The developers in Sarasota have had their say; now it’s our turn. On May 8, the Sarasota County Commission will consider changing the county’s long-range land use plans called Sarasota 2050. At TWIS, we believe that long-range planning is a special kind of public process, and we spent a lazy afternoon pondering the best ways this could possibly go.
Read more ›Post Tagged with: "planning"
“It’s so much more than density” – getting the conversation right
Let’s just skip to the punch line: The density discussion in Sarasota is backwards. This article is devoted to rearranging the discussion in the right order.
Read more ›How to handle Wal-Mart
We’ve used our SRiQ to figure out how, if a Wal-Mart is indeed coming, to make it fit the vision of a strong, healthy, thriving Sarasota. What is your take on Wal-Mart, the Sarasota Comprehensive Plan and future-oriented infrastructure?
Read more ›Voices Carry: Digital exchange and the gift of community
This Week In Sarasota is devoted to building a better community and finding new ways to expand the number of voices and look for solutions. We are trying to focus on a couple of “game-changers” that will both fill gaps and add to our great downtown.
Read more ›Autopsy of a Deal: Beneva and Fruitville
In the tech world, project managers have a post-project meeting called a post mortem to step back and see what the hell happened. So that’s what SRiQ is going to do with the story we did about the intersection of Fruitville and Beneva Roads. To recap, the city of Sarasota received two bids for a piece of publicly-owned property at the corner of Beneva and Fruitville Road: one for $1.4 million-ish and another for $3 million. So naturally the city commission, working on behalf of the public and its land [...]
Read more ›SIM City SRQ – You plan Fruitville and Beneva
There’s a land-use cage match underway on Fruitville Road. The city has agreed to sell a piece of land at the corner of Fruitville and Beneva Roads to Benderson, the mall developer who wants to put — what else — a strip mall there. This move was controversial among some city commissioners, who thought the $1.4 million sales price was too low. On July 2, another investor, Commodore Realty, offered $3 million in cash. They would put multi-family residential, mixed-use development there, along with banks and a restaurant on the [...]
Read more ›






















