HomeMy WebLinkAbout10-25-22 Public Comment - C. Gouveia - 22047 Public Comment - With Staff ResponseFrom:Lynn Hyde
To:Carol Gouveia; Agenda
Subject:RE: 22047 Public Comment
Date:Tuesday, October 25, 2022 12:56:11 PM
Thank you for your public comment. It has been received and included in the review as well as the
public record. All reviewers, the applicant and public will have access to your comment.
If you have any question please let me know.
Lynn Hyde | Development Review Planner, Community DevelopmentCity of Bozeman | 20 East Olive St. | P.O. Box 1230 | Bozeman, MT 59771406.579.1471 | lhyde@bozeman.net | www.bozeman.net
From: Carol Gouveia <crgbozeman@gmail.com>
Sent: Tuesday, October 25, 2022 12:02 PM
To: Agenda <agenda@BOZEMAN.NET>
Cc: Lynn Hyde <lhyde@BOZEMAN.NET>
Subject: 22047 Public Comment
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To:
Planning Department
City of Bozeman
From:
Carol Gouveia
4458 White Eagle Circle, Bozeman, Mt
To whom it may concern:
I am writing to express my opposition to the
proposed Sundance Springs Commercial
Development, site plan number 22047.
While I accept that commercial development on this
site is inevitable, I oppose the development's
requested departures from laws describing the City's
block frontage standards. BMC 38.510.020.F.1.d
states "Departures may be considered provided the
location and front orientation of the buildings are
compatible with the character of the area and
enhance the character of the street." Site plan
22047 meets neither criterion. Placing large
commercial buildings along the designated open
space is not compatible with the tranquil character of
the trail system or surrounding residential
neighborhood. Further, an underlying premise of the
Block Frontage Standards is that parking lots along
streets cause a visual impact on the street-scape,
even if mitigated with a berm (BMC
38.510.030.C.3.c). Proposal 22047 places parking
along the entire South 3rd frontage, on the street
corner with Little Horse Drive. It even degrades the
trail user's experience by placing parking along the
entire trail system to the east, without incorporating
mitigating landscaping! The plan would therefore
degrade the character of South Third Avenue, not to
mention the trails.
The proposed buildings have a higher parking
demand than will fit on the site. In the 1996 Findings
of Fact and Order of the City Commission, which
created the PUD, the City Commissioners explicitly
forbade Neighborhood Services District patrons from
parking on the streets. The requested reduction in
parking requirements from 68 spaces to 44 spaces
may be allowed under current zoning, but is
incompatible with the City Commission's order
regarding this site. I would ask that any
development on this site to meet its full parking
demand in order to comply with the Commission's
Order.
The site plan fails to live up to the Planned Urban
Development governing the site, which incorporates
zoning under the 1992-era B-1 Neighbors Service
District, as established by the Planning Department
in its October 1, 2020 Development Review
Comments. The PUD therefore requires a small
commercial development, residential in character.
When site plan 22047 is weighed against the 1992-
era B-1 standard (Chapter 18.28), yard sizes
(setbacks) are inadequate, building sizes are too
large, parking is inadequate, and the building is
designed specifically to house a disallowed business
use (a brewery). Overall the character of the
development fails to meet the legal intent of the
1992-era B-1 zoning law (18.28.010) -- to maintain
the residential character of the area.
I am especially concerned about the provision for
large patio space which will support outdoor
business uses on the site. The 1992-era B-1 zoning
prohibits outdoor business use on the site as a
principal use. I am against any conditional use or
other permission that might be granted by the city
that would allow for outdoor business use or alcohol
consumption on the site because such uses are not
compatible with the tranquil nature of the open
spaces and residential areas adjacent to the
lot. The proposed patios are decidedly incompatible
with the character of the trail system and
surrounding neighborhood.
Finally, I would ask that a provision for sidewalks
along the South 3rd frontage be enforced before
approval of the site plan. This is a requirement of
note 5 on the Sundance Spring Subdivision Phase
1B Final Plat and by the 1996 Findings of Fact and
Order of the City Commission that created the
Sundance Springs Subdivision. Allowing
development to proceed without sidewalks defeats
the intention of making our city a walkable one.
Please deny application 22047 until such time as the
site plan complies with the 1992-era zoning
requirements (without conditional uses) and the
block frontage standards (without departure),
parking for proposed buildings can be contained on
site (as required by the City Commission), and
sidewalks are included on South Third Ave, to keep
pedestrians safe as commercial areas of the city
expand outward.
Thanks for considering my comment.