My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
Home
Browse
Search
Agenda Packets - 1997/05/12
MoundsView
>
Commissions
>
City Council
>
Agenda Packets
>
1990-1999
>
1997
>
Agenda Packets - 1997/05/12
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
1/28/2025 4:47:56 PM
Creation date
6/28/2018 2:40:49 PM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
MV Commission Documents
Commission Name
City Council
Commission Doc Type
Agenda Packets
MEETINGDATE
5/12/1997
Supplemental fields
City Council Document Type
City Council Packets
Date
5/12/1997
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
146
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
Show annotations
View images
View plain text
City Council Resolution No. 5104 i <br /> May 12, 1997 <br /> Page 6 <br /> EXHIBIT 2 <br /> District 1 is intended to become the Village Center, or focal point for the community. It is envisioned <br /> to be a strong, vital activity center in the heart of the community, where a complimentary, <br /> coordinated mixture of uses will create a feeling of identity and enjoyment for residents and visitors. <br /> It will provide places to live, work, shop and enjoy leisure-time pursuits. The creation of the Village <br /> Center will build on existing uses which include the Mounds View City Hall and Community Center, <br /> two community shopping centers, Mounds View Square and Silver View Plaza, the Silver Lake <br /> Pointe and Wildwood Manor senior apartment developments,the single family homes and townhomes <br /> in Silver Lake Woods, several large apartment developments including Scotland Green, Woodlawn <br /> Terrace, Timberland Ridge, Greenfield Estates, Landmark Estates, The Sands, and Mounds View <br /> Estates, individual retail businesses and restaurants along Highway 10, and neighborhood businesses <br /> like Tom Thumb. <br /> This district includes some significant natural resources and open space areas. Silver View Park, on <br /> of the City's largest parks, is within walking distance from many areas of this district. It includes an <br /> attractive lake with walking paths, athletic fields, and picnic and playground facilities. There are three <br /> large wetlands, one located southeast of Silver View Road and Highway 10, one south of Highway <br /> 10 between Long Lake Road and County Road H2, and one next to the Mounds View Community 111/ <br /> Center. Two of these are State-protected, and all three are protected by local regulations. They will <br /> remain important assets in the environmental quality of this district, and an appropriate setting around <br /> each wetland needs to be preserved. The undeveloped land in this district is often wooded with <br /> mature trees, and effort needs to be given to preserving as much of the forested character and natural <br /> feel of these areas as is possible by how development is designed on these parcels. <br /> Highway 10 presents a challenge to the creation of the Village Center, in that it cuts diagonally across <br /> this district and the remainder of the community, and is used as a major route to move traffic through <br /> the region. It carries a high volume of traffic during commute times, and the timing of the traffic <br /> lights favors the highway rather than local traffic and pedestrians seeking to cross the highway at the <br /> intersections. The Village Center offers the possibility of creating a meeting ground between the two <br /> halves of the community, which will overcome the division created by the highway. It is the desire <br /> of the community that Highway 10 become a boulevard that is rooted in Mounds View, and makes <br /> the community visible rather ignoring or being oblivious to the community. <br /> Vehicular circulation should be developed according to a ring road concept to keep major traffic flow <br /> on the periphery of the Village Center. Access to Highway 10 should be limited and concentrated. <br /> Relative to general use patterns, commercial and medium density residential development should be <br /> located in proximity to Highway 10, with a decrease in intensity of use occurring outward from the <br /> highway toward the lower density residential neighborhoods to the south and west. Development <br /> should also include provisions for dedication of land to a pedestrian/bicycle trail system which can <br /> tie the various elements of the Center together and provide connection to a community -wide system <br /> of trails. <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.