Alan Mathison, executive director of the Point of the Mountain State Land Authority, presented the commission with an update on plans to redevelop the 600-acre site that formerly housed Draper State Prison.
Mathison said demolition is largely complete and that more than 70% of on-site materials have been recycled; crushed concrete will be reused for road base and foundations. He described a phase-1 concept centered on about 100 acres and outlined projected uses including roughly 2,000,000 square feet of office and 3,000,000 square feet of residential space, along with significant retail, hospitality and open space. "This is really about promoting the public interest," Mathison said, and he added the authority had secured commitments from developers to include affordable housing "that reflects the workforce."
On transportation, Mathison said the site will be served by a FrontRunner station and high-quality transit, and that internal circulators and micro-mobility options aim to reduce traffic generation by about 30%. He described the first building — "Convergence Hall" in the presentation materials — as a hub for higher-education institutions and private-sector collaboration. Mathison said the legislature has appropriated an initial loan for infrastructure and that construction of infrastructure will begin the following spring, with the first buildings going vertical in 2025 and first occupancy expected in 2027.
The presentation stressed private capital will build the project and that the authority is operating "under a statute that directs us" to deliver benefits such as workforce housing and a regional development catalyst. Commissioners thanked Mathison for the briefing and noted similar redevelopment efforts elsewhere in the county.
The commission did not take any formal action on The Point during this meeting; Mathison’s update was presented for information and to answer questions.