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property owner must show that they do not have reasonable use of their property without <br />an approved variance. The difficulty with this standard is what counts as "reasonable <br />use" of the property? Since most properties could be construed to have "reasonable use" <br />without a variance, this standard was declared virtually insurmountable by the Court of <br />Appeals. <br />A revised interpretation of the "reasonable use" evaluation criteria has emerged from the <br />Minnesota Court of Appeals. According to the City Attorney, a property owner does not <br />need to show that reasonable use for a property only exists with an approved variance. <br />Instead, the landowner must only demonstrate that the proposed variation is reasonable <br />for a particular property in a given zone. For example, the property owner must only <br />demonstrate that an addition that encroaches into a particular setback is reasonable as <br />opposed to showing that the property would only have reasonable use with the addition. <br />While this is a much softer interpretation of reasonable use, the applicant must still <br />address all four variance criteria listed above. <br />FindinEs of Fact <br />Staff offers the following sixteen findings of fact for review: <br />General Findings <br />1. The lot depth and width exceed the minimum R-1 requirements. The lot size of 13,939 <br />square feet is nonconforming in the R-1 Zone. <br />2. The existing structure encroaches ten feet into the forty foot front yard setback along <br />Skiles Lane. The structure meets all other R-1 setback requirements. <br />3. The proposed addition would encroach 24 feet into the front yard setback. <br />Approximately 480 square feet of the proposed addition would encroach in to the front <br />yard setback, of this only 96 square feet would be above grade and visible from Skiles <br />Lane. The area of the addition outside of the setbacks does not require a variance. The <br />proposed addition would be in line with the existing home, and the portion visible from <br />Skiles Lane would step back with the existing structure. <br />4. The proposed addition does not encroach on the required front yard setback along <br />Snelling Avenue. <br />5. The existing and proposed lot coverage meets the R-1 Zone requirements. <br />6. The existing garage does not meet the height requirements of the Building Code, thus the <br />proposed garage would bring the property into greater conformance with modern <br />building code requirements. <br />7. The dwelling with the proposed addition would not exceed the 35 foot height limit. <br />8. Dwellings are permitted structures within the R-1 Zone. <br />9. The existing dwelling and the proposed garage are outside of the 100 -year flood plain, <br />wetlands, and easements. <br />City of Arden Hills <br />Planning Commission Meeting for December 5, 2007 <br />IlAhdocsllahW HdatalPlanninglPlanning Cases12007107-029 Wessberg Variance (PC TABLED)V20507 -PC Report - Wessberg Variance.doc <br />Page 5 of 9 <br />