C. Wayne Taylor

October 25, 2010

505 – 507 Libbie Avenue – Letter to City Council

Filed under: Flynn, R., North West, Patterson/Libbie/Grove, Zoning — cwaynetaylor @ 1:21 pm

October 25, 2010

Re:  Ordinance 2010-197 – Demolition of two dwelling structures and construction of office building in residential zone.

Dear Honorable Members of Council ,

For the record, ordinance 2010-197 should be stricken.

First, the applicant should request a rezoning to Residential-Office.  While the city charter gives the Council broad powers to grant special use permits that are not detrimental to the public welfare, it is an abuse of power to allow a landowner to circumvent the rezoning process.

Second, the proposed development violates the city’s Master Plan.  The plan limits the applicant’s property to transitional uses that protect the existing character of the adjacent residential zone.   The applicant’s residential structure at 505 Libbie Avenue has already been converted to transitional office use.  The proposed redevelopment would destroy the residential character and transitional buffer intended by the Plan.

Third, Rachel Flynn, Director of Planning and Development Review, misrepresented the facts when she stated in her report that:

The surrounding properties are also located in the R-4 district. Six of these nearby properties are currently authorized by special use permits for office uses. One of these properties, located across Libbie Avenue from the subject properties contains a similarly sized building with approximately 9,100 square feet.

In fact, the two office use properties across the street have buildings with only 2,132 and 2,160 square feet.  The average floor area to lot area ratio is .24 (FAR).  The applicant’s two properties have existing buildings with 1,850 and 1,163 square feet and a .10 FAR. The applicant proposes to triple the floor area  to .32 FAR.

It would be irresponsible, in a residentially zoned transitional buffer area, to approve the demolition of existing single family structures and allow the construction of an office building with triple the intensity.  The proposal is contrary to the zoning ordinances, the Master Plan, and the public welfare.

I am attaching a PDF file with photos and illustrations.

Urban-revitalization tour explores Broad Street corridor

This year, the tour explored the revitalization along the Broad Street corridor and simulated the proposed “bus rapid transit” route that would run west to Willow Lawn and east to Rocketts Landing. The former bank building, which was Richmond’s tallest from 1930 to 1971, was one of the properties toured by about 150 people on four buses yesterday.

via timesdispatch.com Jeremy Slayton.

August 20, 2010

Vacant Properties – On Turning Around Vacant Properties in Greater Richmond

Filed under: Blight, Flynn, R., Planning — cwaynetaylor @ 3:56 pm

City of Richmond, Virginia

More than 100 people turned out to see City of Richmond officials and panelists from Baltimore speak on the state of vacant housing and neighborhood stabilization policy alternatives at a seminar on Friday morning at the Federal Reserve Bank on Byrd Street.  chpn.net timesdispatch.com nbc12.com

July 9, 2010

Downtown – Task force looks to revitalize downtown Richmond

Filed under: Downtown, Flynn, R., Pending, Planning — cwaynetaylor @ 3:13 am

City of Richmond, Virginia

timesdispatch.com

The plan is to start out simple — adding shady trees to Broad Street and other locations, creating two-way streets, and adding signs to direct people to surrounding neighborhoods.

June 8, 2010

Flynn – City worker drops suit

Filed under: Flynn, R. — cwaynetaylor @ 12:24 am

City of Richmond, Virginia

timesdispatch.com

Richmond’s code-enforcement director of operations has dropped a $1.2 million lawsuit against his boss and the city that claimed she had humiliated and harassed him by calling him “an idiot” in front of co-workers.

June 5, 2010

Flynn – “Idiot” Lawsuit Reaches Back to Doug Wilder

Filed under: Flynn, R. — cwaynetaylor @ 1:47 am

City of Richmond, Virginia

styleweekly.com

… the sour relationship between Rachel Flynn and Eidem is in part the lingering effect of a Wilder-era power struggle between Flynn and a former city official.

May 21, 2010

City of Richmond, Virginia – Rachel O. Flynn – City worker sues boss

Filed under: Flynn, R. — cwaynetaylor @ 12:37 am

timesdispatch.com

The city of Richmond’s code-enforcement director of operations has filed a $1.2 million lawsuit against his boss and the city, saying she humiliated and harassed him by calling him “an idiot” in front of co-workers.

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