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<br />PUBLIC SPACES AND FEATURES <br /> <br />The City of Roseville Cornerstone design plan includes formal public open space and informal public <br />spaces which include human scale entry areas, civic spaces, retail focus areas, landmark identity at <br />intersections, and visual/physical linkages to and between neighborhoods. <br /> <br />Entry features in the Cornerstone include gateways, signature signage, or landmarks at all of the major <br />intersections. These are the primary identification features that signify arrival into the Cornerstone <br />and they ~stablish the start of the Streetscape Program. <br /> <br />The "Civic Green or Commons" is the civic focal point for community and governmental life. It is <br />patterned after a traditional town square. The civic green is to be designed as a large flexible open <br />space for active, as well as passive pursuits. It will provide space for art fairs. festivals, public meetings. <br />formal evening meetings, and a multitude of public displays. The civic green area will be connected to <br />the City's walkway system. via sidewalks and potentially covered walkways between buildings. In <br />Roseville the Linear Civic Center Green or Commons, located along Lexington "Parkway" is owned <br />jointly by the City, School District 623 and County. It contains the City Center Complex and the <br />Central Park open space as well as the Roseville Area High School athletic fields. Additional civic green <br />space is available at the Lexington and B area, Lake Josephine, and the large privately owned <br />landscaped setbacks along many of the residential areas. There are examples of narrow areas of open <br />space perpendicular to the corridor that lead to neighborhood parks such as land east of Lexington, <br />leading to the lowlands near the Roselawn Cemetery and Water Works property, as well as the <br />corridor leading west from Lexington to Bruce Russell Park.. County Road B can be considered a <br />connection of neighborhoods, it connects the Cornerstone area at Lexington and B to the new 48,000 <br />square feet public library. However, in the future. typical non-descript suburban parking lots should <br />not be placed on the corner within the Cornerstones. <br /> <br />Public market or farmer's market. consistent with the original activities in Rose Township, may be <br />created in the Cornerstone at or near one of the major intersections. The purpose of this public market <br />or farmer's market is to provide a focus for neighbor to neighbor sharing of the harvest. It is an <br />institution as well as a civic event. <br /> <br />For future design, the signature intersection within the City of Roseville is the Lexington and County <br />Road B intersection, where 32,000 vehicles currently pass through the intersection each day. It is <br />anticipated that by the year 2000. 35,000 vehicles will pass through this intersection. The uses at this <br />intersection have more of a multi-neighborhood focus. This intersection should be redesigned to calm <br />the traffic. create more human scale mixed used development, and orient more of the improvements <br />to pedestrians. It is to be a community design statement and a landmark within the Cornerstone <br />program. The design elements used at this intersection should be carried throughout the community <br />and may be somewhat uniform in nature. It is anticipated that this intersection will have a specially <br />designed urban streetscape adjacent to the right-of-way corner. Public art, or historical landmarks, <br />civic uses, and City logos may also be incorporated into this urban space. <br /> <br />8 <br />