Laserfiche WebLink
<br />2. DEVELOPMENT TOOLS <br />Development Tools are uses of funds that support public/private partnerships, but that are not generally sources <br />of funds on their own. <br /> <br />A. Land Assembly <br /> <br />Land Assembly Summary <br /> <br />? <br /> Development footprint of adequate size is fundamental to project <br /> <br />? <br /> Areas of decline have many owners of small parcels <br /> <br />? <br /> City/URA can: <br /> <br /> Purchase property, buy purchase options; <br />o <br /> <br /> Prepare site for development (demolition / predevelopment); and <br />o <br /> <br /> Sell land at reduced price. <br />o <br /> <br /> <br />The expensive, long, and uncertain process of assembling property is a major barrier to private redevelopment. <br />Cities and urban renewal agencies often take an active role in property assembly as a method of creating <br />redevelopment opportunities and providing incentives for private reinvestment in a given area. Specific actions <br />typically include securing purchase options, direct purchase for resale or contribution to development, <br />demolition and predevelopment, and purchase price reductions. <br /> <br />Example: The City of Eugene and the URA have previously assembled land for the benefit of the following <br />projects: Beam Development (Centre Court & Washburne buildings), Broadway Place, Hilton Convention <br />Center, Eugene Public Library, Wayne Morse Federal Courthouse, US Bank Building, Lane Transit District <br />Downtown Station, and affordable housing development via the Landbanking Program. <br /> <br />Parking <br /> <br />Parking Summary <br /> <br />? <br /> <br /> Downtown core is a parking exempt area <br /> ? <br /> Important for developers and lenders for new housing construction <br /> <br />? <br /> Parking requirements for new development vary based on density and uses <br /> <br />? <br /> Structured parking revenues can support on-going operations and maintenance, but not the <br /> <br />capital cost for building the garage <br /> <br />? <br /> City has historically provided structured parking to support private development and <br /> <br />activity downtown <br /> <br /> <br />The City owns and operates eight public structured parking facilities in the downtown core, including the <br />Broadway Place structures at Broadway and Charnelton Street (366 north spaces and 363 south spaces), the <br />Overpark at 10th Avenue and Oak Street (598 spaces), the Parcade at 8th Avenue and Willamette Street (438 <br />spaces), the Pearl Street Garage (262 spaces), the HultCenter garage by the Hult Center (520 spaces), garage <br />under the downtown library (69 spaces), and under City Hall (196 spaces). The City offers monthly bulk <br />parking permit discounts of up to 30% for businesses that purchase bulk permits (50 or more permits) and have <br />an active alternative modes plan. <br /> <br />Although the downtown core area is parking exempt (meaning there are no requirements to provide parking <br />under City code), developers and lenders will typically require that the development provide parking in support <br />of certain types of uses. For example, market feasibility and lenders may require housing uses to meet a 1:1 <br />housing unit to parking space ratio. Retail uses may also demand specific parking supply per square foot. The <br />existing Land Use Code requires within the C3 zone that if parking of 20 or more spaces is to be provided that <br />they be structured. Because there are cost constraints and income limitations associated with privately <br />constructed structured parking, the provision of publicly provided parking can be a development tool. <br /> <br />