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Master Plan & Development Guidelines for Downtown Centerville
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Master Plan & Development Guidelines for Downtown Centerville
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B. Systems Guidelines <br />Downtown Centerville <br />Master Plan &Development Guidelines <br />standalone district within the City; instead it <br />will be a part of, and connect with, a variety of <br />local, city-wide and regional systems. <br />Systems Guidelines describe the elements Each development project, whether a single <br />of the public infrastructure. The System building, one lot, or a series of blocks, must <br />Guidelines outline issues and provides provide reasonable links to these systems as <br />guidance for standards that apply to the entire a primary design objective. <br />Downtown Area. It is intended as an <br />attachment to the Master Plan Document <br />itself. The Systems Guidelines will deal with <br />the seven distinct items of the overall <br />infrastructure framework: <br />Context <br />Open Space <br />Transportation Systems <br />Storm Water Systems <br />Utilities <br />Mix of Uses Parking <br />Strategy <br />These seven items represent the overall <br />organizing elements that give shape and <br />form to the public elements of the Master <br />Plan. Presumably, they will be adopted by <br />the City as part of the Master Plan, will <br />become part of City policy and will be <br />implemented by the City or with City <br />participation before or concurrently with the <br />work of private developers. The Systems <br />Guidelines will create the framework within <br />which the private parcels are allowed to be <br />developed. They will prescribe Development <br />Standards for all above ground, visible <br />elements of the public infrastructure <br />including street and roadway design, <br />streetscape and landscape design, <br />pedestrian spaces, connectivity between <br />private and public spaces, parking strategies <br />and policy, etc. Systems Guidelines will <br />prescribe everything in the public realm from <br />curb sections and paving materials to street <br />lights, park benches, waste receptacles and <br />tree species. <br />B. I. Context <br />Although unique to Centerville, the <br />Downtown Area is not intended to be a <br />Guideline Recommendations <br />To ensure that the Downtown Area takes <br />full advantage of local and regional <br />systems, development should: <br />• Provide safe, easily recognized <br />connections to city and regional trail <br />systems; <br />• Support increased use of transit services <br />by maintenance of existing service to St. <br />Paul and strengthen service to Minneapolis <br />for residents; <br />• Tie into, and improve, the utility network; <br />• Integrate with and complement the <br />existing (and future) street framework; <br />• Become an integral part of the city and <br />county drainage/storm water management <br />plan; <br />• Parks and open space will be easily <br />accessible to all Downtown Area residents, <br />visitors, people who work here and also for <br />the citizens of Centerville and the <br />surrounding area. <br />B. II. Open Space <br />The overall design framework of the <br />Downtown Area is based on links to LaMotte <br />Park, trails, new open space downtown and <br />regional open space. The City of Centerville <br />will take the lead role in local parks <br />programming, design review, construction <br />sequencing, implementation and ultimately <br />maintenance and operation of key public <br />spaces within this framework. The goal is to <br />link existing parks and trails <br />January 4, 2006 Page 9 of 30 <br />
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