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06-12-2017 Council Packet
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06-12-2017 Council Packet
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City Council
Council Document Type
Council Packet
Meeting Date
06/12/2017
Council Meeting Type
Regular
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Anoka County Multi-Jurisdictional <br />All Hazards Mitigation Plan <br /> 138 <br /> <br />Commercial and industrial development and trends: Commercial and industrial development <br />in Andover is focused around the two major arterial roadways that serve the city: County Road <br />116 (Bunker Lake Boulevard) and County Road 78 (Hanson Boulevard). The city is currently <br />marketing land that is owned by the Economic Development Authority (EDA) in an area known <br />as “Andover Station North.” The site, nearly 120 acres in total, was formally home to an <br />automobile salvage and crushing yard. The City, with the assistance of the Minnesota Pollution <br />Control Agency (MPCA) has cleaned the site, and is now mark eting it for a wide range of uses, <br />including town homes, commercial, and light industrial. Commercial development in the city <br />tends to focus on the retail and service industries. <br /> <br />Residential development and trends: Andover has been one of the fastest growing cities in <br />the Twin Cities metropolitan area during the last 20 years. While the city’s population was <br />15,216 in 1990, it now exceeds 31,000. The Metropolitan Council has projected a population of <br />42,000 in Andover by 2020 and 44,600 by 2030. Andover has added an average of 63 new <br />housing units per year over the last 5 years. This rate of growth is expected to increase in the <br />coming years as municipal services are extended to the “Rural Reserve” area, which will open <br />nearly 1,000 acres to urban development. <br /> <br />Infrastructure and infrastructure projects: The City of Andover’s water treatment plant went <br />online in October of 2004. It is capable of treating up to 9 million gallons per day. As of 2004, <br />there was a total of 191.94 miles of City, County, and State Aid roads in the city. Additional city <br />and county road improvements will be necessary to accommodate the development of the Rural <br />Reserve. A new trunk sanitary sewer line will be constructed to provide service to the Rural <br />Reserve, and a second water treatment plant may be needed to serve the area as well. <br /> <br /> <br />ANOKA <br />Geographic location and characteristics: The City of Anoka is located in western Anoka <br />County, approximately 25 miles north of Minneapolis/St. Paul. Anoka shares its borders with <br />Ramsey, Andover, Coon Rapids, and Champlin. On its southern border are the Mississippi <br />River and the Rum River runs through the center of the City. The City of Anoka is 7.13 square <br />miles in size. Anoka is located at Latitude 45.21N, Longitude 93.39W. <br /> <br />Public lands: 30% of the City of Anoka is in public land. These areas include land owned by <br />the State of Minnesota (Anoka Metro Regional Treatment Center and Highway Department), the <br />County of Anoka (Anoka County Courthouse, Correctional Facility, and Fairgrounds). Within the <br />city, the areas include churches, schools, city offices, public works facilities, public safety center, <br />parks department, an ice arena, the aquatic center, a city-owned golf course, 13 parks, and 7 <br />trail/corridors through the city. <br /> <br />Private fee areas: There are no private fee areas in the City of Anoka. <br /> <br />Agriculture and forestry: Approximately 265 acres in the Rum River Nature area, west of 7th <br />Street and north of County Road 116, is presently agriculture and forestry. While the City of <br />Anoka has an abundance of trees, there are no publicly managed forestlands. <br /> <br />Commercial and industrial development and trends: 40,000 – 80,000 square feet will be <br />part of a mixed-use redevelopment (modest retail – office buildings). <br />
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