HomeMy WebLinkAboutItem 4City of Lakeville
Community & Economic Development
Memorandum
To: Mayor and City Council
Justin Miller, City Administrator
From: Daryl Morey, Planning Director
Date: September 18, 2019
Subject: September 23, 2019 City Council Work Session
CMU Bus Tour Discussion
On July 13, 2019 the City Council, Planning Commission and City staff went on a bus tour of
transit oriented development areas in three Twin Cities suburbs: Eden Prairie Town Center,
Maple Grove Gravel Mining Area/Arbor Lakes, and Park Commons in St. Louis Park. As a
follow-up to the bus tour, Planning Department staff is seeking feedback from the Planning
Commission and City Council on their impressions of each development area on the tour and
also their vision for the future of Lakeville’s two CMU Districts: the Cedar Avenue corridor and
the I-35 corridor.
The Planning Commission discussed their thoughts and impressions of the tour at a work
session held on September 5, 2019. A draft copy of their work session minutes is attached for
your reference.
Action Requested:
Discuss impressions from the bus tour and provide direction to staff for the preparation of
development regulations for CMU District land uses.
Attachments
• September 5, 2019 draft Planning Commission work session minutes
• August 28, 2019 TPC memorandum
CITY OF LAKEVILLE
PLANNING COMMISSION WORK SESSION MINUTES
September 5, 2019
Chair Kaluza called the work session to order at 6:40 p.m.
Members Present: Chair Pat Kaluza, Karl Drotning, Brooks Lillehei, Jenna
Majorowicz, Jason Swenson, and Jeff Witte
Members Absent: Scott Einck and Ex-Officio Mike Lamm
Staff Present: Planning Director Daryl Morey and Daniel Licht, TPC
Others Present: City Councilmember Joshua Lee
Corridor Mixed Use (CMU) Bus Tour Discussion
Mr. Licht outlined his August 19, 2019 memorandum summarizing the July 23, 2019
CMU bus tour that included staff, the Planning Commission, and the City Council. The
bus tour included stops at Town Center in Eden Prairie, the Gravel Mining Area/Arbor
Lakes in Maple Grove, and Park Commons in St. Louis Park. The Planning
Commission made the following comments:
• Liked the centrally located City park, which included recreational activities for all
seasons, in Maple Grove’s Gravel Mining Area/Arbor Lakes development.
• Town Center in Eden Prairie seemed somewhat disconnected, more car centric,
and less pedestrian friendly. Additional pedestrian connections between uses is
needed.
• The Park Commons area in St. Louis Park was too high density and the buildings
were too tall for Lakeville’s vision; however, the community park facilities
including the pool, ice arena, and adjacent park were nice features.
• Noted that major cooperate office projects providing significant employment
opportunities anchored each of the three cities visited on the bus tour.
• Commercial development along the Cedar Avenue corridor is likely to be less
regional in nature as the area is not adjacent to interstate freeways like in Eden
Prairie and Maple Grove.
• All three cities on the bus tour have transit facilities already in place. Concern
was raised over adding additional traffic in the Cedar Avenue corridor with
increased residential density and land use intensity without additional transit
facilities.
• The Planning Commission liked the variation in residential dwelling types within
the Gravel Mining Area/Arbor Lakes area of Maple Grove.
• Pedestrian, bike and vehicle connections will be important for Lakeville’s CMU
District. The ability to live, work and play in the same area is also important.
Planning Commission Work Session Minutes – September 5, 2019 Page 2
• The CMU districts need to be connected to the larger Lakeville community in
terms of site design and architectural character.
• A public open space requirement should be considered for incorporation into the
CMU District with the next update to the Parks, Trails, and Open Space Plan
and/or provision made to include minimum usable open space requirements with
each development.
• CMU land uses developed outside of the Cedar Avenue corridor require a
separate set of development standards that will address consistency with
adjacent existing and planned residential and commercial development.
The Planning Commission would like to be provided with the City’s Council’s comments
on the CMU bus tour after the September 23rd work session.
The work session adjourned at 7:25 p.m.
Respectfully submitted,
Daryl Morey, Planning Director
3601 Thurston Avenue
Anoka, MN 55303
763.231.5840
TPC@PlanningCo.com
1
MEMORANDUM
TO: Daryl Morey
FROM: D. Daniel Licht, AICP
DATE: 28 August 2019
RE: Lakeville – Zoning Ordinance; Corridor Mixed Use development standards
TPC FILE: 135.01
BACKGROUND
The City has completed its draft of the 2040 Lakeville Comprehensive Plan and initiated work on
implementation of the plan with updates to the Zoning Ordinance. A major focus of the
implementation effort will be formulation of development standards for the Corridor Mixed
Use (CMU) land use category.
The CMU land use category has been designated on the 2040 Land Use Plan in two ways. The
primary use of the CMU land use category will be within the Cedar Avenue Bus Rapid Transit
Corridor (Red Line) to provide for future development of high density residential, mixed use,
and commercial land uses in support of planned transit services. The Cedar Avenue corridor
includes not only designation of future CMU land uses, but also low-to-medium, medium, and
medium-to-high residential land uses within ½ mile of Cedar Avenue. CMU Land uses have also
been designated on the land use plan as individual locations within the I-35 corridor based on
recommendations of the Economic Development Commission to identify opportunities for high
density residential land uses within or adjacent to existing and planned commercial uses in
proximity to existing and planned transit facilities within the future Orange Line Bus Rapid
Transit extension.
An initial step in the process to develop Zoning Ordinance standards and requirements for CMU
land uses was a bus tour on 23 July 2019. Members of the City Council, Planning Commission,
and City staff visited existing areas that have developed or are redeveloping with characteristics
similar to that envisioned for Lakeville. These areas included Town Center in Eden Prairie, the
Gravel Mining Area/Arbor Lakes in Maple Grove, and Park Commons in St. Louis Park.
2
Exhibits:
Summary of bus tour communities
Eden Prairie Town Center map
Maple Grove Gravel Mining Area map
St. Louis Park Wolfe Park map
ANALYSIS
City staff is seeking discussion and comments from the Planning Commission and City Council as
to their vision for the CMU land uses within the Cedar Avenue and I-35 corridor. The
development regulations for CMU land uses will be developed to address the following:
Allowed uses
Density
Building and parking placement
Building height/massing
Building exterior materials
Parking demand/supply
Streetscape
Open space
Landscaping
A summary of the areas visited during the bus tour on 23 July 2019 is attached as a reference to
the general character of the developments in these communities. We have also included the
Heart of the City area in Burnsville, which City Council and Planning Commissioners may be
familiar with or may visit individually due to proximity to Lakeville.
Eden Prairie Town Center is a mix of new development and planned redevelopment
involving high density residential, mixed use and transit oriented design adjacent to
interstate freeways and the terminus of the Southwest Light Rail Transit line.
Maple Grove Gravel Mining Area is being reclaimed after excavation for development of
a wide range of land uses. The current park and ride facility is the only transit facility
planned for this area, but the intensity of development (particularly residential
densities) is decidedly urban. As all of the development within the Arbor Lakes area of
the Gravel Mining Area has occurred since 2000, this area may be most germane to
development of the Cedar Avenue corridor in Lakeville.
The Park Commons area and Wolfe Park neighborhood in St. Louis Park includes high
density residential and mixed use development adjacent to major commercial and office
uses along existing bus transit and planned Southwest Light Rail corridors. This area has
the most intense levels of development visited during the tour with a combination of
well-designed mixed use development, individual apartment sites surrounding a public
park, and many employment opportunities.
3
Each of the areas in the other cities summarized in the table allow significantly greater densities
than the CMU guided uses in the 2040 Lakeville Comprehensive Plan (26 to 45 dwelling units
per acre). The table also includes the City’s existing RH-1 and RH-2 zoning districts for
reference, which provide for a suburban character of development for multiple family uses at a
maximum 17 dwelling units per acre. The primary difference between the two existing zoning
districts is that the RH-2 District allows one story greater building height (4 stories or 45 feet).
In considering preferences for how CMU land uses are to occur in Lakeville, consider that
establishment of performance standards for CMU land uses will involve the following
approaches:
A new zoning district is to be adopted for CMU land uses within the Cedar Avenue
corridor that will provide for high density residential uses, mixed residential/commercial
uses, and stand-alone or multiple commercial uses with a more urban form of
development.
In addition to creating the new CMU zoning district, the City may also consider changes
to the RM-2 and RH-2 zoning districts to allow for greater density and site design
flexibility for these land use categories as they are designated within the Cedar Avenue
corridor.
Allowing multiple family uses along the I-35 corridor, either within areas guided for high
density residential uses or CMU as stand-alone development, necessitates separate
development standards. The starting point for these standards would be the projects
approved by PUD District following the City’s 2016 study of multiple family development
standards. Initial discussions during the 2040 Comprehensive Plan process was also
that allowance of multiple family uses within areas guided for CMU within the I-35
corridor were to be as conditional uses to ensure that there is adequate review and
oversight of specific development proposals with regards to utility and transportation
infrastructure and compatibility with surrounding land uses.
CONCLUSION
A Planning Commission work session is to be held on 5 September 2019 to discuss impressions
from the bus tour and provide direction to City staff as to preferences and intent for the
formulation of development regulations for CMU land uses. The City Council is to hold a similar
discussion at their work session on 23 September 2019.
c. Justin Miller, City Administrator
David Olson, Community and Economic Development Director
City Lakeville Burnsville Eden Prairie Maple Grove St. Louis Park
Area Existing HDR Heart of the City Town Center Arbor Lakes/
Gravel Mining Area
Park Commons
Zoning RH-1 RH-2 PUD HOC-1 District
Design Guidelines
Town Center District
Design Guidelines
PUD
Design Guidelines
MIX
R-C District
Allowed Uses Two family
Row townhouse
Back-to-back townhouse
Multiple Family
Senior housing
Park
Two family
Row townhouse
Back-to-back townhouse
Multiple Family
Senior housing
Park
Two family
Row townhouse
Back-to-back townhouse
Multiple Family
Retail
Service
Office
Self-storage
Single family
Row townhouse
Back-to-back townhouse
Multiple Family
Senior housing
Mixed use
Neighborhood commercial
Office
Sit down restaurant
Counter serve restaurant
Service
Hotel
Motor fuel
Civic
Park
Transit facilities
Row townhouse
Back-to-back townhouse
Multiple Family
Senior housing
Mixed use
Neighborhood commercial
Regional commercial
Office
Sit down restaurant
Counter serve restaurant
Service
Hotel
Civic
Park
Transit facilities
Single family
Detached townhouse
Row townhouse
Back-to-back townhouse
Multiple Family
Senior housing
Mixed use
Neighborhood commercial
Regional commercial
Office
Sit down restaurant
Counter serve restaurant
Convenience food
Accessory motor fuel
Service
Hotel
Civic
Park
Transit facilities
Multiple Family
Senior housing
Mixed use
Neighborhood commercial
Regional commercial
Office
Sit down restaurant
Counter serve restaurant
Convenience food
Accessory motor fuel
Service
Hotel
Civic
Park
Density TH: 8.7du/ac.
MF: 17du/ac.
Senior: 29du/ac.
TH: 8.7du/ac.
MF: 17du/ac.
Senior: 29du/ac.
26du/ac. 20-60du/ac. HDR: 40-75du/ac.
Mixed use: 40-75du/ac.
TOD: 40-70du/ac.
Low: 3-5du/ac
Medium: 7-9du/ac
High: 24-33du/ac or higher
HDR: 30-75du/ac.
Mix: 20-75du/ac.
TOD: 50-125du/ac.
Max. Building
Height
3 stories 4 stories 4 stories Not limited Not limited Not limited 6 stories
Setbacks Front 50ft. major roadways
30ft. local streets
50ft. major roadways
30ft. local streets
30ft. Build-to ROW
0ft. min.
20ft. max
0ft. 0ft.
Side 30ft. 30ft. 30ft. 0ft. 20ft. 0ft. 0ft.
Rear 30ft. 30ft. 30ft. 5ft. 20ft. 0ft. 0ft.
Landscape/usable
open space
-- -- -- 10% of lot area 5% of lot area 12% of lot area
Parking Ratio 2.5 stalls/du. 2.5 stalls/du 2.0 stalls/du. 1.5 stalls/du 1.0 stalls/du. min
1.0 stall/bedroom max
Min. 1 stall underground
2.0 stalls/du
Min. 1 stall/du underground
1 stall/bedroom
80% of parking within
structures (MIX District)
Regional Retail/ Mixed UseCommunity RetailBig Box RetailNeighborhood RetailEntertainment/Restaurant/ServicesOfficeHospitality/LodgingTown CenterMedicalPark/Open SpaceCivicHigh-rise (7-10 stories)High Density (60-75 u/ac)Mid-rise (3-6 stories)High Density (40-60 u/ac)Medium Density RetailGround Level (45 u/ac)Low-rise (2-3 stories)Medium Density (4-21 u/ac)Industrial (private utility)LEGENDMixed Use Sites,Housing TotalsHousing SitesDENSITY LEGENDA - 224 unitsB - 216 unitsC - 99 unitsD - 87 unitsXX u/ac - Existing units per acreXXX - Existing total units(XX u/ac) - Future units per acre(XXX) - Future total unitsOther Development Sites.FAR - Existing Floor Area Ratio(.X FAR) - Future Floor Area Ratio(A)(70 u/ac)(525 units)N/A(720 units)(515 units)(50 u/ac)(640 units)(50 - u/ac)(250 units)B(C)(D)(70 u/ac)(50 u/ac)4 u/ac50 units17.8 u/ac319 units20.95 u/ac164 units27.9 u/ac325 units10.9 u/ac36 units40 units39.9 u/ac223 units26.5 u/ac(236 units)SW StationCondominiums.17 FAR5.8 u/ac160 units.10 FAR(.10 FAR).43 FAR.37 FAR.35 FAR.15 FAR(.15 FAR).14 FAR(.30 FAR)(.35 FAR).19 FAR.21 FAR.14 FAR.11 FAR(.11 FAR).16 FAR(.16 FAR).18 FAR(.18 FAR).19 FAR.15 FAR(.15 FAR).17 FAR(.17 FAR).17 FAR.16 FAR(.16 FAR).06 FAR(.5 FAR).15 FAR(.15 FAR).42 FAR(.42 FAR).42 FAR(.42 FAR)(.50 FAR).29 FAR(.29 FAR).43 FAR.40 FAR(.35 FAR).19 FAR4.6 u/ac.13 FAR.15 FAR(Up to 15% INCREASE) Valley View RoadI-494Prairie Cente r D r i v e
I -49 4 Prairie Center Drive Flying Cloud DriveTH 5 Singletree Lane Technology DriveTechnology DriveTH 212