Archive for March, 2007

Mar 23 2007

58 cents at Charlottesville Tomorrow Weblog

I enjoyed the overview of Cville Republicans and the real estate tax issue before the city council at the Charlottesville Tomorrow Weblog today.  They have a great picture of Albemarle County Republicans Chairman Keith Drake’s over-the-top SUV / traveling billboard.  I like Drake’s approach:  only increase your budget if you need to rather than start the budget process with pockets burning from a real-estate tax windfall.

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Mar 19 2007

DailyProgress.com | Will Places29 ever have a place here?

Published by stierle under Charlottesville, Development, Zoning

The DailyProgress.com has an exhaustive article today on the places29 plan.  It gives a good overview of transportation and development in the Charlottesville area (though the article is long and unfocused so you need to be pretty interested to make it all the way through).  The Places29 website is detailed with lots of maps.  Judy Wiegand, a county employee in community development oversees the site and the plan (I think) and has really done a great job getting info out there and keeping it fresh.

The images of what the U.S. 29 corridor in northern Albemarle County could look like in the next 20 years show a different world.

Electric lines vanish. New roads appear, giving drivers a way to avoid 29. Some commuters simply avoid the hassle by riding the bus. Walking is encouraged, because residents work, shop and play in coordinated communities.

Places29 lays out that vision, one very different from how many picture Albemarle’s U.S. 29 corridor today, as an 11-mile stretch of construction and congestion connecting the U.S. 250 Bypass to the Greene County line. Planners, however, envision an emerging community where residents can walk up, down and across U.S. 29 to take advantage of coffee shops, stores and restaurants, and where home is somewhere nearby.

Laid out in a series of colorful maps, Places29 suggests how land could be used during the next 20 years and proposes a road network to cope with the growth that county officials say is inevitable. The plan, now in draft form, is to be considered by the Board of Supervisors late this year. Places29 proposes a specific vision, one the board will ultimately mold and then decide whether to embrace or discard.

Some say it’s a vision that provides for development residents do not want, a blueprint for employment and housing that will only attract unwanted newcomers. Other residents and business owners say that Places29 looks great, but ask: Who will pay for it?

The plan has supporters and detractors. What most agree on is that the vision of Albemarle’s future is something the county must get right.

A pipe dream?

In some cases, tomorrow is already here.

Places29 envisions the development and redevelopment that planners say is bound to occur during the next several decades. Much new development is already under way in northern Albemarle.

Dotting the sides of the U.S. 29 corridor, construction can be seen popping up everywhere, and more is on the way. The National Ground Intelligence Center is set to expand by adding jobs and facilities; North Pointe, a 900-unit housing development that also includes plans for significant commercial space, has been approved; and Hollymead Town Center, a huge, multi-parcel retail, housing and mixed-use development, continues to expand.

Bill West fears his neighborhood will be consumed by cement.

“We don’t want to be designated a development area,” said West, who lives near Shopper’s World, echoing the sentiments of many residents. “We want to be a residential area.”

Lee Catlin, county spokeswoman, says that Places29 seeks to provide the best of both. Residents should think of Charlottesville’s Downtown Mall, she said, not just “high rises and concrete.” While Places29 envisions a retail corridor, the area would still be livable and offer a high quality of life, she said.

It’s a dream that won’t be realized with the Places29 plan, says Wendell Wood, a developer and large landowner in the area.

Wood says the county’s emphasis on “neighborhood centers,” as well as other land-use designations that include plans for smaller retail stores, is “instant bankruptcy.”

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Mar 15 2007

Downtown Living in Waynesboro

Published by Greg under Waynesboro, Development, Zoning

per the News Virginian (Move in and up), new apartments are opening this week in dfowntown Waynesboro above the history museum.  Waynesboro politicians have been trying for some time to revitalize the downtown district, and Lord knows it needs it (ever tried to go our for coffee or anything on a weeknight after 8?) A couple years ago, the city council passed a new ordinance allowing for residential apartments on floors 2 and up in the downtown commercial district.  The idea is to lure people downtown that was, establishing a base for businesses.  When the businesses can afford to open and stay open, more people will come down and the effect snowballs and amplifies.  Sounds great to me!

The museum project was overseen by the Redevelopment & Housing Authority, to get some apartments going.  So far, no new apartments have been made, but perhaps this will be the first of many.

This is outlined in the article well as follows:

Converting the often lesser-used second floors of downtown buildings is seen as another way of getting more feet on the street, an element critical to the district’s revitalization and encouraged by the city, which several years ago made second-floor housing a by-right property use for the otherwise commercial area.

New housing means new tenants whose presence downtown, it’s anticipated, will contribute to a livelier atmosphere and provide a built-in audience for neighborhood shops and restaurants.

Few building owners so far have latched onto the idea, but developers hope the museum project - a first for downtown - will inspire more to pursue it.

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Mar 12 2007

Charlottesville Spillover Drive up Staunton Housing Prices

The Staunton News Leader had a Neat Article About Augusta County Property Values, detailing how the housing market in Staunton, Waynesboro and Augusta County has risen drastically due to pressure from the east.  The big selling point here seems to be price pressure from Charlottesville and Winchester, which makes Augusta County and its cities seem like an inexpensive alternative.

“Augusta has a significant amount of spillover growth, just on your side of Afton Mountain, from Charlottesville,” said Theodore Koebel, director of the Center for Housing Research at Virginia Tech. “You have people commuting over the mountain and buying homes because, compared to the Charlottesville area, they may be seen as a bargain.”

Buyers priced out of Harrisonburg might be looking south for housing options, said Darryl Crawford, a planner who analyzed six years of sales data to compile the newest report. Sales in greater Harrisonburg dropped in 2005, but remained steady in greater Augusta.

“For somebody who works in Harrisonburg, they could easily live in north Staunton or Augusta County,” said real estate agent Diane Woodson, who markets her Staunton and Waynesboro houses to buyers in Harrisonburg and Charlottesville.

But the report also shows housing cost increases outpacing wage increases locally. When adjusted for inflation, home prices rose 50 percent, but wages actually dropped by $161 a year in Staunton and $1,998 a year in Waynesboro. 

… 

“I don’t think the city, or anybody else, is putting enough emphasis on affordable housing,” said Staunton City Councilwoman Rita Wilson. “The average person is being pushed out.”  Koebel said it is important not to read too much into the rising home prices for now. The Augusta market is still small enough that one new subdivision or a few expensive purchases could swing the statistics.

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Mar 09 2007

Interesting Zoning Case in Harrisonburg

Per The Daily News Record, there is a really interesting zoning decision before the Rockingham County Board of Supervisors.  A company that owns Endless Caverns wishes to develop it into an RV park (the website already reads “Endless Caverns and RV Resort”) and is seeking a special use permit on the land zoned agricultural.  Near-by residents, as is their custom, oppose the plan.

The interesting bit is the news today that the Caverns owners hired a Private Investigator who claimed to be a professor and interviewed neighbors and the newspaper trying to find out who opposed the group.  Having that secret exposed isn’t going to win them much local goodwill.

The nearby residents are arguing (site & pdf overview) that there are environmental issues, traffic concerns, & neighborhood character concerns but their most promising angle is the zoning / land use one. “residents who oppose the expansion say they gave the county several documents supporting their claim that an RV resort is not a good use of land zoned general agriculture.”  That’s probably true.  Rockingham county has been really pushing development and incenting folks to bring in outside money, so depending on what the company intends, this may be unstoppable with the current board.

Stultz said she hopes to have a decision on the site plan by April 1. The Rockingham County Board of Supervisors will reconsider the special-use permit, which was tabled in December, whenever it’s ready, she said.

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