Laserfiche WebLink
Motion carried. Voting Yes: Mayor Gamec, Councilmembers Anderson, Kurak, Hendriksen, <br />and Zimmerman. Voting No: None. <br /> <br />Case #4: <br /> <br />Request for Preliminary Plat Approval of Highlands at River Park 4th <br />Addition: Case of Arcon Development <br /> <br />Principal Planner Trudgeon stated that Arcon Development has submitted a preliminary plat for <br />the subdivision of property generally located north of Alpine Drive between Zuni Street and <br />Yakima Street NW. The property is approximately 4.81 acres in size and the applicant is <br />proposing to develop 10, single-family lots served by City sewer and water. The property is <br />zoned R-1 Residential and is located in the Metropolitan Urban Service Area (MUSA). The <br />proposed net density of the plat is approximately 2.2 units per acre. The development will be <br />served from new Yakima Street within the Highlands at River Park subdivision by a public cul- <br />de-sac, approximately 500 feet in length. All of the lots meet the minimum dimensional <br />requirements. The grading, drainage, utility, and street plans are generally acceptable subject to <br />the points raised in the Staff Review Letter dated November 1, 2002, Revised November 22, <br />2002' The applicant has provided an extensive tree inventory as part of the tree preservation plan. <br />The tree preservation plan has been reviewed by staff and found to be acceptable. The.proposed <br />plat is considered low density residential and is bounded on the east and north by Highlands at <br />River Park, a low-density single-family development. The development property abuts four lots <br />(3 lots fully back up to the development and the fourth has 25 fleet, sharing a common boundary) <br />to the west that are also in the Metropolitan Urban Service Area and eligible for redevelopment <br />with single family homes at urban densities. The four lots are all served by septic' systems and <br />private wells and range from 0.83 to 0.87 acres in size. The existing houses on these lots are <br />located on one side of the lot, making replatting very feasible. The density transition ordinance <br />does not clearly state what the requirements would be, if any, in situations where the adjacent <br />property is in the MUSA, zoned the same, but currently consists of larger lots. Subd. 3.b. 1.(a) of <br />the ordinance would seem to indicate that no transitioning is required. Subd.. 3.b. 1 .(b) of the <br />ordinance could be broadly interpreted to require a Level C Vegetative. Buffer (45 foot wide <br />landscape with over story, evergreen, and understory trees). Additionally, there is always the <br />possibility of an 'alternative agreed upon :by the Developer and the City' if transitioning is <br />determined to be appropriate in these instances. The north half of the property contains an <br />extensive thicket of trees along the western property line that provides for good screening. On <br />the southern half of the property, the trees thin out on the subject property, but there is extensive <br />vegetation on the adjacent property owner's lot line. Given the fact that the adjacent lots are in <br />the MUSA and are configured to be able to be replatted in the future, staff proposes that <br />landscape buffering be used to satisfy the density transition requirements as follows: <br /> <br />a) Given the existing vegetation and what will remain, there is no need for additional <br /> screening on Lots 4 and 7. <br />b) The addition of new plantings on the rear of Lots 5 and 6 where the existing tree cover <br /> will be removed for grading and utility purposes. <br /> <br />City Council/November 26, 2002 <br /> Page 9 of 23 <br /> <br /> <br />