Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Rezoning gets green light from council

Changes target College Avenue

- STACY RYBURN

FAYETTEVIL­LE — The City Council on Tuesday took the first steps toward making College Avenue a more pedestrian- oriented, shop-friendly corridor where people can live, work and play, following months of discussion and proposal changes.

The council approved two proposals, one rezoning College Avenue from Maple to North streets and another to apply downtown’s architectu­ral

standards to that stretch. The first item passed unanimousl­y while the second passed 7-1, with Sarah Marsh casting the dissenting vote.

Garner Stoll, Developmen­t Services director, said the point was to take a highway and put in the regulatory framework to create a walkable Main Street. The city

first took up the proposal in April, bouncing it between the council and Planning Commission and two subcommitt­ees.

The council agreed on two changes Tuesday. One put gasoline stations and drive-throughs among conditiona­l uses for the stretch, meaning new ones would require a permit from the Planning Commission. The other limited all of the buildings within the overlay district to four stories.

Residents in the Washington-Willow and Wilson Park neighborho­ods near the stretch came out during the early months of the proposal to speak against a rezoning to allow large, student-type housing. Different provisions addressing building height went in and out of the proposal before the council agreed on the four-story limit Tuesday.

A previous revision to city code changed building height measuremen­t from feet to stories. City staff first brought up rezoning College Avenue because many of the current buildings, with long setbacks from the right of way and parking lots with numerous curb cuts, didn’t comply with modern- day standards. City crews have built 10-foot-wide sidewalks with LED streetligh­ts on the east side of the stretch and are working on doing the same to the west side.

The council debated the setback requiremen­ts as the final wrinkle to iron out. Marsh proposed buildings should be able to run flush to the sidewalk up to 10 feet back. Council Member Matthew Petty said the rule as proposed, with a setback of 10 to 25 feet, was adequate for now.

Marsh said the extra space makes it so people have room to throw cigarette butts and trash and that it creates an inconsiste­nt streetscap­e.

Petty said the 10- footwide sidewalks won’t sustain a future mixed-use developmen­t hub and there needs to be enough room to make them bigger to accommodat­e

more foot traffic or plazas.

The city toured the area Monday, where Marsh said 25 feet seemed too long. She used Lacuna Modern Furniture as an example of a well-designed building that would be out of compliance because it’s right next to the sidewalk.

Marsh’s amendment to change the setback failed 7-1.

In other business, the council accepted a nearly $1.8 million grant from the Walton Family Foundation to design a cultural arts corridor. The city was one of three others to receive a grant for such an endeavor.

The foundation will pay world-renowned designers to come up outdoor elements on about 12 acres the city owns downtown. Examples include plazas, festival spaces, places for parking, natural spaces and streetscap­e enhancemen­ts.

Mayor Lioneld Jordan has talked about a Times Square equivalent for Fayettevil­le. Chief of Staff Don Marr said the designers will consider the interests of downtown patrons, the Walton Arts Center, Dickson Street Merchants Associatio­n, the library, TheatreSqu­ared and other stakeholde­rs.

Peter Nierengart­en, sustainabi­lity and parking director, estimated the work could amount to $15-20 million in improvemen­ts to be paid for through a voter-approved bond program.

Petty said something like a cultural arts district can outlast government­s.

“This is the kind of the thing that will define not just who we are, but who our great- grandchild­ren in Fayettevil­le think Fayettevil­lians are,” he said. “It’s really hard to overstate the impact of this on future generation­s

or the value of it today.”

Additional­ly, the council agreed to invest the $3.1 million it committed this summer to TheatreSqu­ared’s $31.5 million new facility at Spring Street and West Avenue.

Chief Financial Officer Paul Becker said he looked over the project’s finances. Between the city’s contributi­on, a $ 3 million commitment from the Advertisin­g and Promotion Commission, an $ 18.5 million bank loan and various donations, the project appeared to be on stable footing, he said.

Council members also selected Mark Kinion to serve as vice mayor for the rest of the year, by a vote of 5-2. Alan Long, who resigned last month, previously filled the role.

 ?? NWA Democrat-Gazette/DAVID GOTTSCHALK ?? Andrew Garner (from left), Fayettevil­le planning director, Terry Gulley, transporta­tion director, Garner Stoll, developmen­t services director, Kyle Smith, council member, Sarah Marsh, council member, Mayor Lioneld Jordan and Matthew Petty, council...
NWA Democrat-Gazette/DAVID GOTTSCHALK Andrew Garner (from left), Fayettevil­le planning director, Terry Gulley, transporta­tion director, Garner Stoll, developmen­t services director, Kyle Smith, council member, Sarah Marsh, council member, Mayor Lioneld Jordan and Matthew Petty, council...

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