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Live/work in Oklahoma City

I am really drawn to live/work spaces like these ones here in Oklahoma City’s new Wheeler District. (Additional project info can be found over here.) We have some examples of this in Toronto, but I wouldn’t say it’s commonly done. And oftentimes they don’t work at all. More often than not, these spaces seem to just get used as strictly residential (which is okay).

But there are some arguably successful examples that we can point to. CityPlace is maybe one. When the area was first getting developed, retail would have been an extremely difficult use to underwrite. It was a development island. And so live/work suites were introduced at grade along much of the area’s main artery.

The area did eventually get new dedicated retail, but its live/work suites also started taking on more “work” as demand in the area grew. Today, nobody is going to confuse it with Bloor Street, but importantly, the ground floor was able to change and adapt. And this is one of the great benefits, or at least promises, of live/work: you get additional flexibility.

Personally, I would love to have a live/work space. I’d use it to incubate new ideas and sell random stuff. And I have a feeling that, given the opportunity, many others would do the same. So I plan to spend some more time thinking and writing about this topic. If any of you have shining examples of live/work successes, please share them in the comment section below.

2 Comments

  1. Judith Martin

    In the UK (in England, anyway, not sure about the other countries) local planning authorities have been lukewarm at best about live/work, because of the different local taxation regimes. Our domestic council tax is a farce, based on property values from 1991, and leading to poor authorities taxing their people far harder than rich ones. But business rates are set by central government and the revenue split between central and local. Is it different in Canada or the US? I’d really like to know how it’s made to work. I’m certain it should be encouraged, not least as so many large retail outlets go bust and are effectively unlettable.

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  2. Jon Cummings

    Canary District, live/work spaces facing Mill Street from the first phase of development are pretty successful. Light medical service (optometrist, naturpath) next to similar units that as used for residential.

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