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Created2010-01-14
Description

The City of Chandler developed the South Arizona Avenue Entry Corridor Study in 2006, setting forth a vision for the development of the corridor between Dr. A.J. Chandler Park and the new SanTan Freeway, ¾ mile to the south. Between downtown and the freeway is the corridor that the City

The City of Chandler developed the South Arizona Avenue Entry Corridor Study in 2006, setting forth a vision for the development of the corridor between Dr. A.J. Chandler Park and the new SanTan Freeway, ¾ mile to the south. Between downtown and the freeway is the corridor that the City intends to see redeveloped, with mixed residential and commercial uses to create a dynamic new “front door” for Chandler. The purpose of these design guidelines is to guide zoning requests within the South Arizona Avenue Corridor to achieve the objectives of the Chandler General Plan. The overall goal of these objectives is to implement the vision for South Arizona Avenue. The guidelines address the major design aspects of new office, retail and residential buildings in the corridor. Design Guidelines are not building or streetscape designs; they provide design direction so that each project’s architectural design will reinforce the City’s strategic intentions as this important area of the city responds to its new role as Chandler’s “front door.” These guidelines also identify streetscape design principles for South Arizona Avenue with the objective of coordinating public and private design in the Corridor.

ContributorsVollom, Judith L. (Author of dialog) / Vollom, Thomas M. (Author of dialog)
Created1994
DescriptionStudents learn "he/she will/shall eat."
ContributorsVollom, Judith L. (Author of dialog) / Vollom, Thomas M. (Author of dialog)
Created1994
Description

Students learn "He/she/they I came in."

ContributorsVollom, Judith L. (Author of dialog) / Vollom, Thomas M. (Author of dialog)
Created1994
DescriptionStudents learn verb and sentence structure, "He or she lives/dwells/leaves."
ContributorsVollom, Judith L. (Author of dialog) / Vollom, Thomas M. (Contributor)
Created1994
DescriptionWords like "moon, sun, flower, tree, star earth,, drum"- words for the seasons, and "The sky is singing for someone to dance.".
ContributorsVollom, Judith L. (Author of dialog) / Vollom, Thomas M. (Author of dialog)
Created1994
DescriptionStudents learn names for animals of the Ojibwe environment- mink, weasel, loon, fox, bear, moose, fish, buffalo and duck.
ContributorsVollom, Judith L. (Author of dialog) / Vollom, Thomas M. (Author of dialog)
Created1994
DescriptionStudents learn locatives, combined with inanimate nouns- "to the gas station/school/store."
ContributorsVollom, Judith L. (Author of dialog) / Vollom, Thomas M. (Author of dialog)
Created1994
DescriptionStudents learn inanimate nouns like "town, school, college, store, gas station etc."
ContributorsVollom, Judith L. (Author of dialog) / Vollom, Thomas M. (Author of dialog)
Created1994
DescriptionStudents learn third-person plural- "They are glad, they are hungry."
ContributorsVollom, Judith L. (Author of dialog) / Vollom, Thomas M. (Author of dialog)
Created1994
Description

Students learn second personal plural verbs and sentence forms- "You all are glad, you all arrive"