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UNH Hockey Off Season Thread 2026

Latest developments on an important project taking shape on the western edge of the UNH Titletown campus ...

I saw this the other day on Fosters but I doubt it goes beyond the academic building. Why UNH would get into the rental business and there are the 500 units worth of people coming to? This is not Tuscan Village in Salem, this is basically Lee and the though they can fill retail and restaurants is laughable. Half of the retain in Durham is empty.
 
I saw this the other day on Fosters but I doubt it goes beyond the academic building. Why UNH would get into the rental business and there are the 500 units worth of people coming to? This is not Tuscan Village in Salem, this is basically Lee and the though they can fill retail and restaurants is laughable. Half of the retain in Durham is empty.
Location and visibility, norbie. Think of it this way, and I'll let Snives speak to the core mapping project and its logistics ... if we've seen past trends over the last two plus generations, it's been the withering of downtown businesses in the face of more available alternatives on the fringes of town, but closer to highways to enable broader access to folks not within walking distance of a downtown hotspot. If downtown Titletown is withering, it's probably in large part due to being "out of sight, out of mind" to all but UNH students and resident townies. I think we can all agree that the lack of parking in the downtown core is not welcoming to outsiders, whereas a site out at the far end of Main St. out and around Channel 11 and the agricultural areas would not only have the opportunity for a lot of additional parking, BUT also added visibility to out of towners who might be trekking along Route 4. If you're a Concord pol, for example, if you're coming to UNH, this is the first area you see from the highway. Right now, there's very little activity you can see from Route 4, except a smokestack, a stadium and barns. This project will change that.

I also think you're underestimating the growth of some of the surrounding communities, starting with Dover but also including places like Barrington, Epping, Northwoods, Lee and Newmarket. Before we landed in Effingwoods, we spent a decade plus in Dover, and even while it was beginning to grow back then, its continued growth as an extension of the Portsmouth/Pease hub is a huge factor in the area, and if the core project can embed a certain amount of sustained business activity, I think the surrounding communities will cap that off nicely as an alternative to the hustle and bustle (and cost) of downtown Portsmouth, an avoidance of Rochester (which has ambitious plans developing along Route 11), and the probable gap caused from the demise of the Fox Run Mall before the Torrington folks get up and running with their Seacoast Landing megaproject. The latter situation is both the opportunity (i.e. it'll probably be another 5 years until they completely build out Seacoast Landing at the old Fox run site), but also the need for urgency in acting on these UNH West Campus plans.

Maybe not Tuscan Village ... but as a concept, I'm pretty sure I've advocated on here before about a possible "Wildcat Village" before, and this may be tentative first steps towards such a vision. More competitive Hockey and Football (and Soccer?) programs wouldn't hurt in filling some of that hotel space in season ... if this was me in charge of such a project, I'd take a satchel of NIL money with me down to North Carolina and get our former Men's Soccer coach to head up this project, what with it being in his own hometown, and with the potential lure of money (and growth beyond sports) in a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity ...

If you're gonna dream, you might as well dream big. And then we can move along to the "NH Beanpot" project next ,,, :) :) :) :) :)
 
Location and visibility, norbie. Think of it this way, and I'll let Snives speak to the core mapping project and its logistics ... if we've seen past trends over the last two plus generations, it's been the withering of downtown businesses in the face of more available alternatives on the fringes of town, but closer to highways to enable broader access to folks not within walking distance of a downtown hotspot. If downtown Titletown is withering, it's probably in large part due to being "out of sight, out of mind" to all but UNH students and resident townies. I think we can all agree that the lack of parking in the downtown core is not welcoming to outsiders, whereas a site out at the far end of Main St. out and around Channel 11 and the agricultural areas would not only have the opportunity for a lot of additional parking, BUT also added visibility to out of towners who might be trekking along Route 4. If you're a Concord pol, for example, if you're coming to UNH, this is the first area you see from the highway. Right now, there's very little activity you can see from Route 4, except a smokestack, a stadium and barns. This project will change that.

I also think you're underestimating the growth of some of the surrounding communities, starting with Dover but also including places like Barrington, Epping, Northwoods, Lee and Newmarket. Before we landed in Effingwoods, we spent a decade plus in Dover, and even while it was beginning to grow back then, its continued growth as an extension of the Portsmouth/Pease hub is a huge factor in the area, and if the core project can embed a certain amount of sustained business activity, I think the surrounding communities will cap that off nicely as an alternative to the hustle and bustle (and cost) of downtown Portsmouth, an avoidance of Rochester (which has ambitious plans developing along Route 11), and the probable gap caused from the demise of the Fox Run Mall before the Torrington folks get up and running with their Seacoast Landing megaproject. The latter situation is both the opportunity (i.e. it'll probably be another 5 years until they completely build out Seacoast Landing at the old Fox run site), but also the need for urgency in acting on these UNH West Campus plans.

Maybe not Tuscan Village ... but as a concept, I'm pretty sure I've advocated on here before about a possible "Wildcat Village" before, and this may be tentative first steps towards such a vision. More competitive Hockey and Football (and Soccer?) programs wouldn't hurt in filling some of that hotel space in season ... if this was me in charge of such a project, I'd take a satchel of NIL money with me down to North Carolina and get our former Men's Soccer coach to head up this project, what with it being in his own hometown, and with the potential lure of money (and growth beyond sports) in a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity ...

If you're gonna dream, you might as well dream big. And then we can move along to the "NH Beanpot" project next ,,, :) :) :) :) :)
The powers that be have made downtown Durham very inhospitable. And its not just the parking. I'm minutes away and honestly can't remember the last time I was there.
 
Everyone should check out the current Ocean Mapping and Hydrographic Center (OMHC) on the “other side of the tracks,” if you have not already done so, as it is a most impressive facility. My longtime UNH undergrad friend and colleague that I mentioned in my previous post spent his first 15 years or so as a research assistant professor at the Jackson Estuarine Lab (JEL) on Durham Point of Great Bay before he moved to the OMHC when it opened in 2000. As wonderful as the JEL and its setting are, the place is small and can be lonely for researchers, whereas the OMHC is anything but that. The Edge Complex promises to be even larger and should create its own hub of academic activity, maybe a mini-version of Triangle Park in North Carolina? I know that Durham had grand plans for the industrial park west of town on the north side of Rte 4 back in the “Cabletron days,” which never expanded much. But, I think that this Edge complex thing could restart that earlier industrial park complex vision also.
 
The powers that be have made downtown Durham very inhospitable. And its not just the parking. I'm minutes away and honestly can't remember the last time I was there.
Me too, Felgie. And it's a shame, it didn't always used to be this way ... for me, maybe it's due in small part to being present at the original Jackson's Landing rink skating with our then 6 year old daughter the night before its roof collapsed ('96), which was when we were living in Dover before we built the WIS Estate in Effingwoods. That, and another close call at the 2013 Boston Marathon with our youngest in tow ... the Butterfly Effect in full force, stories for another day ...
 
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Location and visibility, norbie. Think of it this way, and I'll let Snives speak to the core mapping project and its logistics ... if we've seen past trends over the last two plus generations, it's been the withering of downtown businesses in the face of more available alternatives on the fringes of town, but closer to highways to enable broader access to folks not within walking distance of a downtown hotspot. If downtown Titletown is withering, it's probably in large part due to being "out of sight, out of mind" to all but UNH students and resident townies. I think we can all agree that the lack of parking in the downtown core is not welcoming to outsiders, whereas a site out at the far end of Main St. out and around Channel 11 and the agricultural areas would not only have the opportunity for a lot of additional parking, BUT also added visibility to out of towners who might be trekking along Route 4. If you're a Concord pol, for example, if you're coming to UNH, this is the first area you see from the highway. Right now, there's very little activity you can see from Route 4, except a smokestack, a stadium and barns. This project will change that.

I also think you're underestimating the growth of some of the surrounding communities, starting with Dover but also including places like Barrington, Epping, Northwoods, Lee and Newmarket. Before we landed in Effingwoods, we spent a decade plus in Dover, and even while it was beginning to grow back then, its continued growth as an extension of the Portsmouth/Pease hub is a huge factor in the area, and if the core project can embed a certain amount of sustained business activity, I think the surrounding communities will cap that off nicely as an alternative to the hustle and bustle (and cost) of downtown Portsmouth, an avoidance of Rochester (which has ambitious plans developing along Route 11), and the probable gap caused from the demise of the Fox Run Mall before the Torrington folks get up and running with their Seacoast Landing megaproject. The latter situation is both the opportunity (i.e. it'll probably be another 5 years until they completely build out Seacoast Landing at the old Fox run site), but also the need for urgency in acting on these UNH West Campus plans.

Maybe not Tuscan Village ... but as a concept, I'm pretty sure I've advocated on here before about a possible "Wildcat Village" before, and this may be tentative first steps towards such a vision. More competitive Hockey and Football (and Soccer?) programs wouldn't hurt in filling some of that hotel space in season ... if this was me in charge of such a project, I'd take a satchel of NIL money with me down to North Carolina and get our former Men's Soccer coach to head up this project, what with it being in his own hometown, and with the potential lure of money (and growth beyond sports) in a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity ...

If you're gonna dream, you might as well dream big. And then we can move along to the "NH Beanpot" project next ,,, :) :) :) :) :)
You mentioned the growth of surrounding communities - and I just wanted to mention the continued growth of the Pease hub for biotech as I believe Lonza is trying to expand their manufacturing campus/footprint in that area. While I don’t think they will ever get within sniffing distance of the biotech hub that is Cambridge/Boston, it does provide an alternative for those that may not want all the hustle/bustle of living in a big city.

I imagine a fair amount of those workers likely come from Dover, Durham etc, given the higher prices in Portsmouth. Perhaps this planned project in Durham will continue the growth going on in the seacoast area.

Bringing more business into Durham certainly can’t hurt, and perhaps newcomers will see the Whitt on the other end of campus and start to get a bit interested in who plays there? Having a winning product certainly helps this equation significantly…
 
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