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Consultants draft ideas for towns
future
By Frank Ruggiero
As a lesser known saying goes, All good charrettes
must come to an end.
The town of Boone closed the workshop portion of its design
charrette last Friday, and the Lawrence Group
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From left, Lawgrence Group design
team members Wade Walker, Tom Harrington, David Brannon
and Chad Hall finish a quick draft of development ideas
for the old Watauga High School site at last Fridays
session. Photo by Frank Ruggiero
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consulting firm is now summarizing its findings for a final
presentation Tuesday, Oct. 28.
A charrette is an intensive, week-long planning session that
involves significant public participation, and Boone planning
director John Spear said he was pleased with the outcome.
Its been a great week, he said of the session
that lasted Oct. 20-25. There has been a tremendous amount
of public participation every day. The session focused on specific
issues every day, and the first three days really brought people
to the table.
Focused on developing a land-use master plan that will take
Boone through 2030, topics included environmental protection
and sustainability, utility infrastructure and alternative energy,
transportation, green space, development, and affordable and
student housing.
Members of the public were invited to attend any session that
piqued their interest, to offer suggestions and opinions on
the diverse set of topics.
Spear said meetings started with an economic and market analysis
that aided the planning process, such as a consideration of
vacant and underdeveloped properties and areas.
Each evening, after recording stakeholder input, Lawrence Group
designers incorporated those ideas into renderings drafted on
transparency paper, which was then placed over an aerial map
of Boone, showing what such development might look like to scale.
Spear particularly liked the Lawrence Groups idea for
development near Watauga Medical Center. The rendering shows
higher-density mixed use, with various medical offices and workforce
housing.
David Walters, professor of urban design at UNC-Charlotte and
urban designer with the Lawrence Group, elaborated. With
this being a regional medical center thats only going
to get bigger, this is the ideal location (for growth),
he said, suggesting that such growth would likely come from
redevelopment.
There are some places in town where you can get redevelopment
fairly easily, but market forces will tip the balance
We dont want to build on the slopes, so the best way is
to redevelop at higher density.
Walters added that higher density means more tax dollars without
raising the rate. It would also mean multi-story buildings,
though he said none should exceed four stories.
During the pin-up session, during which consultants review the
days progress through a one-by-one description of each
rendering, Lawrence Group principal Craig Lewis said, The
focus of this week is what should we do to allow Boone to grow.
There are two choices you can grow out or grow up.
He said there are many redevelopment opportunities throughout
the area, many of them incorporating the proposed Daniel Boone
Parkway (Boone bypass) with consideration to surrounding features.
For instance, the old barn adjacent to the medical center on
Deerfield Road would be considered a historic property and therefore
preserved to celebrate and not consume, Lewis said,
while the bypass would connect to the area by way of an elongated
roundabout, rather than another stoplight. Traffic would flow
one way in each direction, and circulation would come from Deerfield
and work its way toward its destination in that area.
A unique approach to topographic conditions in the area
and it might also make for a very interesting gateway
in that area, Lewis said.
Consultants also spent time with plans for the old Watauga High
School site, with one idea being a research campus run in a
public-private manner. Such campuses can be built and owned
by developers and occupied by agencies, paying rent like any
other tenant, thus contributing to the tax base, Lewis said.
Another option is a mixed-use commercial center, including multi-story
buildings and big-box national retailers. Parking would be accommodated
by decks built atop the larger stores, with elevator access
into their lobbies. Such a commercial center would require multiple
entries and exits, likely one on Wilson Drive and another on
Winklers Creek Road, in addition to that already present
on N.C. 105.
A concept for Blowing Rock Road, which Lewis called perhaps
the ultimate build-out, would see a separate frontage
driveway or access road on either side of the main thoroughfare
for access to business and properties. This would allow a steady
flow of uninterrupted traffic down U.S. 321. So, there
are four travel lanes that can move straight through this area
no lights are needed through four blocks, Lewis
said. We do know we need to move cars through the area,
but it also provides the much needed access to the lots.
The Lawrence Group also addressed redevelopment of properties
demolished by the U.S. 421 widening, suggesting multi-story,
mixed-use buildings, as well as a relocation of Boone Public
Works.
For the area between Faculty Street and Blowing Rock Road (between
the Holmes Center and McDonalds), Lewis suggested opening
Kraut Creek to create a living environmental park,
thereby dealing with environmental water quality needs and creating
a green park with LEED-certified, sustainable buildings.
Imagine what a jewel this would be, he said. Right
now, youve got this endless sea of parking lots and strip
centers, but down here you get this wonderful break and really
get to celebrate something special in this area.
Rich Jacobs, owner of ArtWalk in downtown Boone, asked how soon
people can expect to see changes.
We do want to make sure youll keep this energy going
to make things happen, Lewis said, explaining that
changing town ordinances would be paramount, though time-consuming
in a one-to-two year period. But youve got to have
things in the interim to show progress, so let that be parallel.
The Lawrence Group was scheduled to provide a closing presentation
Tuesday, Oct. 28, at 5:30 p.m. at the Broyhill Inn & Conference
Center, located at 775 Bodenheimer Drive on the Appalachian
State University campus.
For more information, visit the 2030 Land-Use Master Plan Web
sites at boone2030.blogspot.com and on Facebook (www.facebook.com)
as boone2030.
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