com 🗓 Let's Meet on ZOOM or Google Meet... Schedule your consultation here ⏩ calendly.com/meetscott/30min?back=1&month=2024-03
I've read through hundreds of pages of documents and I cannot see anything outlining anything definitive with respect to units for sale v units for purchase. I will certainly be doing many, many more videos on this development over the coming months and years.
I live in this area and you will be sorely disappointed, the traffic at the point is horrible, the dust from the multiple mining operations never quits. The noise from the traffic on I-15 never stops.
@scottdsteele i live at the point and travel in the traffic everyday. Doesn't matter if it is redwood road or I-15. I travel the prison road everyday. Do you? How does this development impact you. I am realistic not negative. Have you ever seen a comment that our air quality is awesome beyond a day past a storm? Where does Herriman get all their water from? Hint AF canyon, and that resourse is tapped out. Utah has destroyed winter range for wildlife in the name of population growth. Whats the problem with leaving something for the wildlife. Where is the negative In that? 20,000 in added population growth on how many acres? I chose not to be blue pilled. The last poll that I read for this development is open space, parks and recreation had a more popular vote. I am all for that, That is positive.
I do not travel that road every single day but I do drive 35-40k miles per year along the Wasatch Front and I do enjoy talking with people that aren't so negative. I'm just asking that we can talk about everything with a more constructive and positive approach rather than just being negative. Best wishes
Interesting concept, but atrocious architecture. Do we really want more California architecture in Utah? Don’t we have enough of this boring, bland, maximum square foot per lot shipping container style residential architecture here already??
wtf is california architecture? all architecture is nice and when it blends together its absolutely stunning. but besides the modern architecture what would they build instead.
@@LukeLamoreaux-eg7cy Maybe they could build more cheap housing, instead of this crap that will be extremely expensive. It isn't even dense housing. The units are going to be massive, this area is just for the rich, none of us will actually be able to afford it.
The point development is garbage. The developers care nothing of the existing problems and only about making money. Where is the water going to come from to supply this city? The power? I know my bill has went up. What about the traffic problem. Just because the illusion of a 15 minute city sounds good doesn't mean it's going to happen. Every person who moves there will have vehicles. With the Jordan river to the west and I-15 to the east how are 20,000 more people going to get around? This place is a choke point between utah and salt lake counties. Going to make everyone that already lives there misserable.
@scottdsteele where's your study on how water will not be impacted at all? How do you build a city without using water? How bout the garbage created, where's that going to be trucked to? 20,000 people have zero impact is backed up by what science? I live at the point right now. Do you? You put 20,000 more people in your neighborhoods and see what the standard of living is like afterwards.
It's not my study, but there are plenty of resources and studies that will enlighten one's understanding about our water supply and what is really used here. Less than 4% of our water is used for the population, and the vast majority of our water is used for agricultural use and the studies show that for every acre of farmland that's developed, there's a massive net savings in water usage, as sad as that is to see happen. Many people live in fear with respect to water because of the headlines, the narrative and the marketing to get us to conserve. The Great Salt Lake has suffered immensely due to poor water management and the low that it experienced a couple of years ago has sparked some big and long lasting changes that should restore that lake to where it needs to be. Our reservoir levels right now as we just passed the start of another water year in the first of Oct also show how good we are. None of this even touches on the immense amount of water beneath us in ground water. Water is a hot topic and we need to manage it better as our population expands.
The prison site was just that, a prison not corn fields. Urban people can rage against agg land all they want. We all go to the grocery store. Apples to Apples that site sould get only the water that the prison used. What problems does this development solve? Housing? That's bs, 90% of the units offered the average Utahn cannot afford. Garbage? Air pollution? Noise pollution? Your an advocate for the people of black rock.
Thanks for Watching! The Point - Framework Plan:
p9s94f.p3cdn1.secureserver.net/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/The-Point-Framework-Plan-Final-Report.pdf
🤔 Thinking about Moving to Utah? Let me help!
📲 Call or Text: 801.898.2450
📨 Email: scott@motivrealestate.com
🗓 Let's Meet on ZOOM or Google Meet... Schedule your consultation here ⏩ calendly.com/meetscott/30min?back=1&month=2024-03
Rip to the trail I run everyday. Sounds like it will be busier than ever
Likely, yes.
Will there be any single family homes in The Point?
It actually will, yes!
I purchased a new build off 146th 2 yrs ago soley for this reason. Ill off load that home in about 5 to 7 yrs when it doubles !
That's a good plan!
Why not make it all housing to bring down the cost of housing instead of making another super expensive area to live?
The only way to bring down the cost of housing is to increase supply or decrease demand... or both
Are any of the multi-family units for sale? Or is this a "pay the corporate landlord forever" business model?
I've read through hundreds of pages of documents and I cannot see anything outlining anything definitive with respect to units for sale v units for purchase. I will certainly be doing many, many more videos on this development over the coming months and years.
The state is retaining land ownership of the whole site, so to me that means rentals
@@AstroMagi Utah slavery
Can you do a video on the upcoming Downtown Daybreak?
You bet Andrea! I'll get to work on that one specifically here in the next couple of weeks. I actually live in Daybreak as well
@@scottdsteele yes I know. Me too!
Still not that dense but a huge leap forward for any city in the US. The renderings look nice though.
Thanks! It certainly looks appealing
Wow Scott this is going to be amazing! Can’t wait to move to the area :)
Hi Nadia! It's going to be take unique and awesome and it's right next to where you've told me you want to live.
I live in this area and you will be sorely disappointed, the traffic at the point is horrible, the dust from the multiple mining operations never quits. The noise from the traffic on I-15 never stops.
Dan, all you ever share here is negativety. Why? Life has so much more positive than negative and i hope that you might be able to see that someday
@scottdsteele i live at the point and travel in the traffic everyday. Doesn't matter if it is redwood road or I-15. I travel the prison road everyday. Do you? How does this development impact you. I am realistic not negative. Have you ever seen a comment that our air quality is awesome beyond a day past a storm? Where does Herriman get all their water from?
Hint AF canyon, and that resourse is tapped out. Utah has destroyed winter range for wildlife in the name of population growth. Whats the problem with leaving something for the wildlife. Where is the negative In that?
20,000 in added population growth on how many acres? I chose not to be blue pilled. The last poll that I read for this development is open space, parks and recreation had a more popular vote. I am all for that, That is positive.
I do not travel that road every single day but I do drive 35-40k miles per year along the Wasatch Front and I do enjoy talking with people that aren't so negative. I'm just asking that we can talk about everything with a more constructive and positive approach rather than just being negative. Best wishes
Interesting concept, but atrocious architecture. Do we really want more California architecture in Utah? Don’t we have enough of this boring, bland, maximum square foot per lot shipping container style residential architecture here already??
Thank you so much for sharing! I do not disagree and let's see how this plays out
wtf is california architecture? all architecture is nice and when it blends together its absolutely stunning. but besides the modern architecture what would they build instead.
@@LukeLamoreaux-eg7cy Maybe they could build more cheap housing, instead of this crap that will be extremely expensive. It isn't even dense housing. The units are going to be massive, this area is just for the rich, none of us will actually be able to afford it.
Let's find out what they actually build here
The point development is garbage. The developers care nothing of the existing problems and only about making money. Where is the water going to come from to supply this city? The power? I know my bill has went up. What about the traffic problem. Just because the illusion of a 15 minute city sounds good doesn't mean it's going to happen. Every person who moves there will have vehicles. With the Jordan river to the west and I-15 to the east how are 20,000 more people going to get around? This place is a choke point between utah and salt lake counties. Going to make everyone that already lives there misserable.
I hear you. Water is not going to be the problem at all. Traffic will be impacted, and no... it won't be a place for everyone for sure.
@scottdsteele where's your study on how water will not be impacted at all? How do you build a city without using water? How bout the garbage created, where's that going to be trucked to? 20,000 people have zero impact is backed up by what science? I live at the point right now. Do you? You put 20,000 more people in your neighborhoods and see what the standard of living is like afterwards.
It's not my study, but there are plenty of resources and studies that will enlighten one's understanding about our water supply and what is really used here. Less than 4% of our water is used for the population, and the vast majority of our water is used for agricultural use and the studies show that for every acre of farmland that's developed, there's a massive net savings in water usage, as sad as that is to see happen. Many people live in fear with respect to water because of the headlines, the narrative and the marketing to get us to conserve. The Great Salt Lake has suffered immensely due to poor water management and the low that it experienced a couple of years ago has sparked some big and long lasting changes that should restore that lake to where it needs to be. Our reservoir levels right now as we just passed the start of another water year in the first of Oct also show how good we are. None of this even touches on the immense amount of water beneath us in ground water. Water is a hot topic and we need to manage it better as our population expands.
The prison site was just that, a prison not corn fields. Urban people can rage against agg land all they want. We all go to the grocery store. Apples to Apples that site sould get only the water that the prison used.
What problems does this development solve? Housing? That's bs, 90% of the units offered the average Utahn cannot afford.
Garbage? Air pollution? Noise pollution? Your an advocate for the people of black rock.
Dan, i wish you the best, have a nice day