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<br />Select Senior Living Staff Report <br />August 6, 2008 <br />Page 2 <br /> <br /> <br />The city rezones properties by ordinance. This means that the City Council will need to have two <br />readings of the ordinance to approve the zoning change. After Council approval, the ordinance <br />goes into effect 30 days after the City publishes the ordinance in the newspaper. <br /> <br />Presently: <br />The development site has an area of 2.38 acres, is located on County Road 10 and Groveland <br />Road and currently has mixed zoning designations. The property at 2865 County Highway 10 is <br />zoned R-O, Residential/Office and is currently being used as a single family home. 7980 and 8020 <br />Groveland Road are both currently zoned R-1, Single Family Residential with a house on each lot. <br /> <br />Select Senior Living is requesting a rezoning of the identified parcels to an R-4, High Density <br />Residential designation. The R-4 zoning designation would permit Single family dwellings, <br />twinhomes and townhomes up to 8 units. Senior congregate housing, schools, churches, day care <br />centers and other multiple family developments require City Council approval of a conditional use <br />permit (CUP) in an R-4 district. <br /> <br />Rezoning Criteria: <br />Chapter 1125 of the Mounds View Zoning Code addresses rezoning requests. The procedure and <br />conditions of approval are the same as for conditional use permits, which means the Planning <br />Commission is to consider possible and potential adverse effects of the requested rezoning. The <br />Planning Commission shall make a finding of fact and make a recommendation to the City Council <br />based upon the review of potential adverse effects and the findings of fact. <br /> <br />Relationship to the Comprehensive Plan <br />According to the Comprehensive Plan, the city has designated the site as a mixed-use planned <br />unit development. This is defined as land containing a building or buildings with significant <br />amounts of residential uses in combination with commercial and/or office uses. Sites with this <br />designation could be developed as planned unit developments (PUDs) to allow flexibility, but not all <br />development areas will meet the minimum size criteria. As I noted above, this is the case with this <br />proposal. One of the key components of the Comprehensive Plan, the Housing Element, is geared <br />toward maintaining and improving the quality and diversity of the existing housing stock and <br />providing infill housing opportunities where both possible and practical. The proposed rezoning <br />would help promote a greater diversity of housing choices in the city, as it would help allow the <br />applicant’s requested senior housing development proposal. <br /> <br />Geographical Area <br />The subject area proposed for redevelopment currently consists of three single family homes, (one <br />formerly also operated a trailer hitch business on the property). Adjacent to the west and north are <br />two vacant parcels zoned B-3 and R-1, which are also expected to be redeveloped. The properties <br />to the northeast of the subject parcels are zoned R-1, single family residential, and are developed <br />as such. Properties on County Highway 10 tend to be developed to a greater intensity, whether <br />commercial or residential, than in other parts of the city. Directly east of the project area across <br />Groveland Road is Steve’s Appliance, zoned B-3, and south of the project area across County <br />Highway 10 are two townhome developments. <br />