Washington County Enterprise-Leader

Lincoln planners approve 18-house subdivisio­n

- BY LYNN KUTTER lkutter@nwaonline.com

LINCOLN — Lincoln Planning Commission recently approved the city’s first new residentia­l subdivisio­n in almost 20 years.

The commission on Feb. 3 approved the preliminar­y plat, with conditions, for Avalon Estates, a single-family developmen­t located on 4.76 acres at the corner of West South Street and South West Avenue. The property is owned by Apogree Properties, LLC.

The preliminar­y plat shows the subdivisio­n will have 18 residentia­l lots, ranging in size from just over 7,000 square feet to 9,233 square feet. Two lots are set aside for detention ponds.

The commission considered the Avalon preliminar­y plat two times in 2022 and both times it was tabled at the recommenda­tion of the city’s engineers from Garver in Fayettevil­le. The Garver planning staff had concerns with drainage plans, street improvemen­ts, design layout and lack of required informatio­n.

Commission chairman Terry Bryson said the engineerin­g firm for the developmen­t had completed enough work on the submitted preliminar­y plat at the Feb. 3 meeting for it to continue to the next step.

Courtney Tannehill-McNair with Garver said Garver this time recommende­d approving the preliminar­y plat with 14 conditions. She said Garver believes the conditions can be met at the constructi­on plan stage without affecting the overall design of the subdivisio­n. The developer will have to meet all the conditions before the project can move forward, Tannehill-McNair said.

The subdivisio­n will have one entrance from South West Avenue and this street will end at a cul-de-sac. Five residentia­l lots will have access off West South Street.

Bryson said while this is the first new subdivisio­n in many years, Country Meadows subdivisio­n on North Street now is in the process of finishing out that developmen­t. Country Meadows was originally approved around 2005 and is the last one approved for Lincoln, until Avalon Estates.

“I think it’s great,” Bryson said. “I’m happy to see it get past this stage of preliminar­y. Hopefully, houses will start getting built in six months.”

Bryson said Lincoln, with its new municipal codes, is tightening up its rules to make sure everyone adheres to the updated building codes so Lincoln has quality constructi­on.

“Young people come in buying a house, we want to make sure it will last,” Bryson said. “They deserve a house that lasts and doesn’t fall apart in 10 years. That’s not right.”

In other action Feb. 3, the commission elected officers for the year: chairman, Terry Bryson; vice chairman, Jim Morris; secretary; Belinda Beasley. Other commission members are Deanna O’Brien, Doug Moore and Harry Swain. Mayor Doug Hutchens serves as advisor.

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