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In the 1970s, the Subject Property was established as part of the Hunters Park neighborhood and <br />homeowners associations through a Planned Unit Development (PUD). A PUD can permit a <br />greater amount of flexibility for developments from the underlying zoning regulations. The <br />Hunters Park PUD used the flexibility permitted in the PUD process, and the neighborhood was <br />designed with varying lot sizes, structure setbacks, and lot coverages. A number of the lots were <br />permitted to have structures that did not meet the underlying zoning requirements, which is a <br />legitimate use of the PUD process. Because the lot sizes and building locations were approved as <br />part of the PUD process, they are not considered nonconforming even if they do not meet the <br />underlying R- 3 zoning requirements. <br />In 1985, the City Council approved a process evaluating future changes to structures in Hunters <br />Park: <br />■ If additions or alterations to the homes do not require setback or coverage variances <br />from the R-3 Zone, only a building permit issued administratively by the City shall be <br />required. This removed the need for a PUD amendment with every change. <br />■ If additions or alterations to cluster homes do require additional variances of any kind <br />from the R-3 Zone, the standard variance procedure set by the City shall apply. <br />■ If both cases, the Architectural and Environmental Committee of the Hunters Park <br />Homeowners Association shall review and approve the proposed addition or alteration <br />before submitting the same to the City. It shall assist individual homeowners in <br />determining if a variance is required for proposed alterations. <br />According to the planning case files, the Hunters Park homeowner association approved this <br />process along with the City. Since many of the lots and structures are "nonconforming" under the <br />R-3 regulations, a variance is almost always required. There have been at least five variances <br />approved for additions in the Hunters Park neighborhood; however, past variance approvals are <br />not a basis for current variance reviews. <br />In 2009, a previous owner of the Subject Property requested three variances to construct a 585 <br />square foot addition to the dwelling. The proposed addition encroached eight (8) feet into the <br />required 30 foot rear yard setback, encroached four (4) feet into the required 40 foot front yard <br />setback, and increased the structure coverage on the lot from 19.4 percent to 26 percent. The <br />variance was approved by the City Council with approval from the Architectural and <br />Environmental Committee of the Hunters Park Homeowners Association. The proposed addition <br />was constructed before the Applicant became the owner of the Subject Property. <br />2. Site Data <br />2040 Future Land Use Plan: <br />LDR — Low Density Residential <br />Existing Land Use: <br />Single Family Dwelling <br />Zoning: <br />R-3: Townhouse and Low -density Multiple Dwelling District <br />Lot Size: <br />0.2 acres <br />Proposed Use: <br />The Applicant is requesting a variance to exceed the maximum structure coverage of 25 percent <br />to 27.3 percent and construct a 4.4 foot by 6.8 foot addition on the principal structure. The existing <br />City of Arden Hills <br />City Council Meeting for April 28, 2025 <br />P:\Planning\Planning Cases\2025\PC 25-001 - 1126 Benton Way — VAR, CUP <br />Page 2 of 11 <br />