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g. <br />The Preserve, page 4 <br />The project includes a trail within the open space areas and along the road to <br />provide access to Birch Park.. <br />Managing stormwater (flow rates and quality) using natural infiltration and ecologically - <br />based approaches <br />The project includes natural infiltration as part of the design. The `treatment train' <br />approach includes swales, rain gardens, and infiltration ponds. This will improve <br />water quality on and off site. In addition, improving the wetlands through restoration <br />of native vegetation will contribute to better water quality. <br />h. Preserving the open space aesthetic to which community residences have become <br />accustomed <br />The project design minimizes impacts on wetlands and actually improves the <br />wetlands, which will be protected with a management plan. <br />i. Maintaining natural buffer between established and new developments. <br />The large wetlands along the eastern part of the site will remain as and open space <br />buffer for existing development. <br />In addition to the specific activities described in the restoration and management plan, this site is <br />a piece of a wetland greenway system. This wetland complex continues south and west for over <br />a mile, and east for a similar distance. These wetlands are part of a large watershed along <br />County Ditch 25, which drains a significant portion of south central Lino Lakes. It is the same <br />complex that covers parts of the Foxborough project, which incorporated many conservation <br />development elements to restore and conserve the wetlands. This ditch and wetland system has <br />been identified as a high value ecological area. The Foxborough project was the first <br />conservation development project because it was designed to accommodate and enhance this <br />ecological system. The Integra development can be the next piece in this larger picture. <br />PLANNED UNIT DEVELOPMENT, PRELIMINARY PLAT <br />PUD: Conservation development design considers the conservation goals more important than <br />mathematical standards found in a zoning ordinance. A planned development provides the <br />flexibility needed in order to implement conservation development. <br />Section 2, Subd. 10.A. of the zoning ordinance discusses the purpose of a planned unit <br />development (PUD). In addition, Subd. 10.D. lists the purposes of an urban PUD. The <br />application should be compared to these purposes. <br />Purpose and Intent. The purpose of this section of the Zoning Ordinance is to provide for <br />the grouping of lots or buildings for development as an integrated, coordinated unit as <br />opposed to traditional parcel by parcel, piecemeal, or sporadic approach to development. <br />This section is intended to introduce flexibility of site design and architecture for the <br />conservation of land and open space through clustering of lots, buildings and activities, which <br />promote the goals outlined in the Comprehensive Plan or serve another public purpose. It is <br />further intended that planned unit developments are to be characterized by central <br />