Suzette Hatfield
Playing “Building Bingo,” showing how most of the buildings contribute to most of the goals of the design ordinance.
Says SandRidge focused on own needs and convenience, not a factor in the ordinance
Rod Baker
Board chair just told Preservation Oklahoma structural issues won’t be considered
Katie Friddle
Preservation Oklahoma director is reminding Board of Adjustment of statements by state preservation officers that the eligibility process for listing on the National Register of Historic Places shouldn’t be a part of this discussion
Williamson
Your job today is easy – the SandRidge proposal is not in compliance with design guidelines.
Live Blogging: Barrett Williamson, Keep Downtown Urban
He’s doing another powerpoint… “history will be written today. Whether we will be remembered in a good light or a bad light.” Williamson reminds the Board of Adjustment is charged with ensuring Downtown Design guidelines are followed. Says board was misinformed about facade on the India Temple building, thousands of examples of similar buildings restored.
Live Blogging: The SandRidge Energy/Preservation Oklahoma Battle
Michael Dunn is absent from today’s Board of Adjustment meeting; Jeff Austin has recused himself again. That means all three present must agree on a motion if there is to be a decision today.
Downtown OKC Inc., Jane Jenkins Endorse SandRidge Commons Project
Just a couple weeks after Jane Jenkins helped host the National Main Streets conference at the Cox Convention Center, she signed the following letter which has been sent to the Oklahoma City Board of Adjustment as it considers the SandRidge Commons project – which proposes tearing down six buildings (they will hear the issue again on Thursday):
Change on Downtown Design Review Committee?
The city council agenda includes an appointment of Stan Carroll to the committee to replace Anthony McDermid. Discuss amongst yourselves
Is All of the Information Presented to the Board of Adjustment Accurate?
SandRidge Energy attorney Frank Hill told the board the India Temple, YMCA and Kermac buildings were all empty for three decades. But then we hear this:
My name is Brian Young. Back in March 2006, I was hired by Kerr McGee as a legal contractor to work on environmental litigation. Initially, 5 of us were assigned to go through various reports and files. Due to the quantity of files for this particular project, there was no room in the regular Kerr McGee tower for us to go through everything. So KM put all of us over in the India Temple building. At some point, our employment shifted from Kerr McGee to Tronox (in fact, I think it shifted within the first week or so)
I worked there from March 2006 until January of 2007, when the project was completed. The number of people working in that building varied over the course of the year, but it ranged from 5 people up to about 10 or 12. We worked on the 4th floor of India Temple. All the lighting, electrical outlets, and plumbing still functioned. Kerr McGee/Tronox sent over some IT guys that summer to hook up computers and high speed internet access. They ran standard ethernet cables through the walls and ceiling as well.
The only safety hazards we ever encountered were a warning that the middle of floor could not hold the hundreds of file boxes we were searching through (we had up to 200 on the floor at one time with no issues), and difficulty in going down the old emergency stairs when a transformer exploded and left half of downtown without power (there were no emergency lights installed in the stairway and they had to send over someone with a flashlight).
Now, no one may have had their permanent office in that building, but it was continuously in use. While I only worked on that one project, my understanding is that the India Temple building was where KM sent various overflow projects that were too large to handle in their tower.
We’ve also heard over and over again from those supporting demolition of the buildings that if they were good candidates for redevelopment that a person would have done so long ago. But then Doug Loudenback reminds of this 2005 comment by former Kerr-McGee Chief Executive Luke Corbett:
Corbett said his company has fielded numerous offers for the properties over the past decade, but he said the ideas or timing was never quite right.
“What’s captured our attention is what has happened to the downtown area after MAPS,” Corbett said. “If you look at the momentum we have in this city and the growth that’s occurring downtown, it’s breathtaking.”
Why?
It’s been awhile since we’ve hit up the most simple form of journalism there is: a situation captured so well by a single photo that sending the photo with the question “Why?” pretty much gets to the heart of the matter. And so we have our latest “why?” which I’ll be sending to Jim Cowan, director of the Bricktown Association (for one more week) and planning director Russell Claus.

When did the green space along the canal become a parking lot? We're seeing this most weekend evenings.




