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Agenda Packets - 2015/06/08
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Agenda Packets - 2015/06/08
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1/28/2025 4:48:24 PM
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MV Commission Documents
Commission Name
City Council
Commission Doc Type
Agenda Packets
MEETINGDATE
6/8/2015
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City Council Document Type
City Council Packets
Date
6/8/2015
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<br />Item No: 7B <br />Meeting Date: June 8, 2015 <br />Type of Business: Council Business <br />Administrator Review: ________ <br />City of Mounds View Staff Report <br />To: Honorable Mayor and City Council <br />From: Heidi Heller, Planning Associate <br />Item Title/Subject: Appeal of a Variance Denial to Allow a Driveway Curb Cut to <br />Exceed 24 Feet at 8382 Knollwood Drive; <br /> Planning Case VR2015-002 <br /> <br /> <br />Introduction: <br /> <br />The applicant, Robert Horbul, applied for a variance to allow his driveway curb cut to exceed 24- <br />feet at his property at 8382 Knollwood Drive. The Planning Commission heard this request on <br />May 20, 2015 and denied the variance. Mr. Horbul is appealing the denial to the City Council. <br /> <br />The applicant’s entire driveway, including the curb cut, is currently 34 feet wide. This property is <br />on a street that is being reconstructed this year. As the streets have been reconstructed, the City <br />is installing the new curb cut aprons so that they comply with the Zoning Code requirements. The <br />new aprons are installed with a 5-foot setback and a maximum of 24 feet wide. The applicant’s <br />existing concrete driveway was installed 34 feet wide (presumably by the builder) in 1977 when <br />the house was built and has remained this way ever since. It does comply with the required side <br />yard setback. City staff sent the applicant a letter stating that his driveway width was non- <br />conforming, and that the new apron would be installed 24 feet wide instead of matching to his <br />existing width. The Zoning Code allows driveway curb cuts for single family homes to be a <br />maximum of 24 feet wide, so the applicant requested a variance for a curb cut to exceed the <br />allowed width. <br /> <br />Discusssion: <br /> <br />There was no zoning permit issued when the driveway was installed, and there was no variance <br />granted allowing the driveway to be 34 feet wide. Had the builder applied for a permit, he would <br />have been informed that the driveway was not allowed to be 34 feet wide at the street. The <br />driveway itself can be wider – it’s only the curb cut opening that is limited to 24 feet. When <br />Knollwood Drive is completed, the applicant wants his new driveway apron to be installed 34 feet <br />wide. <br /> <br />The Zoning Code states that the Planning Commission may issue a variance to provide relief to <br />the landowner in those cases where the Code imposes practical difficulties to the property owner <br />in the use of the property owner’s land. This is true for all variance requests. State statutes <br />require that the governing body review a set of specified criteria for each application and make its <br />decision in accordance with these criteria. These criteria are set forth in Section 1125.02, <br />Subdivision 2, of the City Code. A variance may be granted only in the event that all of the <br />following circumstances exist:
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