What about Sunday opening and alcohol sales?
Stores will be closed Sunday. A limited number of restaurants located on non-church-owned property could seek liquor permits and probably would stay open Sunday.
Because it's church-owned, will there be restrictions on dress and behavior?
It will remain private property, so free speech is a no-go. Expect the same standards now found at Crossroads and ZCMI Center. The church stresses the project is a commercial, not an ecclesiastical, venture and will have a different function from Temple Square or the Main Street Plaza.
When will it open?
Tentatively set for 2011. A full-service 55,000-square-foot Harmons will open in 2008.
What about Christmas shopping?
The malls will remain open through the coming holiday season. Many stores, including Nordstrom and Macy's, will close in January.
What retail will stay open?
During construction, the ZCMI Center food court and a few unnamed existing tenants will move to the ground floor of the Eagle Gate Tower on the corner of South Temple and State Street and to the lower level of the Beneficial Financial Group tower at 36 S. State. Parking will be on adjacent blocks.
Who will be the key tenants?
Nordstrom and Macy's are slated to be there, and possibly a third anchor. A full-service Harmons grocery store will open on the block east of the ZCMI Center.
What will be torn down?
Crossroads Plaza, ZCMI Center, Key Bank tower, Inn at Temple Square, First Security Bank/Deseret Building.
What buildings will remain?
Utah Woolen Mills, Gateway West, Zions Bank, Eagle Gate, Beneficial, Crandall, McIntyre, Marriott Hotel.
What about the planned sky bridge?
Mall builders and retailers want it, but it will require city approval. Some city leaders and urban planners oppose it.
Will the public have a say?
Public comment will be accepted through the Salt Lake Chamber's Downtown Rising Web Site, www.downtownrising.com, through November. A model of the site plan will go on tour in each of the city's seven council districts.


