Laserfiche WebLink
<br />Ci~ of <br />RI~ <br /> <br /> <br />Minnesota <br /> <br />COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT DEPARTMENT <br />PREFACE <br /> <br />CITY OF ROSEVILLE CORNERSTONE GUIDELINES <br />Developed Summer 1997 <br />(not officially adopted by the Roseville City Council) <br /> <br />Roseville, Minnesota has an opportunity to create its own future. Incorporated in 1948 with a <br />population of 500, the City now has over 34,000 residents. In the 1960's, the City's vision of the <br />community for the 1990's included County highways and major thoroughfares, neighborhoods <br />convenience centers, a City Center, and a series of (over 3,000,000 sJ.) of regional and subregional <br />shopping center districts. Today the shopping areas have become a hub of day-to-day commercial <br />activity in the north metro area, with a primary and secondary market of over 120,000 households <br />within five miles. The neighborhood convenience centers have clustered around intersections of <br />County and State roads which provide auto oriented services for neighbors and pass through traffic. <br />Many of the improvements on the corners are over 40 years in age and beginning to show the years of <br />wear and deferred maintenance. <br /> <br />Roseville's Cornerstone Program consists of 29 intersections throughout the community with over 125 <br />businesses located in an area bounded roughly by County Road "0" on the north, Rice Street/Highway <br />49 on the east, Larpentuer Avenue on the south, and Cleveland Avenue on the west. <br /> <br />The retail and office strength ofthe City is in or near its' shopping centers, but the neighborhoods are <br />the local focus of the Cornerstone Program. The "Roseville Cornerstone" is developing an identity as <br />a high quality mixed-use "neighborhood edge" - a gathering or meeting place - capable of providing the <br />some of the low auto impact financial, retail, office, health services, and social functions of a suburban <br />residential area. Roseville hopes to use its' Cornerstone Program. well kept homes and neighborhoods, <br />excellent schools. and expansive parks to create a community image or "sense of place" that will <br />encourage citizens and families to remain life-long residents. <br /> <br />Directly accessible from the grid of County roads, the Cornerstone residential areas has grown to serve <br />approximately 15,500 housing units on 3,200 residential acres, with 98% already built-up. Only 120 <br />acres remain for further residential development. The intersections of many of the County roads <br />handle 30,000 to 40.000 trips per day. (This compares to the major arterial intersection of Interstate <br />35W and Highway 36, which currently handles over 175,000 (in 1996) vehicles per day and will grow <br />to 200,000 vehicles within 5 years.) <br /> <br />1 <br />