Vision unveiled for 40 acres of land in the Menomonee Valley
Design charette concepts revealed for six key sites
Design charette concepts revealed for six key sites Back to the full release.
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NOTE: This press release was submitted to Urban Milwaukee and was not written by an Urban Milwaukee writer. While it is believed to be reliable, Urban Milwaukee does not guarantee its accuracy or completeness.
Recent Press Releases by Menomonee Valley Partners
Valley Week Features Urban Nature & Outdoor Exploration
Sep 19th, 2022 by Menomonee Valley PartnersValley Week runs from September 24 to October 1 in Milwaukee’s Menomonee River Valley
Menomonee Valley Partners, Urban Ecology Center Complete Transformation of 24-Acre Brownfield
Aug 25th, 2020 by Menomonee Valley PartnersMulti-year campaign included creation of Three Bridges Park and Menomonee Valley UEC branch, expansion of Hank Aaron State Trail
Valley Businesses Join in Supporting Housing First Effort
Nov 11th, 2019 by Menomonee Valley PartnersWith a lead gift from We Energies, Valley businesses are contributing to provide housing to the homeless
This looks great. I would use it all. Let’s do it.
The plans described in in this article neglect to consider two major
advantages of this area that will soon become crucial.
Climate collapse is going to cut us off from sources of some things we need.
Reasons include:
Some sources will be unable to produce under new conditions
Paths between ourselves and sources being changed, crowded, hazardous or blocked
Costs of producing and shipping some things we need will be prohibitive.
Forced new needs will drain funds from existing needs and activities.
These factors could force us to produce to meet our own
needs, or induce us to meet other’s needs.
All such problems will intensify if we don’t use
this area’s strategically critical access to rail and navigable water.
While a diverse economy needs to consider entertainment, retail, hospitality
and other elements, they can be accommodated elsewhere.
The highest uses for this area will be to protect us from the effects of these new problems.
Lastly, such use will produce more jobs and economic payback per acre than the existing proposals.