Side Streets ~ Neighborhood people and issues

Archive for the 'Cascade Avenue' Tag

THE BERLIN WALL CAME DOWN, will Holger’s?

January 17th, 2010, 12:00 pm by

  Holger and Sally Christiansen started building this wall around their home at 1221 N. Cascade Ave. in 2007. It sits unfinished while they battle the city over zoning codes, permits, variances and encroachments.

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Eventually, the city sued the Christiansens to force compliance with codes. The couple countersued and the whole mess comes to trial Tuesday. 

There’s more at stake than just the $200,000-plus wall, built of red brick they had shipped from Virginia and which towers over Cascade just north of Unitah Street.

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The trial, before  Fourth Judicial District Judge Timothy Simmons, left, will be a test of Colorado Springs’ zoning codes and the Historic Preservation Board and its rules for construction in the Old North End Historic District.

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   The city says the Christiansens built the wall without necessary permits. The wall ranges from nearly 7 feet to 11 feet tall at the top of its decorative finials, shown below.

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In fact, it far exceeds the 6 feet maximum for fences and walls built without permits or variances. It’s so large the city classifies it as an “accessory structure” meaning it must sit back 25 feet from property lines.

 Worse, the city says, it encroaches into a city alley by 2 feet, flush against a city utility pole, as you can see below. 

wallalley

I wrote this column in September 2008. This is the blog that accompanied the story.

 A few months earlier, in May, I wrote about it for the first time.

 It’s a beautiful wall, as you can see. But the city said the process the Christiansens’ followed violates the integrity of the zoning codes and planning process, as well as defies the Historic Preservation Board, which rejected the wall as inappropriate in the district.

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I’LL BE YOUR ROUNDABOUT

September 17th, 2008, 8:36 pm by

                                       

Apologies to the rock band Yes and its popular 1971 album Fragile and hit Roundabout. But if Colorado College gets its way, motorists will be rockin’ and rollin’ along Cascade Avenue when they hit four proposed roundabouts between Boulder and Jackson streets.

The city planning staff has approved the idea, at least as an experiment, and now it’s off to Colorado Springs Planning Commission and, eventually. the City Council.

The changes to Cascade are part of a sweeping revision the college has proposed to its master plan.

Here is a look at the long range master plan proposed by CC: Colorado College Long Range Development Plan

And here is the college’s response to initial city planning objections to the plan: Colorado College Response

Lots of good maps and stuff in those.

Here are some of the maps you will find. This is an overview of the campus and what the college considers its redevelopment potential:

This map shows the college transportation plan with the straightening of Glen Avenue south of Uintah Street on the far west edge of campus, the opening of access to the residence hall parking complex south of Uintah at Wood Avenue and the installation of roundabouts on Cascade, among other changes.

The map below shows the various land uses on campus:

Here is the first phase of construction proposed by the college:

Below is the plan with all three phases:

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