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4 <br /> <br /> <br />Attachments: <br />1. Shows a multi-unit residential structure with a variation of paint/siding and vertical <br />features as proposed in Section 7.3 (b), (iv). This only adds to construction, <br />maintenance and operating costs. It doesn’t add to quality of the building or meet <br />our economically sustainable and architectural quality goals. <br />2. This shows LEED registered attached townhouses of the same color but with a <br />variation in architectural features, the same roofs and variation from units <br />adjacent to it. A variation in color or siding is not necessary for high quality <br />architecture. <br />3. This shows pictures of Jackson Meadows that was chosen by the Marine on the <br />St. Croix City Council to look like it had always been a part of the community. <br />This shows that each residence has a different design but with similar style of 24 <br />foot wide, white wood siding, standing seam metal roofs and extensive solar gain <br />and daylighting. This development was awarded the AIA highest national design <br />award. <br />4. This shows a 2014 AIA Minnesota Honor Award multifamily housing unit in <br />Minneapolis in contrast to attachment 1. Another example of where a variation in <br />color or siding is not necessary in high quality architecture, as shown in the <br />March/April 2015 Architecture MN Magazine. <br />5. LEED-ND (New Development) checklist. <br /> <br /> <br />