City discusses high-density housing on East Side
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Andrew Glazer
EAST SIDE -- Cookie-cutter homes squeezing onto lots once occupied by
larger, single-family homes here are taking away from the neighborhood
feel of this middle-class, family-filled area, city officials say.
City Councilwoman Heather Somers said the new, higher-density
developments, sprouting like dandelions here as the real estate market
continues to boom, are also flooding residential streets with traffic and
added garbage cans on trash day.
Because many of the complexes are gated and withdrawn from the street,
it’s difficult to chat with neighbors on the way to the mailbox or while
watering the lawn. Some East Side residents say this creates a feeling of
separation in the neighborhood.
“I know everyone on my street, but I think I have yet to meet a neighbor
in the new development across the street from me,” Somers said. “It
doesn’t encourage them to go outside their niche. It’s a little pocket
within the neighborhood.”
The City Council in 1992 reduced the number of housing units allowed on
each piece of land on the East Side in an attempt to preserve the
neighborhood feel.
“I’m very proud of what we did,” said Councilman Joe Erickson, who was
among those who approved the measure. “But there are already so many
built up already. I don’t think you can turn the clock back a decade.”
City planners distributed a report to the City Council at a study session
this week detailing how the city could restrict developers from
subdividing parcels of land.
The city could further decrease the number of homes it allows on each
property, said David Brantley, an associate planner who helped prepare
the report. Or it could require developers to maintain larger back and
front yards and provide more parking for their residents within each
complex.
But Mayor Gary Monahan said it wouldn’t be fair to prohibit the people
who bought homes here years ago from selling their land to more than one
developer. Doing so, he said, would make the property less valuable. For
now, the issue is still in the discussion phase.
“To take that away from them is pretty aggressive,” Monahan said.
Paula Meigs, who has owned a home on Santa Ana Avenue for more than 30
years, along with several other homeowners in the area, said she’s
willing to make the sacrifice.
“I’m not concerned about the property values,” she said, standing in her
frontyard blanketed with grass and ferns and looking across the street at
a new, red-shingled cluster of homes.
“We moved here because the buildings were heterogenous. I just don’t want
to live in a cookie-cutter area.”
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