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Salt Lake magazine offers an insightful and dynamic coverage of city life, Utah lore and community stories about the people places and great happenings weaving together the state’s vibrant present with its rich past. Its Community section highlights the pulse of Salt Lake City and around the state, covering local events, cultural happenings, dining trends and urban developments. From emerging neighborhoods and development to engaging profiles long-form looks at newsmakers and significant cultural moments, Salt Lake magazine keeps readers informed about the evolving lifestyle in Utah.

In its Utah Lore coverage, the magazine dives deep into the state’s historical and cultural fabric, uncovering fascinating stories of Native American heritage, pioneer history, and regional legends. Whether exploring ghost towns, untold tales of early settlers, or modern folklore, Salt Lake magazine connects readers with the roots of Utah’s identity.

The Community section emphasizes the people and organizations shaping Utah’s present-day communities. Through stories of local heroes, grassroots movements, and social initiatives, the magazine fosters a sense of belonging and civic pride. It often spotlights efforts that promote inclusivity, sustainability, and progress, giving voice to the diverse communities that make up the state.

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bestofthebeehivenorthslc

Best of the Beehive – North Salt Lake

By Best of the Beehive

Every year the list is different. We don’t do categories, we don’t fill in forms, we don’t count votes. We just pick our brains and everyone else’s for the coolest, newest and unexpected superlatives in the Beehive State. Every year we surprise ourselves and are delighted at the discoveries. You too will be surprised and delighted. And, no doubt, disgruntled. Because we left out one of your favorites. Let us know.

Best Unexpected Dessert, Strawberry Nachos at Last Course – It’s really tough to ruin nachos, but it’s also a challenge to up the ante and create a new type of nacho. Last Course does it with their incredible Strawberry Nachos. Dip white, milk, and dark chocolate “chips” into decadent strawberry “salsa” and officially put nachos in both the savory and sweet columns of your food brain. 835 W. East Promontory, Farmington, 801-410-4708, lastcourse.com

Hive Winery Raspberry, Honey Wine – Ah, mead. The drink of ancient warriors and those who lived before modern booze making provided us with limitless options. The Hive Winery is resurrecting honey-wine and giving it new life. Stop by their tasting room and sample the award-winning, and mouth-watering, Raspberry Honey Wine before the secret gets out. 1220 W. 450 North, Layton, 801-546-1997, thehivewinery.com

Best Savory Waffle, Honey Chipotle Pastrami at Waffled – The savory waffle is a divisive food, but Waffled, an innocuous booth in the middle of Station Park, can mend the relationships of savory waffle lovers and sweet waffle purists. The Honey Chipotle Pastrami Waffle brings out the dense heartiness of the liege waffle while melding flavors so good you’ll run back for seconds. Believe it. 25 N. East Promontory, Farmington, 801-447-9175, waffledeats.com

Best Sensory Overload, Allegiant Nonstop – Clearfield is stepping up their entertainment game with new additions to the newly named Allegiant Nonstop, formerly G4CE. Their 100,000 square foot building features go-karts, laser tag, arcade games, virtual reality, bowling, mini golf, escape rooms, play zones, a restaurant, snack bar, soda bar and frozen yogurt station. Our heads started spinning just listing all they offer. 1400 E. 700 South, Clearfield, 801-416-2388, playnonstop.com

 

Best Way to Lose Your Voice, Cannibal Roller Coaster – Adrenaline junkies, rejoice! While many lament the absence of a Six Flags in Utah, Lagoon has one major entry into the roller coaster hall of fame. Featuring the steepest vertical drop in North America, Cannibal also holds the world record for tallest beyond-vertical drop on any coaster. Prep your pipes and enjoy the ride. 375 Lagoon Dr., Farmington, 801-451-8000, lagoonpark.com

For more of our Best of the Beehive winners click here. 

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Best of the Beehive – South Salt Lake

By Best of the Beehive

Every year the list is different. We don’t do categories, we don’t fill in forms, we don’t count votes. We just pick our brains and everyone else’s for the coolest, newest and unexpected superlatives in the Beehive State. Every year we surprise ourselves and are delighted at the discoveries. You too will be surprised and delighted. And, no doubt, disgruntled. Because we left out one of your favorites. Let us know.

Make Salt Lake Co-working spaces are all the rage but Make Salt Lake is different—it offers you tools, space and instruction so you can make it yourself—anything from woodworking to metal craft to electronics to welding. Make yourself the master.
makesaltlake.org

Best Tacos Down South, Daniel’s – The concept of a taco: Small enough to eat out of hand. Simple enough to sell for cheap. Flavorful enough that small is big enough. Daniel’s tacos are all this and don’t need to be more, but they are. They’re fresh, for one thing. Plus you can order oysters, horchata and beer. 1017 N. 900 West, SLC, 801-521-9404. tacosdanielutah.com

Best Way to Live a Happy Life, Order in from Happy Dumpling – All dumplings, all the time and if you like dumplings like we like dumplings, these will make you very happy indeed, just like the logo promises. It’s so easy! Go to the website, check the maps to make sure you’re in the zone and place your order. They take weekend orders up until Thursday mornings. 3359 S. Main St., 801-635-4818, happydumplingslc.com

 

Best Excuse to Buy a Sari, Salt City Studios Bollywood Dance Class – How do they swivel their hips like that?? The gorgeous, sinuous dance used in Bollywood films is a style unto itself—a combination of belly-dancing, Indian folk dancing and modern jazz. The point is though, when you add it all up into a five-week workshop at Salt City Studio, you’ve had an amazing workout. You don’t need prior dance experience or a partner, just the urge to take some exercise that makes you happy. 1321 E. 3300 South, SLC, 801-699-6809, saltcitystudio.com/bollywood-slc

Best Thing to do in a Brewpub Besides Drink Beer, TF Brewing’s Game Night – Beer is not enough anymore. Brewpubs must have entertainment and while the Big Game of the moment is draw enough for some, there are those of us who are tired of balls—be they thrown, kicked or bounced. And we are certainly Trivia’d out. The questions are too culture specific, or too stupid. TF Brewery offers an alternative pastime to go with with your ale. Actually, several of them. A game sommelier brings a whole menu of board games so you can settle in, sip and learn how to do something new and pointless. 936 South 300 West, SLC, 385-270-5972, tfbrewing.com

Check out more of our Best of the Beehive winners here.

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Best of the Beehive – Ogden

By Best of the Beehive

Every year the list is different. We don’t do categories, we don’t fill in forms, we don’t count votes. We just pick our brains and everyone else’s for the coolest, newest and unexpected superlatives in the Beehive State. Every year we surprise ourselves and are delighted at the discoveries. You too will be surprised and delighted. And, no doubt, disgruntled. Because we left out one of your favorites. Let us know. 

things to do in ogdenBest New Beer Idea, Rooster’s B Street Taproom – Rooster’s laid the cornerstone for hip Ogden when they opened their brewpub on Historic 25th Street. After that, the cool places sprang up like houses on a Monopoly board. Now, they’re doing it again: With the opening of the B-Street Taproom, across the bridge from downtown Ogden, Rooster’s is breaking in another new concept. This one is, gasp, for adults only. The menu echoes downtown, the brew-friendly munchies of the original and the beer is made right there. 2325 B. Ave., Ogden, 801-689-2879, roostersbrewingco.com

Best Vegan Anything, Lavender Kitchen’s Brookie – Half brownie, half cookie, zero animal products, 100 percent delicious. Lavender Kitchen is disrupting Ogden’s food scene by churning out incredible, fully-vegan deliciousness on a daily basis. Check out their signature brookie or any one of their unbelievably vegan goods. We seriously can’t believe there’s no butter. 2276 Washington Blvd., Ogden, 801-628-1576, thelavkitchen.com

Best Hike Most People Don’t Do, Frary Peak on Antelope Isle. – Forget the legendary gnats. Ignore the lake stink. Antelope Island is one of the most beautiful places in Utah. The salt-shimmer of the shallow water, the views of the mainland, the sheer other-worldliness of its earthly landscape are best seen from the top of Mt. Frary. After a short but strenuous hike spend some time catching your breath and absorbing the wonder. utah.com/hiking/frary-peak

things to do in ogdenBest Piano, City Club Bar – All-Beatles all the time—that’s the theme of the City Club bar upstairs in Ogden. From the Fab Four of 1963 to the grizzled seers of their waning days, the faces of John, Paul, George and Ringo (which one was your crush?) are plastered all over the walls, ceiling and—most impressively—this hand painted piano. Yeah. Yeah, Yeah. Porter Block Building, 264 Historic 25th St., Ogden, 801-392-4447, thecityclubonline.net

Best Way to Indulge Your Prepper Obsession, Smith & Edwards – We know; Doomsday Preppers has got us on a paranoia binge as well. Luckily, Smith & Edwards is a wild place where you can buy insane amounts of prepper gear to make you feel better about the end of the world as we know it. Our advice? Literally just wander around the store—it’s seriously nutter butters. 3936 UT-126, Willard, 801-731-1120, smithandedwards.com

things to do in ogdenBest Ogden Original, Two Bit Klettersack- Take it from trail to office. This rugged pack has special space for your laptop and add-on camera pouch. ogdenmade.com

 

bestofthebeehivelogan

Best of the Beehive – Logan

By Best of the Beehive

Every year the list is different. We don’t do categories, we don’t fill in forms, we don’t count votes. We just pick our brains and everyone else’s for the coolest, newest and unexpected superlatives in the Beehive State. Every year we surprise ourselves and are delighted at the discoveries. You too will be surprised and delighted. And, no doubt, disgruntled. Because we left out one of your favorites. Let us know. 

Best Kitty Fix, Cache Humane Society Cat Cabana – What if we told you that you could cuddle kittens and help a charity? The Cache Humane Society’s Cat Cabana lets visitors sign in to play and cuddle the kitties so they can socialize before finding their furever homes. Or, be an even cooler person and adopt one of these fluff balls for yourself. 2370 W. 200 North, Logan, 435-792-3920, cachehumane.org 

 

Best Sugar Rush, Temptation Cupcake – If you want one of the best cupcakes you’ve ever had, you need to head up to Logan ASAP. Known for their buttercream frostings, Temptation Cupcakes are so sinfully good, they put it in the name. Bring your gluten-free friends with you, their GF offerings are just as tasty as their regular flavors. 1010 N. Main St., Logan, 435-787-8272, temptationcupcake.com

Best Rejection, Pepperidge Farm Factory Cookies – All those Pepperidge Farm cookies you gaze longingly at in the store are manufactured up in their Richmond factory. But, when the cookies come off the line looking less than perfect, they end up in the on-site store where their loss is your gain. Bring the kiddos and buy rejected cookies still as good as their flawless counterparts. 901 US-91, Richmond, 435-258-2491

Best Pancake the Size of Your Head, Cinnamon Swirl at Herm’s – The only thing that could possibly make a great pancake better is more of it, and Herm’s has that down. Tucked away off a back road, Herm’s Inn is serving up pancakes the size of your head and then covering them with frosting, caramel and cinnamon sugar. It’s not a waffle, but we think Leslie Knope would approve. 1435 Canyon Rd., Logan, 435-792-4321, hermsinn.com

Best Glimpse of the Future, Martian Tomatoes. Yes. Martian Tomatoes. – You can’t grow tomatoes in outer space—little water, lots of CO2 and not much nitrogen. And there’s no take out on Mars. That’s a problem for future Mars inhabitants or explorers. They’re going to have to grow their own. USU biochemist Lance Seefeldt and botanist Bruce Bugbee have been trying to solve this future problem for 30 years. This year, NASA tapped them to start a $15 million, five-year project, Center for the Utilization of Biological Engineering in Space or CUBES. (Space types love their acronyms.) Caesar salad on Mars can’t be that far away.

Butcher’s Bunches – Liz Butcher has been jammin since 2010, starting in her own kitchen and selling at farmers’ markets and now distributing their jams and jellies nationwide—thousands of jars a year. Based on local fruit and partnering with other local food producers like Amano Choccolate and High West Whiskey. butchersbunches.com

For more of our Best of the Beehive winners click here. 

 

bestofbeehiveslc

Best of the Beehive – Salt Lake City

By Best of the Beehive

Every year the list is different. We don’t do categories, we don’t fill in forms, we don’t count votes. We just pick our brains and everyone else’s for the coolest, newest and unexpected superlatives in the Beehive State. Every year we surprise ourselves and are delighted at the discoveries. You too will be surprised and delighted. And, no doubt, disgruntled. Because we left out one of your favorites. Let us know.

Mountain West Cider – In a valiant effort to break the “cider barrier”—the U.S. idea that apple juice is a sweet drink for kids—Mountain West is making dry, European-style cider perfect for sipping on their new cider garten. 425 N. 400 West, 801-935-4147, mountainwestcider.com

Best Way to Seem Like a Civilized Human, Tabula Rasa – Remember paper before our forest-guzzling paperless society? It’s depressing to think how many reams businesses go through these days, but here’s what we’ve forgotten about: pretty paper. And the nearly lost graciousness of a handwritten note. Or engraved invitation. Tabula Rasa is the only place in town to procure that elusive but still necessary etiquette. 330 Trolley Square, SLC, tabularasastationers.com

Best Hiker, Todd Powelson, Parrot Whisperer – City Creek Canyon is one of Salt Lake’s treasures. But it’s not just the babbling brook, the wildlife, birds and changing foliage that make it so charming—it’s the people you run into. Like Todd Powelson, who hikes City Creek with his parrot in fine weather. Say hello to the hiker with the birdcage on his back. And say hello to Saffron, too.

Best Place for the Naturally Curly, Curl Co. Hair & Beauty Salon – For those who have issues with their hair, which either behaves, or behaves badly–step it forward. It doesn’t matter what you’ve done, dreamed or prayed for, those with naturally curly hair have to learn the rules and the issues. Big, dry, frizzy issues. From the team at Curl Co. Hair & Beauty Salon, you’ll get the right cut, learn the basics in curl care techniques and get steered towards the products especially made for your most-epic hair type. You can go full-on natural any day, any weather, with less effort than, well, swiping left on your current dating app. 777 E. Broadway, SLC, 801-359-4288, saltcitycurlco.com

Best Yoga Slumber Party, Schole yoga Can’t bend like a pretzel? – A little rusty on your Sanskrit? Nidra yoga is not about a skill level. You only need a willingness to cooperate and be quiet in a darkish room with other people. It’s been said that an hour of meditation is equals 40 hours of sleep–obviously, this is not your typical seventh-grade slumber party. Expect a calming voice, possibly singing bowls and, of course, patchouli. 824 S. 400 W. SLC, scholeyoga.com/studio

Best New Popup, Little City’s FLEET – FLEET is a new pop-up space in Salt Lake City’s Granary District. Its creators Michael Yount (Yo Coach!) and Tim Sullivan, have created gathering space out of what else? Shipping containers. They’ve taken a small stretch of asphalt on 400 West, along the edge of the old “Fleet” block between 800 and 900 South. Fleet Nights, a rotating set of local brewer tap takeovers, started last May and will continue throughout the summer. But Yount envisions much more than just beer (like that’s not enough). Stay tuned. littlecityinc.com

See all of our 2019 Best of the Beehive winners here.

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Utah has a Place in Space

By Community

Fifty years ago, Neil Armstrong took his one small step. (For a thrilling account of how it went down, or actually, up, see Apollo 11 which premiered at the 2019 Sundance Film Festival on opening night.) As well as Cape Canaveral and Houston, Utah from the Space Dynamics Laboratory to the Green Beam, contributed to the giant leap for mankind, the moon landing, yeah that one, and other U.S. space endeavors.

Shooting Stars Space travel began when humans first looked up into the night sky. Utah offers access to more dark sky than anywhere else in the country and we’re  encouraging more, helping all the movers and shakers understand the value of dark skies and the problem of light pollution. Dark skies mean Utah’s a mecca for astro-photographers—David Lane and other astro-photographers flock to Bryce Canyon; the park holds regular astronomy and photography workshops. nps.gov/brca

Nerds Were First Space Dynamics Laboratory a nonprofit research corporation operated by USU, was founded in the era of pocket-protectors, just as U.S. Space programs really got off the ground. Since then, Space Dynamics Laboratory has created sensors for more than 400 payloads ranging from aircraft to rocket-borne experiments that traveled in the Space Shuttle and to the International Space Station.

The Center for Atmospheric and Space Sciences at U.S.U. aims its famous “Green Beam,” a sophisticated LIDAR, or light laser, at the upper reaches of our atmosphere. CASS is figuring out how to determine what space weather is like because it can interfere with human space missions—like satellites, communications systems and GPS accuracy. Space weather is a result of solar storms.

The Airglow It sounds like a hippie’s acid dream, but airglow is a real thing being studied at—where else?—USU NASA chose the school’s Atmospheric Wave Experiment (aptly dubbed AWE) to study airglow from the International Space Station. USU physics professor Mike Taylor has studied atmospheric gravity waves for decades. He’s leading the project which will mount a camera on the ISS to capture airglow images, colorful light bands caused by planetary atmospheres to explore forces driving space weather. Lift-off: August 2022.

Subscribers can see more. Sign up and you’ll be included in our membership program and get access to exclusive deals, premium content and more. Get the magazine, get the deals, get the best of life in Utah! 

everett_reuss_by_dorothea_lange

Take the Trip of a Lifetime to Seek Everett Ruess

By Utah Lore

Everett Ruess is every romantic’s favorite Utah legend—the idealistic young man—poet, artist, explorer—fell in love with the wild lands of the unsettled West, the high Sierras and the moonscapes of souther n Utah. He spent his short life mostly alone with just a dog and a donkey exploring these harsh places until they swallowed him up.

“I thought that there were two rules in life—never count the cost and never do anything unless you can do it wholeheartedly. Now is the time to live.” — Everett Ruess

Down the River
with Everett Reuss and Friends
Aug 5, 2019 – Aug 10, 2019

A six-day deluxe rafting expedition on the Green River through Utah’s Desolation Canyon featuring nightly readings and recitations by Ken Sanders. Filmmaker Emmanuel Tellier and musician Kate MacLeod will join forces for spontaneous performances on the banks of the Green River. Bookings and information here.

At the age of 20, Ruess disappeared into the canyons of southern Utah, somewhere near Devil’s Gulch, Escalante in 1934 and no one ever learned what happened to him. He left behind his poetry, a series of remarkable woodcuts and a legend we can’t seem to forget.

After six years, French filmmaker Emmanuel Tellier has finally finished his documentary about Ruess—it premieres on August 4, 2019 at the historic Star Hall in Moab and Tellier himself will be there to discuss the film.

LA DISPARITION D’EVERETT RUESS – Voyage dans l’Amérique des ombres (teaser) from Emmanuel Tellier on Vimeo.

The following day Tellier, storyteller and historian Ken Sanders and musician Kate McLeod (See our Small Lake City Concert at with Kate at Ken’s store) will embark on a 6-day deluxe rafting trip down the Green River through Desolation Canyon, along with a few paying guests. Learn more here.

During the river trip, Tellier will be discussing his many Ruess projects which, in addition to the six years of production work on the film, include a successful stage play that was recently presented at Le 104, one of the most exciting cultural centers in Paris, and two record albums of original compositions about Ruess.

Sanders will join in with entertaining stories, narratives, and readings about Everett Ruess and the Canyon Country. The amazing fiddler and vocalist, MacLeod will perform songs and music inspired by Utah’s wilderness landscapes, and will collaborate with Tellier to offer rousing beach concerts and sing-alongs.

On the other hand, if you can’t make it to Moab and the River, you can still see the film at these free screenings around the state:

  • JULY 29 — THE ESCALANTE SHOWHOUSE, ESCALANTE, 7PM
  • AUGUST 4 — THE STAR HALL, MOAB, 7PM
  • AUGUST 13 — NANCY TESSMAN AUDITORIUM, SALT LAKE CITY MAIN LIBRARY, 7PM
maryright

Letter from the Editor • Utah in Space

By Community

Usually it’s hard for me to pick just one thing, but in this issue of Salt Lake magazine I have a favorite: It’s on p. 38—I love the interactive model O.A.S.I.S.C.A.F.E., a local art group, is making of the lunar module. That’s right, these folks are making a full-sized replica of the moon lander in a Salt Lake City backyard. I realize that at the stage we’re showing it, it’s not objectively the most beautiful thing I’ve ever seen, but the idea is so eccentric and touches on such tropes of hope and idealism that I find it lovely.

Utah in Space

Photo by Steve Mayer

What is it? Why, it’s an artistic model of the Lunar Module, being created for the Element 11 Art Festival, part of the Regional Burning Man Network on July 11. In celebration of the moon landing’s 50th anniversary, Artistic group O.A.S.I.S.C.A.F.E. is reinventing the Lunar Module as an interactive installation to show the marriage of art and science. We can’t possibly explain it all here, go visit the website.

In a way, it’s sheer lunacy. Yes, that means craziness because it was once believed that certain kinds of nutty behavior were linked to the phases of the moon. And that’s how I think of the O.A.S.I.S. project: touched by the moon.

Last May, NASA announced its goal of reaching the moon by 2024 as part of its larger Moon to Mars plan. That sounds like lunacy, too, but we did reach the moon 50 years ago. Human dreams and ideas are often called lunacy at their genesis—some are (think cold fusion) and some aren’t (think the Wright Brothers.) In any case, the loveliness of lunacy is in the idea, the effort to make a dream come true, the outrageousness of human imagination and the answers to our quests, large and (mostly) small.

In very small ways, that’s what we look for to include in Salt Lake magazine, especially our Best of the Beehive issue—new ideas, new efforts, new answers. What’s the best way to hike with your parrot? What’s the best way to help co-workers with health problems? Where’s the best place to pitch horseshoes? Get a gluten-free cupcake? How will we grow vegetables on Mars?

It’s not so much about providing the answer as asking the question. Curiosity is a kind of lunacy, a little bit crazy. We need more of that. Is our new gig economy good or bad? Ashley Szanter examines that question. Does recycling work? Rebecca Walsh looks into the fate of tin cans and trash. And—important to know for the summer—what does tiki mean, anyway? (See Bar Fly.)

Here’s to the crazy questions. And to the answers, when we can find them.

Subscribers can see more. Sign up and you’ll be included in our membership program and get access to exclusive deals, premium content and more. Get the magazine, get the deals, get the best of life in Utah! 

Cowboy-making-the-kids-laugh

Park Silly Market Expect 200,000 People this Summer

By Community

The Park Silly Market comes out of hibernation for its thirteenth year on Sunday, June 2. More than 200,000 people are expected to join in the madness this summer as local artisans, chefs, musicians and performers transform Main Street into a boisterous festival ground every Sunday from 10:00 a.m. To 5:00 p.m. Revelers should be pleased to know their environmental impact will be minimized through Park Silly’s eco-friendly ethos. All consumable items are sorted into zero-waste stations for recycling, and all food waste goes to feeding lucky pigs in Kamas. Visit the Park Silly Market website to learn more about the market and see the most up-to-date listing of events.  parksillysundaymarket.com

And Park Silly isn’t the only market, see our round up of farmers’ markets around the Wasatch Front and Back.

See all of our community coverage here.


Subscribers can see more. Sign up and you’ll be included in our membership program and get access to exclusive deals, premium content and more. Get the magazine, get the deals, get the best of life in Utah! 

Not-Pedestrian-Friendly

Kimball Junction What Are We to Do With You?

By Community

Start your day in Kimball Junction with an espresso from Park City Coffee Roasters. Follow with a stop at Smith’s for some dinner provisions before a spin class at the Basin Rec Field House and a slice of pizza from Maxwell’s. The distance covered among all those stops is less than three quarters of a mile, but few would dare tackle such a journey on foot for fear of certain death. 

Kimball Junction is a maze of paint-by-numbers development with an endless sea of asphalt and sidewalks to nowhere. Its isolated pockets of community are notoriously hostile to pedestrians, which is why Summit County’s Neighborhood Master Planning Committee is trying to give the area a redesign.

Kimball JunctionSome would argue the effort’s too little, too late after 30 years of fragmented development. Each individual plot in Kimball Junction ticks required zoning boxes but without any overarching identity. The area was essentially built as a regional shopping center and truck stop—see the endless parking spaces and cornucopia of chain restaurants—but how it falls short is in its evolving space as a town center for the growing majority of Parkites who call unincorporated Snyderville Basin home. The surge of diverse, new restaurants hints at the area’s potential but can’t mask its underlying incoherence. 

Prior to the 2002 Winter Olympics, the Summit County Planning Commission anticipated a surge in residential and commercial development, but pervading local opinion held that Snyderville Basin would remain a rural area without the need for a broader plan. Lo and behold, some 26,000 people now call the Basin home and traffic and development gripes have become the area’s number one export.

“Kimball Junction is the poster child for fear of development, but well-planned development is the opportunity to evolve it into the community you want. We can’t just abandon the area to market forces. That’s what got us here,” says Summit County Community Development Director Patrick Putt. The no development is good development ship sailed long ago; the county has already approved 4,000 single family units and 2.5 million square feet of commercial space, all of which is yet to be built. 

Kimball JunctionThe Neighborhood Master Planning Committee—which is comprised of property owners, elected officials and private residents—unveiled its amended neighborhood plan for Kimball Junction earlier in 2019 to guide the process. “We’re striving to create a people-oriented environment, not one that’s catered to the movement of vehicles,” says Summit County Director of Planning and Zoning Design and committee member Peter Barnes. 

Barnes emphasizes the need for centralized parking facilities and seamlessly-connected, walkable neighborhoods with a logical mixture of open space, businesses and workforce housing to get people out of their vehicles and engaging with each other and their surroundings.“Everyone gets caught up talking about traffic, but there’s no one fix for that,” Barnes adds. “Some components of the plan will help, but frankly traffic issues are secondary to the quality of experience in the community.”

The amended neighborhood plan isn’t a binding document; it’s a starting point. “The plan is a community creed, which we hope will drive neighborhood engagement during the development process,” Putt says. “Planning is the human side of development where we can tap into our imagination of what a better place looks like. We love to hear from people in the community whether it’s directly or at meetings, but we hope they can bring their ideas, vision and inspiration, not only complaints.” 

Therein lies the primary crux of the development debate. Blindly abhorring change won’t fix Kimball Junction. Leaving the area to the development whims of the highest bidders will precipitate issues of exclusivity and inaccessibility familiar to Old Town. “Kimball Junction is the gateway to the entire area and the hub of a rapidly growing population in Summit County. A spectrum of livability that fits a diverse set of needs is fundamental to the area,” Barnes says.   

It’s going to take a wide array of informed, passionate people to drive change. Visit the Summit County website to get educated, get involved and see your ideas come to life in Kimball Junction’s future. 


Subscribers can see more. Sign up and you’ll be included in our membership program and get access to exclusive deals, premium content and more. Get the magazine, get the deals, get the best of life in Utah!