Midtown Crossing at Turner Park is a seven-building, 16-acre mixed-use development in downtown Omaha, covering 297 luxury condominiums, 196 apartment units, and over 225,000 square feet of fine and casual dining, entertainment and shopping. The majority of Midtown Crossing's restaurant partners and retailers are businesses in Omaha, including Wohlner's Neighborhood Grocery & amp; Deli, Afternoon, and nationally famous The Gray Plume, the greenest restaurant in America according to the Green Restaurant Association.
Built around an expanded and revitalized Turner Park, the neighborhood is nestled between Farnam and Dodge Streets and 31st and 33rd Streets. It is located directly east of Mutual of Omaha headquarters and minutes from downtown Omaha, CenturyLink Center Omaha, Eppley Airfield, Henry Doorly Omaha Zoo, Old Market, and a host of other local attractions.
LEED Certified Green Community, Midtown Crossing is owned by East Campus Realty, a subsidiary of Mutual of Omaha. This is the first major project associated with Destination Midtown, a public/private partnership focused on restoring historic downtown Omaha to fame.
The free community event, held at Turner Park 7-acre, is a hallmark of development and includes concerts (such as Jazz on the Green and Play with Fire), festivals and health and wellness meetings.
Video Midtown Crossing at Turner Park
Histori
2002
Representatives from big and small businesses in downtown Omaha, neighborhood associations, residents and city leaders met in Mutual of Omaha to discuss concerns about the future of the environment. The result of this meeting is Destination Midtown, a project that seeks to study the environment and identify revitalization opportunities.
2005
May 18 Mutual of Omaha announces a feasibility study to determine whether mixed urban environments are used accordingly for underutilized property adjacent to the headquarters building.
2006
Oct. 19: Mutual announces plans to continue with Midtown Crossing and introduces details of the project, featuring a million square feet of commercial and residential space in seven buildings, an expanded and revitalized Turner Park. The ECI Investment Advisor, conducting a feasibility study, is named the project developer.
2007
September. 20: Land was officially damaged after extensive site preparation including dismantling of not less than eight buildings and the removal of 10,000 dirt trucks.
2009
Nov. 6: Years of planning, significant investment and hard work began to work when Midtown Crossing's first business, Marcus Midtown Cinema, was open. Prairie Life Fitness soon followed, launching a cascade of openings.
2010
May 18: Exactly five years after announcing a development-led feasibility study, the community gathered in Revitalized Turner Park to officially cut the ribbon at Midtown Crossing.
Since its opening, Midtown Crossing has celebrated a number of achievements, including:
- September 2010: Urban Land Magazine recognizes Midtown Crossing as one of ten projects worldwide that "embody the synergy of public/private partnerships."
- December 2010: Midtown Crossing The Gray Plume earns the distinction as the first three stars of SustainaBuild (TM) Certified Green RestaurantÃ,î by the Green Restaurant AssociationÃ,î.
- July 2010: The summer concert concert in Omaha, Jazz on the Green debuted at his new home in Turner Park, Midtown Crossing development center.
- February 2011: Omaha City Center Inc. named Midtown Crossing the winner of the Visionary Award for 2011, honoring its development for "its commitment to revitalizing the city center through time, resources and leadership."
- November 2011: Midtown Crossing receives international applause, winning two prestigious American Property Awards - one in the "Mixed Usage Architecture" category, the second for "Retail Architecture."
- June 2012: The revitalized Omaha Turner Park becomes the first city park in Nebraska to offer free Wi-Fi internet service. (Midtown Crossing pioneered and funded the repair.)
- November 2012: Omaha welcomes its newest holiday tradition with the inaugural launch of Miracle on Farnam (now Miracle at Midtown), Midtown Crossing holiday celebration.
- July 2013: The new Pavilion at Turner Park debuts with the 2013 Jazz on the Green kickoff.
- August 2014: Midtown Crossing receives the 2014 Beautiful Award from Keep Omaha Beautiful, an award given to a person, organization or company that has enhanced the aesthetic value of our community through property development, planting and/or art.
Maps Midtown Crossing at Turner Park
Awards
Majalah Omaha - Best of Omaha
2011-2014 Best Condos & amp; Apartemen
American Property Award
Best Architecture & Architecture Mixed-Use 2011 Best Retail Architecture
Omaha by Design
Penghargaan Laurels 2011
American Council of Engineering Companies
ACEC 2011 Award for Excellence Technique
CREW
Progress Year 2010
Downtown Omaha Inc.
2011 Visionary Pioneer
Omaha World Herald
Top Park Pick 2010
Readers
Readers Choice Awards 2010 - Best Condo Development
Readers Choice Awards 2012 - Apartemen Terbaik - Midtown
Readers Choice Awards 2012 - Best Condo Development
Urban Land Magazine
2010 - One of Ten projects around the World to Achieve Public/Private Partnership Synergy
Events
Midtown Crossing has a series of free community events at Turner Park, including:
- Midtown Car Show
- Miracle at Midtown
- Monday Night in Movie
- Omaha Performing Arts' Jazz on the Green
- End of the Summer Concert Series
- Wednesday Heating/Cooling
- Yoga Rocks the Park
- Zydeco Festival
Turner Park is a bit of a populer in the morning and the amal yang menyenangkan dan league bola bocce.
Pengecer & amp; Restaurant
- Sore
- Arlan's Barbershop
- Black Oak Grill
- Boomer 1490
- I belong to Keuangan Callahan
- Winery Laredo Chicago Dawg House
- Cold Stone Creamery/Rocky Mountain Chocolate
- Canvas Corky
- CRAVE
- Penglihatan Definitif
- Delice
- Element of Omaha Midtown Crossing
- Pembersih Mode
- Salon Day Spa Garbo
- GNC The Gray Plume
- Hutch
- Terapija Fisik Makovicka
- Marcus Midtown Cinema
- Kuku NT
- Prairie Life Fitness
- Ketentuan is The Gray Plume
- Spielbound Board Game Cafe
- Thirst Tea Cafe
- Wohlner
- Z-Wireless
- Lobby controlled access with concierge service
- Private access, climate-controlled parking with elevator access to every condo floor
- Family room with 9 floors in Club Room
- The granite table
- Wooden floor in living room and dining room
- Stainless steel equipment
- Most units have a balcony with gas hook up
- Fireplace available
- Pet friendly life
- free gym membership
- Free parking
- Concierge service
- patrol patrol 24/7
- Accessed access entries
- Washer and dryer included
- Discount to Midtown Crossing retailers
- Roof structure/canopy "Saddlespan" signature that can be illuminated with high efficiency LED lighting effect
- The stage is expanded temporarily (54 ft ÃÆ'â ⬠"48 ft) capability
- Concrete area for dancing
- The back of the home staging area for the event
- Smart location and transport links.
- Environmental preservation.
- A dense, complete, and connected environment.
- High performance, green construction and technology.
- Omaha History
- Midtown Omaha
Condominium
Midtown Crossing's nearly 300 luxury condos are located near downtown Omaha, the University of Nebraska Medical Center and Creighton University. Options include one bedroom, two bedroom and penthouse unit.
The Condominium Facility Includes:
Apartment
Midtown Crossing's development covers nearly 200 apartments - one bedroom and two floor plan rooms - for rent.
Facilities Included:
Turner Park
The origins of Turner Park date back to 1900. Charles Turner, a Nebraska pioneer and prominent real estate professional, donated the original land into town for use as a public park. (It was a six-hectare prize The park grew up to 7.5 acres with the construction of Midtown Crossing.) Turner wanted the park to be known as Curtiss Turner Park in memory of his 35-year-old son Curtiss C. Turner. A prominent civil engineer, Curtiss Turner was killed in an avalanche in 1898 while working in Alaska's Klondike state at Chilkoot Pass.
Today, the revitalized and expanded Turner Park is one of Omaha's top parks and a popular venue for community events such as concerts (including Jazz on the Green and Play with Fire), festivals and health and wellness meetings.
Pavilion at Turner Park
Built in 2013, Pavilion at Turner Park provides a permanent stage (44 feet x 24 ft) and infrastructure, eliminating the need to install and destroy temporary staging facilities for every new show at Turner Park.
Other features include:
Holland Basham Architects, the executive architect of the entire Crossing Crosstown development, designed the pavilion, funded by private donations through the Omaha Community Foundation.
"We want to create an iconic structure that is easy to remember and improve the current environment.You do not see anything like this," said Tim Holland, principal Holland Basham Architects.
Parking
Midtown Crossing offers parking
for more than 3,000 vehicles. Two public parking garages are accessible from 33th, Farnam and Harney Streets. The first three hours of free parking ($ 1 for every hour thereafter - maximum cost $ 6).
Short-term meter parking (2 hours max) is available along Farnam Street and inside Turner Park, accessible from 31st Avenue.
Green Initiative
Midtown Crossing is one of the first projects in the country to achieve Leadership Certification in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) under the Green Building Council's pilot Environmental Development certification program. This is the only project selected to participate in Nebraska or Iowa. LEED for Neighborhood Development recognizes projects that protect and promote overall health, natural environments and quality of life in their communities through:
Midtown Crossing's 132-room Element Hotel by Westin LEED Silver certified, the first hotel built in Omaha to achieve this recognition. Midtown Crossing apartments and condos have an ongoing recycling program for all residents. The pure white LED holiday light development uses only about 10 percent of the electric power of a traditional incandescent holiday lamp.
See also
References
Source of the article : Wikipedia