My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
Home
Browse
Search
Item 3A: Approval of City Council Minutes
COE
>
City of Eugene
>
Council Agendas 2006
>
CC Agenda - 06/26/06 Meeting
>
Item 3A: Approval of City Council Minutes
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
6/9/2010 1:07:48 PM
Creation date
6/22/2006 8:38:18 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
City Council
City_Council_Document_Type
Agenda Item Summary
CMO_Meeting_Date
6/26/2006
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
40
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
View images
View plain text
Ms. Bettman cited the last sentence of the first paragraph of page 389 of the Agenda Item Summary (AIS) <br />and disagreed with the suggestion that any consideration be given to assembly or joint development of other <br />adjacent parcels. <br /> <br />Ms. Bettman agreed with Ms. Taylor’s comments regarding retail. She did not believe there should be any <br />“public subsidy for commercial space.” She supported the encouragement of creativity, but wished to stress <br />that the council had a responsibility to determine the “highest and best use” for a public piece of property. <br />She thought the best use for the property would be housing as it would bring more people to the downtown. <br />She asserted that private developers shied away from this type of development unless there was a public <br />subsidy. <br /> <br />Ms. Bettman averred that mixed-use did not need to mean there would be a solid strip of one type of use. <br />She thought there were many successful high-density residential developments in thriving sections of other <br />cities that contained mixes of retail and office uses interspersed with residences. She opined that too much <br />retail space would lead to “over-commercialization.” <br /> <br />Ms. Bettman maintained that opportunity siting, as forwarded from the council, was all residential. She felt <br />exceptions could be made for a “corner shop or salon” but basically the intention was to increase residential <br />density. <br /> <br />Ms. Solomon, seconded by Ms. Ortiz, moved to approve the RFP for the sale and develop- <br />th <br />ment of the 10 Avenue and Charnelton Street development site, and direct the City Man- <br />ager to issue a request for proposals consistent with the preliminary schedule included in the <br />draft RFP, with final review of the RFP responses and approval of a project for the site <br />provided by the Urban Renewal Agency. <br /> <br />Ms. Bettman, seconded by Mr. Kelly, moved to amend the ‘Development Objectives’ to in- <br />clude: <br />“As a publicly solicited project, with the potential for public subsidies and incentives, <br />this development addresses the needs of the community. More housing units and varied <br />housing options are needed to accommodate projected population demographics. Central <br />housing is a key element in the Growth Management Policies and the Downtown Plan. <br />Downtown housing is essential for creating the critical mass of residents to support re- <br />tail; and to concentrate populations where services already exist within walking distance; <br />and where transit and pedestrian amenities are easily and efficiently available. Housing <br />downtown requires public sector support in order to be competitive. Proposals for the <br />site will recognize this development site as a rare opportunity to address the significant <br />need for downtown housing units by providing for multi-storied, very high density hous- <br />ing, preferably accommodating ownership options as well as affordable units.” <br /> <br />Mr. Kelly offered a friendly amendment to insert the word ‘preferred’ before the sentence beginning with <br />‘proposals for the site. . .’ The maker of the motion accepted the friendly amendment. <br /> <br />Mr. Kelly indicated his support for the amendment. He cited several successful housing projects in the <br />downtown area and said he believed housing in that area to be a “cornerstone.” He noted the RFP would not <br />require, but rather would strongly encourage the construction of housing at the site. <br /> <br />City Manager Taylor understood the amendment to preclude all other uses of the site. He said the addition <br />of the word ‘preferred’ clarified that it meant to encourage the development of housing. <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />MINUTES—Eugene City Council May 24, 2006 Page 3 <br /> Work Session <br /> <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.