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2001_0924_packet
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Roseville City Council
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6.0 STAFF RECOMIV�NDATION <br />There are at least six options in this case: approve or deny the requested changes to the <br />Comprehensive Plan and zoning; approve or deny an Interim Use Permit; approve a mi�ed use <br />project with housing and office space, using a Planned Unit Development PUD process. <br />6.1 Staff recommends denial of the request by Ms. Agness to change the Comprehensive Plan &om <br />LDR (Low Density Residential) and B(Business) and recommends denial of a rezoning from R 1 <br />to B- 1 based on the findings in Section 4 and 5 of this report (09/1 2/0 1), and <br />6.2 Staff recommends approval of an Interim Use Permit of which the applicant may seek renewal <br />every five years (with conditions, which are shown in the attached draft resolution). The staff <br />recommends this because the site was previously used for a music academy for 40 years. Even <br />then, some supporters of the 1960 academy reported that the noise and traffic was too intense an <br />impact for a single family home use. The noise and traffic impacts of the academy were more <br />intense than those of the proposed residential real estate office. After 40 years, without substantial <br />improvements and removals, the building will not easily be reconverted to an owner occupied <br />single family home. Given the current R- 1 zoning, it is more likely, economically, that the <br />structure would be converted to a shared residential use by four unrelated house renters who share <br />expenses, each with one or two vehicles to be parked on the large pa�ed pad in the rear of the <br />site. Our history in Roseville has shown that such shared uses do not improve the quality of the <br />building, but do reduce maintenance and lawn care and add trafftc. While the neighborhood is <br />evolving into new uses and new households (as shown by the census), an interim use for limited <br />and restricted office use can work on this site, and can be reviewed (and approved or denied) <br />every five years for further impacts. <br />7.0 PLANNING COMMISSION RECOMMENDATION <br />71 Planning Commission meeting: Excerpt of Draft Nlinutes and communications from meeting <br />(Dunnette and Goodroad 9/1 2/0 1): <br />A request by Kathleen Agness for a Comprehensive Plan Amendment and Rezoning (from R-1 to <br />B-l) to change the former Rymer Academy (allowed through a special use permit) to an o�ce <br />use. The property is located at 2256 Lexington Avenue. <br />Vice Chair Jim Mulder opened the hearing and requested Dennis Welsch to pravide a verbal <br />summary of the project report dated September 12, 2001. <br />Dennis Welsch Community Development Director explained that Kathleen Agness has requested a <br />Comprehensive Plan Amendment from Low Density Residential (LDR) to Business (B) and a <br />Rezoning from Single Family Residence District (R-l) to Limited Business District (B-l) and/or ar� <br />Interim Use Permit (City Code Section1012.09) on the property located at 2256 Lexington Ave. <br />He noted that the 20,271 s.f. (97.7 ar 207. 1) property located at 2256 Lexington Avenue was <br />formerly the Rymer School of Fine Arts Academy, a use that existed on the property for <br />approximately 40 years (1960 to 2000). The building is estimated to be 2,700 s.f, in size. The <br />building is 75+ years old and was originally a single family residence (1925 to 1960). Parking <br />spaces (I 6 to 20) exist behind the building where parking pavement has cavered the majority of <br />the rear yard. <br />The buyer/seller assumed that a special use permit was issued to the Rymer Academy that could <br />apply to Schorn Realty. In 1960, when Rymer appliedfor the permit to operate in this building <br />the original application was for a rezoning to a B-1 zone. The City Council and attorney at that <br />PF3329 RCA (092401).doC Page 5 <br />
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