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PCAgenda_07Jun26
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PCAgenda_07Jun26
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19 <br />• Areas of Potential Change <br />Except for a few vacant residentially zoned parcels, Falcon Heights is fully developed. <br />The City's unique composition includes the University of Minnesota's agricultural <br />research fields. This land is not considered vacant by the City or the University. <br />Therefore, it is not in new development, but in redevelopment where Falcon Heights will <br />see changes over the next twenty years. <br />Vacant land. The only vacant land for development in the city's land use controls is one <br />vacant lot on Tatum street, zoned R-4, and site of approximately 4 acres that is in a <br />single-family residential zone [map?]. At the present time, this vacant land is divided into <br />eight separate parcels, all but one belonging to the adjacent homeowners. None of these <br />parcels have street access. Although these and other constraints make it unlikely that this <br />site will be developed in the next ten or even twenty years, the City evaluated this area's <br />development potential in the past and determined some minimal criteria that must be <br />addressed by any future developer to guarantee that it would be developed according to <br />sound land use planning practices. These criteria include developing the site as a whole <br />rather than on a lot-by-lot basis. It is likely that this would be developed as a planned unit <br />development with densities being determined at the time of the development. <br />Redevelopment: The Larpenteur Corridor. As of the last comprehensive plan, the largest <br />potential site for redevelopment was the southeast corner of Snelling and Larpenteur. <br />Now that this project has been completed, there are no immediate candidates for <br />• redevelopment. However, several of the larger commercial properties are underutilized, <br />and the existing apartment buildings are aging, so it is likely that opportunities for <br />redevelopment will arise during the next twenty years. Most of these sites are on <br />Larpenteur Avenue, an important bus transit route, so a chief focus of the City's planning <br />will be the "Larpenteur Corridor." <br />Given the unlikelihood of University of Minnesota land being made available for <br />development, it will be redevelopment of properties in the Larpenteur Corridor that will <br />provide the additional housing Falcon Heights is expected to need by 2030. It is likely <br />that any proposed redevelopment will be carried out as planned unit development with a <br />housing component, densities to be determined at the time of development. <br />Changes to Public Lands. The construction of a new Bell Museum of Natural History on <br />the southwest corner of Larpenteur and Cleveland Avenues (scheduled to open in 2010) <br />will bring many visitors to Falcon Heights. With Gibbs Museum of Pioneer and Dakotah <br />Life (Ramsey County Historical Society) across Larpenteur Avenue to the north, and the <br />proximity to University recreational facilities, two City parks and existing or planned <br />trails, the Cleveland/Larpenteur area could become the nucleus of a new cultural and <br />recreational center in Falcon Heights and an important element of the Larpenteur <br />Corridor. To allow for a proposed expansion of the Gibbs Museum the Public Land <br />overlay will be extended to the adjacent residential property which the Ramsey county <br />Historical Society now owns. <br /> <br />
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