Side Streets ~ Neighborhood people and issues

Archive for the 'Shooks Run neighborhood' Tag

SHOOKS RUN DIVIDED OVER KIOWA CREEK HOMES PROJECT

March 14th, 2012, 12:57 pm by

Beginning in 2003, East Kiowa Street in the Shooks Run neighborhood became a hot spot for development. Three large infill projects were proposed. None was ever built. But that may be changing soon.Blueprints for PAX Development's Kiowa Creek Homes show four buildings and two garages, entering off the alley on the south edge of the property.

Blueprints for PAX Development's Kiowa Creek Homes show four buildings and two garages, entering off the alley on the south edge of the property.

A few years ago, Shooks Run was a hot spot for infill projects as developers proposed three large projects clustered around the creek and East Kiowa Street.

First was the 10-unit Kiowa Creek Lofts in 2003, then the Pikes Peak Plaza commercial/retail project just east along the creek in 2004 and finally a 20-unit condo on Kiowa in 2007.

The historic neighborhood on the east edge of downtown was not too happy about any of them.

It mobilized to oppose the projects fearing they would change the character of the neighborhood, which dates  to its annexation in 1872.

None was ever built.

Now, with development starting to heat back up, one of the projects has been retooled and will come back before the Colorado Springs Planning Commission on Thursday. It’s called the Kiowa Creek Homes.

Plans by Martin Newton and his PAX Development call for two duplexes and two single-family homes, each with three bedrooms, on a lot at 507 E. Kiowa St.

To squeeze four buildings and two garages onto the commercially zoned, half-acre lot, Newton is seeking a variance from the required 12 off-street parking spaces. He wants just six.

Newton also wants a variance so his buildings can sit just 15 feet back from the sidewalk instead of the required 20 feet.

Neighbors are split on the project. A big objection is the density.

An artist renderning shows the Kiowa Creek Homes from the alley.

An artist rendering shows the Kiowa Creek Homes from the front off Kiowa Street. The project was redesigned from its 2003 loft proposal to more closely resemble the century-old homes of the neighborhood.

The Kiowa Creek Loft project was a four-story building that neighbors complained clashed with homes on the block.

“I think they are trying to cram too much onto the lot,” said Louise Conner, president of the Middle Shooks Run Neighborhood Association, which opposes the plan.

However, neighbors are relieved it’s not another hideous, huge four-story box building as Newton proposed and won approval for in 2003.

Newton significantly redesigned the project and configured smaller buildings in similar architectural style as the surrounding century-old houses.

Conner said neighbors appreciate the revisions. (See them on my blog.)

“They did make adjustments to the exteriors to make the porches look slightly more like the old homes on that street,” Conner said.

This is a view of the lot from the alley looking northeast.

Regardless, she wants the codes for parking and setback enforced.

City planner Ryan Tefertiller is recommending approval, noting the neighborhood is not strictly residential and zoning would allow Newton to build sidewalk-to-alley with little regard to aesthetics.

“I think this project is about the best scenario you could hope for in a long-vacant, commercially zoned property,” Tefertiller said. “It’s zoning would permit a lot of things the neighborhood would be pretty strongly opposed to. If I were a neighbor, I’d be pretty darn happy with this proposal.”

I’m guessing neighbors are not convinced. And I’m wondering, can the other two projects be far behind?

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SHOOKS RUN AHEAD OF STREETSCAPE CURVE

September 28th, 2011, 1:09 pm by

Nancy Strong didn’t know she was ahead of the curve when she led an effort to transform a deteriorating piece of abandoned Santa Fe Railway right-of-way in the Shooks Run neighborhood.

The property, at the southeast corner of El Paso Street and Willamette Avenue, was a bend in the railroad abandoned after the last train passed in 1971.

Over the years, it had grown weedy and nasty.

It bothered Nancy, especially because it was across from the Middle Shooks Run Park and adjacent to a Mountain Metro Transit bus stop.

So after the bus stop was rebuilt last fall to make it handicapped accessible, Nancy was inspired to transform the right-of-way as well.

She led and public-private effort to rehab an old bend in the railroad and make it an attractive corner that would look good for years with minimal water or weeding.

The corner of El Paso Street and Willamette Avenue has been transformed by the Middle Shooks Run Neighborhood Association from weeds and dirt into a landscape of trees and shrubs sustainable in our dry climate.

First, she enlisted her friends in the Middle Shooks Run Neighborhood Association for ideas and help.

Then she started contacted Metro Transit where she found Bill Bottini, who helped her get approval to redirect $500 the agency planned to use reseeding the area and use the cash for landscaping.

Nancy turned to area businesses for donations and got donations and discounts on boulders, dirt, landscaping materials, trees, shrubs, flowers and mulch.

Finally, it was up to neighborhood volunteers to sculpt everything into the streetscape that exists today.

Long-term, the plants will need little water. Hopefully, they will get by on natural rainfall and snowmelt.

And the mulch will suppress weed growth to keep the properpty attractive with minimal labor.

Turns out, Nancy and her neighbors doing the exact kind of public/private project envisioned by Mayor Steve Bach when he announced formation Wednesday of a Streetscapes Solution Team.

The team will be led by longtime neighborhood activist Dave Munger, president of the Council of Neighbors and Organizations, an umbrella group for the city’s neighborhood associations.

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The neighbors aren’t fooled

July 18th, 2010, 12:01 pm by

If you think you are fooling your neighbors about something going on at your home, forget about it.

Neighbors always seem to know what’s going on next door or down the street.

There are no secrets.

The Shooks Run neighborhood is a good example.

Folks there are convinced someone is selling drugs from a rental property near East Bijou Street and North Corona Street. It has a parade of people, day and night, seven days a week, neighbors say.

Men and women, young and old, drop by for quick visits. For months they stopped at recreational vehicles parked at the house. Now they visit the garage.

We are not specifying the exact house because we could not reach the owner, nor could we prove that any illegal activity is going on.

Here is a look at the area from FlashEarth:

We checked with Colorado Springs officials and found the house is well-known to them.

Code enforcement administrator Ken Lewis said the city has a list of complaints dating to 2005.

In 2008, his officers condemned an upstairs apartment in the duplex. Officers found unsanitary conditions and evicted a man, woman and two children from the apartment, as well as two pit bulls.

After I observed the house for myself, I became convinced something strange is going on.

I saw a steady flow of foot traffic, bicyclists and motorists coming and going. Even teenagers from nearby Palmer High School. What I saw matched what neighbors told me.

They also report bizarre behavior, such as naked men making late-night visits to the house. And some have found what they believe was drugs outside the house.

Here’s what I saw. The photo below  shows one of a parade of people who walked, biked and drove up to the RVs, made quick visits and left.

(I have digitally obscured the person’s clothing.)

Note the way blankets and tarps are roped across the RV to obscure it.

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One fellow was in a hurry. He drove up, parked the wrong way, hopped out and was on his way in a jiffy.

(His license plate and other identifying marks have been erased, digitally, as well.)

A sign on the door of one RV had a sign: School of Professional Psychology. Hmmm

Neighbors tell me they’ve picked up drug paraphernalia and baggies with white substances they believed were some sort of illegal drugs.

One neighbor said a man visiting the RV stripped naked and tried to break into her house late one night.

The last photo, below, shows  a fellow who was not too happy to see me taking photos. After I shot this frame, he broke into a sprint toward me, yelling something I can’t repeat. Suffice to say he wasn’t wishing me a nice day.

Since I called Colorado Springs Code Enforcement, both RVs have been moved away. But neighbors say drugs are still be sold from the garage on the property.

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