Side Streets ~ Neighborhood people and issues

Archive for the 'infill' Tag

INDIAN HEIGHTS CASITAS: Resident solves problem

May 16th, 2010, 10:39 am by

Indian Heights Casitas is one of the “infill” projects that Colorado Springs has encouraged in recent years. Here’s a look at it:

 

In this case, developer Bill Skeele took a vacant lot on the Westside at 19th and King Streets and, around 2006, built 15 townhomes.

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 Basically, Skeele built seven duplexes and a single unit.

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It’s adjacent to a large storage complex and surrounded by older homes as well as other housing developments.

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Joyce Truitt and her daughter came along and bought side-by-side units. They were low-maintenance homes. Conveniently located in the city. And not part of a sprawling complex.

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There was just one problem. Skeele never finished the project. Truitt said he left lots of little things undone. Most important was an irrigation system for the common areas.

As a result, trees and shrubs died. Truitt said he was unresponsive to repeated calls for action. So she turned to the city. Again she became frustrtated.

Here’s a look at Indian Heights Casitas from FlashEarth:

So Truitt started calling the city’s development review folks and teh city attorney. Truitt had been married to a banker for years and knew projects like this were secured by bonds. In this case, $57,000 remained locked up until the city released it back to Skeele.

Truitt asked the city to use that money to finish the project. But she said city staff told her the money was a penalty bond meaning it would not necessarily be used to finish Indian Heights Casitas if staff decided Skeele would forfeit it.

That’s when Truitt called me.

She didn’t need to. She had done everything possible to get action on her complaint. And the city had not ignored her. In fact, the city met a week ago with Skeele and he promised to complete the project by June 1.

Truitt is not convinced. But she hopes it’s true.

Stay tuned.

Common areas at Indian Heights Casitas

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DEVELOP OR PRESERVE?

April 26th, 2009, 10:04 pm by

Folks in the Ralwes Open Space Neighborhood want the Colorado Springs City Council to decide if the policy to encourage ”infill” development has any limits.

rawlestwitter

At Tuesday’s council meeting, they will ask the council to reject plans for the Horizon View subdivision. They argue the projec tis incompatible with the neighborhood, which sits along Mesa Road between Fillmore and Uintah streets.

rawlesmap

 kristinehembre 

Kristine Hembre, left, an allergy doctor, bought the five-acre property in 2006 and made plans, through her Elle Development Co., to tear down the existing house and replace it with five new houses on a modern cul de sac with a paved street, curbs and gutters, sidewalks and sewers.

 

 

Such amenities are unusual along that stretch of Mesa, where residents take pride in the rural feel of things. They don’t have curbs, gutters and sidewalks or paved driveways or even city sewer service. Here’s a look at the area from www.FlashEarth.com:

rawlesflash

Rawles residents boast that they have preserved their area so well that Springs founder Gen William Jackson Palmer might still recognize it, a century after his death. According to legend, Palmer rode Mesa to get from his Glen Eyrie castle to Colorado Springs.

 rawleshistoricphotoBelow is a page submitted by one of the neighbors:

 

So they are fighting the project on the basis that large homes on 20,000-square-foot lots would be incompatible with the surrounding rural feel of the neighborhood.

 Here’s a look at preliminary blueprints filed with the city:

rawlesblueprint

The Colorado Springs Planning Commission gave the plan unanimous approval because it meets zoning and other requirements. And planners reason that it is exactly the kind of project the City Council wanted to encourage when it established a policy to encourage “infill” development.

The idea is for developers to look for vacant  land within established neighborhoods where houses or apartments can be built, rather than automatically building new subdivisions farther and farther out on the eastern edge of the city.

 But Rawles neighborhood leaders said the council should care about preserving the character of older neighborhoods.

You can read the entire file and see more blueprints here.

Here’s a closer look from FlashEarth at the property:

 rawlesflash21

 

The Rawles Open Space is a 7.6-acre tract named for the former owners of the property. It was deeded to the Palmer Land Trust to preserve it. Another 19-acre tract nearby also is owned by the Trust, which works to secure conservation easements to preserve undeveloped land. Read about the Palmer Land Trust.

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