the developers don't own the "other" space you are talking about ... they own this piece of land .. and they have the right to develop it
the developers don't own the "other" space you are talking about ... they own this piece of land .. and they have the right to develop it
I'm for rebuilding downtown before building new at the outskirts.
I'd have to know more details before I'd be willing to trade land with a developer and not if they bought swampy wetland zoned agricultural that is never going to get legally developed into anything otherwise.
I'm talking about this deal too. They have only filed a PUD, or SPUD or for some zoning change. It remains to be seen if they can do what they want to do and comply with the laws and concerns of the various entities who have to approve of it.
Your analogy has nothing at all to do with what I said. If you want to use that analogy, the property owners should get the city of OKC to buy out the developers which means that all citizens of OKC will be paying for it. Just because you or they don't like the proposed development doesn't mean that the developers should lose all of the money they have invested in a legal proposal. If that land needs to be preserved someone or somebody needs to compensate them.
It does suck that so many suburban developers don't do their due diligence. You do have a point though.
It just comes down to which the city needs to look out for more. Preventing a developer from taking a huge loss and having a property he can't develop or get rid of (although maybe he could put something of much less impact like 1 single family home on the site). Or whether we should prevent shoddy development, enforce development standards, and protect environmental standards especially around a wildlife refuge that is a natural asset to the city.
Not a black and white issue, but it's obvious which side I'm on.
Here's a rendering of what might happen. The apartments would be directly north across the highway from Stonebridge and a bit west of Stinchcomb. There is another section of AA land between Morgan and Stinchcomb. No doubt this will shorten the time until it's developed too. (This tract was zoned AA until the last PUD was approved to be all commercial in 2002). That's an existing stream running through the middle. I don't believe the ponds are existing but are for detention. That's the outer loop on ramp on the left and Highway 66 at the bottom. Most or all of the site is in a flood plane. 60 acres more or less with some proposed to be used for commercial and some residential, single and/or multifamily.
Probably shouldn't develop in a flood plain. And the storm water detention on the southwest looks great but it looks like they are literally just going to use the Stinchomb Wildlife Refuge as their drainage for storm water on the other sides of the development. Nice.
There are issues and risks with building in a floodplain both with the property itself and with the impact on other parts of the floodplain. That's probably not going to slow down this project tho.
We're talking about something entirely different, but let me just say that I'd rather they not Oklahoma River the Stinchcomb Wildlife Refuge.
Usually they fill in the area to raise it above flood stage.
I think it's more complicated than that, depending on the municipality and to what extent they have involved FEMA for help and flood insurance. I think once you have FEMA involved you act according to their guidelines at a minimum. But I'm far from up to speed on that.
<snort>$70
The city filing fee for a PUD is over $1000, closer to $2k I think, and this is their second time around. I imagine they have quite a bit tied up in surveys, consulting, legal fees, filing documents and planning at this point. They are probably on top of it but that doesn't mean it's a Good Thing to do.
edit to add:An internet search makes it appear the filing fee is $2390
It's just a generic site plan that you see almost all new suburban projects using these days, nothing special. Probably figured it was safe.
Yep - I prefer the new fancy 'bells and whistles' site plans also. What they lack in compliance, they make up for in pizazz. What kind of site plans did they use before "these days" anyhow?
Main Street.
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