Directions and Parking

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Directions and Parking A. RAY OLPIN UNIVERSITY UNION THE UNIVERSITY OF UTAH Directions and Parking The A. Ray Olpin Union is accessible by car, campus shuttle, bus and TRAX. UTA BUS AND TRAX Just a 10 minute walk from the Rice Eccles TRAX Station, you can view the bus and TRAX schedules at rideuta.com. CABS AND SHUTTLES Ute Cab and Express Shuttle services are available from downtown Salt Lake City and the Salt Lake City Airport. Express Shuttle: expressshuttleutah.com 800-397-0773 Ute Cab: utecabco.com 801-359-7788 BY CAR From downtown Salt Lake City Take 100 south (turns into North Campus Drive) to Central Campus Drive. Turn right and continue to Union. Visitor parking is located in front of the building. From the South Take I-15 north to 215 east. Exit at Foothill Blvd. Take Foothill Blvd. to Mario Capecchi Drive. Turn right. Bear left; go under the Legacy Bridge and cross tracks to Wasatch Drive. Turn left on North Campus Drive and then left on Central Campus Drive. Continue driving past the Union to the visitor parking area. From the North Take I-15 south to I-80 east. Exit at Foothill Blvd. Take Foothill Blvd. to Mario Capecchi Drive. Turn right. Bear left; go under the Legacy Bridge and cross tracks to Wasatch Drive. Turn left on North Campus Drive and then left on Central Campus Drive. Continue driving past the Union to the visitor parking area. From the East or West Take I-80 and exit at Foothill Blvd. Take Foothill Blvd. to Mario Capecchi Drive. Turn right. Bear left; go under the Legacy Bridge and cross tracks to Wasatch Drive. Turn left on North Campus Drive and then left on Central Campus Drive. Continue driving past the Union to the visitor parking area. 200 South Central Campus Drive | 801-581-5888 A. RAY OLPIN UNIVERSITY UNION THE UNIVERSITY OF UTAH Directions and Parking CAMPUS SHUTTLES View the live shuttle tracker at uofubus.com. Visit the Commuter Services website for more shuttle information at parking.utah.edu or call them at 801-581-6415. PARKING Visitor Lot Located east of the building, view map below. One hour = $2.00 All Other Surrounding Lots Nearest are located behind and north of the building, view map below. No charge after 6 pm Require University parking permits before 6 pm Union Visitor Lots North Campus Drive Surrounding Lots Central Campus Drive Wasatch Drive 100 South Mario Capecchi Drive University Street University 200 South Central Campus Drive | 801-581-5888.
Recommended publications
  • The Mormon Trail
    Utah State University DigitalCommons@USU All USU Press Publications USU Press 2006 The Mormon Trail William E. Hill Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/usupress_pubs Part of the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Hill, W. E. (1996). The Mormon Trail: Yesterday and today. Logan, Utah: Utah State University Press. This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the USU Press at DigitalCommons@USU. It has been accepted for inclusion in All USU Press Publications by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@USU. For more information, please contact [email protected]. THE MORMON TRAIL Yesterday and Today Number: 223 Orig: 26.5 x 38.5 Crop: 26.5 x 36 Scale: 100% Final: 26.5 x 36 BRIGHAM YOUNG—From Piercy’s Route from Liverpool to Great Salt Lake Valley Brigham Young was one of the early converts to helped to organize the exodus from Nauvoo in Mormonism who joined in 1832. He moved to 1846, led the first Mormon pioneers from Win- Kirtland, was a member of Zion’s Camp in ter Quarters to Salt Lake in 1847, and again led 1834, and became a member of the first Quo- the 1848 migration. He was sustained as the sec- rum of Twelve Apostles in 1835. He served as a ond president of the Mormon Church in 1847, missionary to England. After the death of became the territorial governor of Utah in 1850, Joseph Smith in 1844, he was the senior apostle and continued to lead the Mormon Church and became leader of the Mormon Church.
    [Show full text]
  • Downtown Salt Lake City We’Re Not Your Mall
    DOWNTOWN SALT LAKE CITY WE’RE NOT YOUR MALL. WE’RE YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD. What if you took the richest elements of an eclectic, growing city and distilled them into one space? At The Gateway, we’re doing exactly that: taking a big city’s vital downtown location and elevating it, by filling it with the things that resonate most with the people who live, work, and play in our neighborhood. SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH STATE FOR BUSINESS STATE FOR STATE FOR #1 - WALL STREET JOURNAL, 2016 #1 BUSINESS & CAREERS #1 FUTURE LIVABILITY - FORBES, 2016 - GALLUP WELLBEING 2016 BEST CITIES FOR CITY FOR PROECTED ANNUAL #1 OB CREATION #1 OUTDOOR ACTIVITIES #1 OB GROWTH - GALLUP WELL-BEING 2014 - OUTSIDE MAGAZINE, 2016 - HIS GLOBAL INSIGHTS, 2016 LOWEST CRIME IN NATION FOR STATE FOR ECONOMIC #6 RATE IN U.S. #2 BUSINESS GROWTH #1 OUTLOOK RANKINGS - FBI, 2016 - PEW, 2016 - CNBC, 2016 2017 TOP TEN BEST CITIES FOR MILLENNIALS - WALLETHUB, 2017 2017 DOWNTOWN SALT LAKE CITY TRADE AREA .25 .5 .75 mile radius mile radius mile radius POPULATION 2017 POPULATION 1,578 4,674 8,308 MILLENNIALS 34.32% 31.95% 31.23% (18-34) EDUCATION BACHELOR'S DEGREE OR 36.75% 33.69% 37.85% HIGHER HOUSING & INCOME 2017 TOTAL HOUSING 1,133 2,211 3,947 UNITS AVERAGE VALUE $306,250 $300,947 $281,705 OF HOMES AVERAGE HOUSEHOLD $60,939 60,650 57,728 INCOME WORKFORCE TOTAL EMPLOYEES 5,868 14,561 36,721 SOURCES: ESRI AND NEILSON ART. ENTERTAINMENT. CULTURE. The Gateway is home to several unique entertainment destinations, including Wiseguys Comedy Club, The Depot Venue, Larry H.
    [Show full text]
  • The Geographical Analysis of Mormon Temple Sites in Utah
    Brigham Young University BYU ScholarsArchive Theses and Dissertations 1992 The Geographical Analysis of Mormon Temple Sites in Utah Garth R. Liston Brigham Young University - Provo Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd Part of the Geography Commons, and the Mormon Studies Commons BYU ScholarsArchive Citation Liston, Garth R., "The Geographical Analysis of Mormon Temple Sites in Utah" (1992). Theses and Dissertations. 4881. https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/4881 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by BYU ScholarsArchive. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of BYU ScholarsArchive. For more information, please contact [email protected], [email protected]. 3 the geographicalgeograp c ananalysisysls 0off mormormonon tetempletempiepie slsitessltestes in utah A thesis presented to the department of geography brigham young university in partial fulfillment of the requiaequirequirementsrementscements for the degree master of science by garth R listenliston december 1992 this thesis by garth R liston is accepted in its present form by the department of geography of brigham young university as satisfying the thesis requirement for the degree of master of science f c- H L ricirichardard H jackson 1 committeeoommittee chair alan H grey committecommifctemeflermeymere er i w i ige-e&e date laieialeidleaaleig- J 6tevstevtpvnstldepartmentni d- epartmentepartment chair n dedication0 0 this thesis is dedicated to my wonderful mother
    [Show full text]
  • Salt Lake City Arts Council Strategic Plan
    2017-2020 Salt Lake City Arts Council Strategic Plan 2017-2020 Introduction The Salt Lake City Council on the Arts was formed in 1976 at the request of Mayor Ted Wilson, who appointed its first Executive Director. The Council was created to help distribute funds to arts organizations within the City, taking the burden off the City Commission. By 1979 a nonprofit entity, The Salt Lake Arts Council Foundation, was established to manage funds designated for the arts organization and also begin programming of their own. The two staff members of the Foundation were City employees. In 1981, this new group moved into the Art Barn, located in the City’s Reservoir Park, when the space was vacated by the Salt Lake Arts Center. From that initial beginning, the organization now has six full-time City employees who, together with the Foundation board, have grown the original concept into a significant cultural entity in the City. The Salt Lake City Arts Council is the City’s designated local arts agency and uses its unique position as manager of both public and received-grant resources to leverage how the arts are supported and presented to the City. Through its work, the Council has created enduring connections between the arts and the public, cultivated future artists and arts organizations, given voice to community arts conversations and needs, provided resources for arts programming, offered education about the arts as well as support of arts education efforts, and impacted City policy affecting the arts. It has developed its own programs, as well, that have endured for decades and serve as models for other arts programming.
    [Show full text]
  • Non-Mormon Presence in 1880S Utah
    The Pennsylvania State University The Graduate School College of Earth and Mineral Sciences THE WASP IN THE BEEHIVE: NON-MORMON PRESENCE IN 1880S UTAH A Thesis in Geography by Samuel A. Smith c 2008 Samuel A. Smith Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Science August 2008 The thesis of Samuel A. Smith was read and approved1 by the following: Deryck W. Holdsworth Professor of Geography Thesis Adviser Roger Downs Professor of Geography Karl Zimmerer Professor of Geography Head of the Department of Geography 1. Signatures on file in the Graduate School. iii Abstract Recent studies have reconsidered the Mormon Culture Region in light of its 1880{1920 transition to American political and economic norms. While these studies emphasize conflicts between the Mormon establishment and the non-Mormon federal government, Mormon/non-Mormon relations within Utah have received little direct attention. Based on religious affiliations recorded in the 1880 federal census of Utah Territory, this study uses historical GIS to visualize the composition of Utah's \Mormon" and \non-Mormon" towns. The results highlight the extensive presence of religious minorities in Utah's settlements. Case studies of farm villages, mining camps, and urban neighborhoods probe the social and economic contexts of non-Mormon presence in Utah. These studies, based on Sanborn maps and city directories, explore the geographical mosaic of Mormon and non-Mormon residence and business activity. These variegated patterns, often absent from historical accounts of the region, enable localized analyses of the ensuing decades of cultural conflict, transformation and assimilation. Keywords: Mormons, non-Mormons, Mormon Culture Region, Utah, 1880 Cen- sus, historical demography.
    [Show full text]
  • Utah Women's Walk Oral Histories Directed by Michele Welch
    UTAH VALLEY UNIVERSITY Utah Valley University Library George Sutherland Archives & Special Collections Oral History Program Utah Women’s Walk Oral Histories Directed by Michele Welch Interview with Melissa (Missy) Larsen by Anne Wairepo December 7, 2018 Utah Women’s Walk TRANSCRIPTION COVER SHEET Interviewee: Melissa Wilson Larsen Interviewer: Anne Wairepo Place of Interview: George Sutherland Archives, Fulton Library, Utah Valley University Date of Interview: 7 December 2018 Recordist: Richard McLean Recording Equipment: Zoom Recorder H4n Panasonic HD Video Camera AG-HM C709 Transcribed by: Kristiann Hampton Audio Transcription Edit: Kristiann Hampton Reference: ML = Missy Larsen (Interviewee) AW= Anne Wairepo (Interviewer) SD = Shelli Densley (Assistant Director, Utah Women’s Walk) Brief Description of Contents: Missy Larsen describes her experiences growing up in Salt Lake City, Utah during the time her dad, Ted Wilson, was the mayor. She also explains her own experiences serving in student government during her school years. Missy talks about being a young wife and mother while working as the press secretary for Bill Orton. She further explains how she began her own public relations company, Intrepid. Missy details how she helped Tom Smart with publicity during the search for his daughter Elizabeth Smart who was abducted from her home in 2002. She talks about her position as chief of staff to Utah Attorney General Sean Reyes and her involvement in developing the SafeUT app, which is a crisis intervention resource for teens. She concludes the interview by talking about the joy she finds in volunteering her time to help refugees in Utah. NOTE: Interjections during pauses or transitions in dialogue such as uh and false starts and stops in conversations are not included in this transcript.
    [Show full text]
  • NIGHTLIFE in DOWNTOWN SALT LAKE CITY Downtown Salt Lake City Is a Vibrant Place to Be After Dark! Below Is a Listing of Downtown's Private Clubs
    NIGHTLIFE IN DOWNTOWN SALT LAKE CITY Downtown Salt Lake City is a vibrant place to be after dark! Below is a listing of downtown's private clubs. (All listings are Private Clubs for Members) AJ’s Deseret Lounge Club Dv8 Pitchers in Downtown 323 South Main Street 115 South West Temple Marriott Hotel Tavern Dance Club 75 South West Temple Hotel Bar Area 51 Crazy Goat Saloon 451 South 400 West 165 South West Temple Pool Hall Junkies Dance Club Private Club / Strip Bar 165 East 200 South Pool Hall Bar X Inn Heads Up 155 East 200 South 163 W. Pierpont Ave. Port O' Call Social Club Tavern Alternative Private Club 78 West 400 South Live Music / Sports Bar Bourbon Street Bar & Grill Kristauf's Social Club 372 South State Street 16 West Market Street Radio City Lounge Bar & Grill / Live Music Martini Bar 147 South State Street Tavern Cabana Club Macaroni Grill Bar in the 31 East 400 South Peery Hotel The Red Door Live Music / Piano Bar 110 West Broadway 57 West 200 South Private Club Martini Bar Cheers to You 315 South Main Street Market Street Oyster Bar Room 32 Neighborhood Bar Downtown 32 E. Exchange Place 48 West Market Street Private Club Club Axis Private Club / Seafood 108 South 500 West Restaurant Shaggy’s Living Room Dance Club 155 West 200 South Melinas in Shilo Inn Private Club Club Baci 206 South West Temple 140 West Pierpont Ave. Hotel Bar SkyBox Sports Grill & Private Club / Italian Arena Mo's Neighborhood Grill 4 S. Rio Grande in The Club Bambara in Hotel 358 South West Temple Gateway Monaco Bar & Grill Private Club & Sports Bar
    [Show full text]
  • Weber County to Salt Lake Commuter Rail Project; Salt Lake City, Utah
    FrontRunner North Rail Project Before-and-After Study (2013) Salt Lake City, Utah Learn more: www.transit.dot.gov/before-and-after-studies Weber County to Salt Lake Commuter Rail Project; Salt Lake City, Utah The Weber County to Salt Lake Commuter Rail Project, known as FrontRunner North, is a 44- mile commuter rail line extending north from downtown Salt Lake City through Ogden to the northern end of Weber County at Pleasant View, Utah. The project was planned, developed, and built by the Utah Transit Authority (UTA). FrontRunner North is the first commuter rail service in the Salt Lake City metropolitan area. UTA operates the commuter rail line as part of a region- wide transit system that includes local and express buses, bus rapid transit, and light rail. In early 2013, UTA opened FrontRunner South, a 40-mile extension of the commuter rail line extending south from downtown Salt Lake City to Orem, Utah. In September 2001, an alternatives analysis identified commuter rail in the north-south corridor as the preferred alternative for transit improvements in the corridor. The project entered preliminary engineering (PE) in December 2003, and advanced into final design (FD) in June 2005. UTA and FTA executed a Full Funding Grant Agreement (FFGA) for the project in June 2006. The project opened to service in May 2008. The accompanying figure is a map of FrontRunner North and the corridor it serves. Physical scope of the project The project extends over 44 miles from the Salt Lake Intermodal Center just west of downtown Salt Lake City to the northern terminus at the Pleasant View Station.
    [Show full text]
  • November 2006 the Bulgarian Community in Utah
    issue 1 newsletter november 2006 The Bulgarian Community in Utah SPECIAL OFFERS: On October 15th, 2006, several Bulgarians met in downtown Salt Lake City and established the Utah’s Friends of Bulgaria Club. The purpose of the club is to BULGARIAN TV promote the appreciation of the culture, traditions, and history of Bulgaria, as Bulgarians in the United well as to establish a forum for discussing political, social, and cultural issues re- States and Canada can lated to Bulgaria and the life of Bulgarians abroad. The membership of the club now watch 10 Bulgarian is free of charge and open to all Bulgarians and friends of Bulgaria. TV channels and 5 Euro- pean TV channels on their UPCOMING EVENTS home TVs, without the The Utah’s Friends of Bulgaria Club will meet for its second potluck party on need for a satellite dish! December 10th, 2006 at 2 pm at Belvedere Apartments on 29 S State St., behind High Speed Internet (DSL the ZCMI Center in downtown Salt Lake City. For this pre-Christmas gathering, or Cable) is required. the local folk dance ensemble “DUNA” has been invited to perform dances from Bulgaria, Rumania, and Hungary. • bTV • 7 SKAT Please bring your favorite dish, nonalcoholic drink, or a bottle of wine (no other • Bulgaria TV alcohol is allowed in the building!). The Belvedere Apartments have a secure • Fen TV access, so try to be in front of the building by 2:10 pm. For those who cannot • City TV make it on time, there will be a note on the door with a phone number to call.
    [Show full text]
  • Ballpark Neighborhood Master Plan
    CMP 6160 - Plan Making - Spring 2020 Department of City and Metropolitan Planning The University of Utah BALLPARK NEIGHBORHOOD MASTER PLAN May 2020 Contents Acknowledgments ...................................................................................................................... 3 Executive Summary [Meadow, Byron, Lily, Maddy] .................................................................... 4 Introduction and Community Profile ........................................................................................... 7 Plan Objectives ...................................................................................................................... 7 Definition of Area Boundaries ................................................................................................. 8 Community Profile .................................................................................................................. 9 Community Vision .....................................................................................................................32 Community Engagement .......................................................................................................32 Vision ....................................................................................................................................34 Focus Areas ..............................................................................................................................39 Focus Area 1: Reimagining Main Street: A New Centrality for Ballpark .................................39
    [Show full text]
  • Highlights Neighborhood Characteristics of TRAX And
    2014 | Volume 74, Number 1 Highlights Neighborhood Characteristics of TRAX • The Utah Transit Authority has invested almost $4.4 billion and FrontRunner Stations over the past 20 years in light rail and commuter rail transit along the Wasatch Front. John C. Downen, Senior Research Analyst • In 2010, almost 100,000 people, about 10 percent of Salt Lake County’s population, lived within a half-mile of an existing or future TRAX station. History of TRAX and FrontRunner • Approximately 12 percent of Salt Lake’s minority population The Utah Transit Authority began capital expenditures toward the lived within a half-mile of a light rail station in 2010. Nearly TRAX light rail system in 1994 and 1995. They were less than one-third of the population living near a station was minority $1.5 million in the first year and a little over $4.1 million in the versus 26 percent countywide. second year, but in 1996 UTA began investments in rolling stock (rail cars) and facilities (tracks, power systems, passenger stations, • Seventeen percent of Salt Lake County’s 2010 renter population lived within a half-mile of a TRAX station. These etc.) and total capital expenditures exceeded $26.5 million (all renters represented 51 percent of the population; amounts are constant 2013 dollars). The first TRAX line opened countywide, renters made up 29 percent of the population. in December 1999 and ran between downtown Salt Lake City and Sandy. A second line, between downtown Salt Lake and Rice- • While about one-third of all occupied dwelling units in Salt Eccles Stadium at the University of Utah, opened in 2001 and was Lake County in 2010 were renter occupied, 59 percent of extended to the university’s medical center by 2003.
    [Show full text]
  • Maintain and Enhance the Link Among 600/700 North Corridor Neighborhoods and the Rest of Salt Lake City
    CONNECTIONS Goal 1 | Maintain and enhance the link among 600/700 North corridor neighborhoods and the rest of Salt Lake City. The plan will maintain and enhance the corridor’s connection of neighborhoods to one another and to the rest of the city, for all transportation modes. How do we measure it? • Traffic performance • Bike connections • Transit connections • Pedestrian connections Assets Challenges • Generally, very little traffic delay at most • Poor existing transit connections, especially intersections connecting to downtown Salt Lake City and • Low traffic volumes west of I-15 the east side of I-15 • Good amount of roadway and right-of-way • Inconsistent bike connection, including to improve connections for other modes across the I-15 interchange and viaduct • Curb-adjacent sidewalks in some segments PUBLIC FEEDBACK: Things people like and don’t like “Large sidewalks and bike lanes” “Traffic flows” “East to west” 2 1 “Wide and open” “Convenient” 56 comments The 600/700 North corridor often has a narrow sidewalk, inconsistent bike lane, and little transit service, but there is lots of space to provide for these modes. 6 comments Chart Title Chart “Getting over I-15 on foot, bike or scooter is nearly impossible at the moment” CONNECTIONS Goal 2 | Link people and neighborhoods across 600/700 North. Make 600/700 North a seam rather than a barrier, with a focus on frequent, well-placed, and high-quality pedestrian crossings. How do we measure it? • Crossing location: spacing and • Crossing quality: length and access to destinations
    [Show full text]