From winterety at sbcglobal.net Thu Jun 7 09:36:07 2007 From: winterety at sbcglobal.net (sheryl lynn gerety) Date: Thu, 7 Jun 2007 09:36:07 -0700 Subject: [OldNorth] City Council Hearing Tuesday Message-ID: <1cb56d2acb417c751dd07ea329dc137c@sbcglobal.net> We are coming up on a City Council hearing, Tuesday, June 12, 2007 at 7:30PM, to vote pass or fail on the Davis planners' work to rezone B Street from 4th Street south through 2nd and the 2nd, 3rd and 4th Street corridors leading to campus. The rezoning being proposed would increase density from low to high, allow for four story buildings, allow the demolition of any of the historically important structures (Cciocolat, and 311 B Street in particular) should the owner ask to redevelop the lot rather than repair, add on or remodel. These houses are framed and sided in old growth redwood, have a charm and historical significance that is characteristic of Davis' early days. 301 B Street was the home of a prominent citizen who had a lot of influence in his day. 311 B is one of the finer examples of English Cottage Revival architecture. The area under study is currently bound by the Design Guidelines developed under a democratic process (not developer driven as is the 3rd & B Vision). The Guidelines allows for quite a lot of flexibility in adaptive re-use. We work with the Guidelines in Old North and have successfully used them to support alley accessory structures (Granny flats), an extensive remodel, and the demolition of a non-contributing structure that will be rebuilt to a similar scale and in a style that will allow it to function well in our traditional neighborhood. The majority of the City Council members who will make the final decisions on zoning for this key area are looking at rezoning as an effort to relieve a "blighted" neighborhood of its somewhat run down appearance. They may argue that there will be lots of housing, office and maybe retail space available. The height and density proposed to accomplish this vision will, however, threaten the houses now in place with demolition rather than reuse, provide only a few more bedrooms than already exist, and create more parking issues, traffic problems, noise and air pollution for the neighborhood it borders and for surrounding residential neighborhoods. Please write letters to City Council members (accepting Sue Greenwald who must recuse herself) asking them to vote against zoning that clearly threatens all the quite visible, historically significant structures remaining on B Street along the park. Please join the City Council hearings Tuesday, June 12 when this item comes up on the agenda to be a presence against the proposed zoning, to speak against the zoning changes. Thanks, Sheryl Gerety Old North Davis Neighborhood Association