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APAC Meeting Coverage – Village Life

The El Dorado Hills Village Life has a new article regarding the August 9 2017 APAC meeting, focusing on the El Dorado Hills Apartments at Town Center East.

From the article:

A Stockton-based developer went back to the architectural drawing board to reduce the density of its original plans for the apartment complex proposed on a vacant 4.6-acre lot in the heart of El Dorado Hills Town Center.

Voting members of the Area Planning Advisory Committee, which studies land use projects and gives recommendations to the El Dorado County Planning Commission, voted against the project last Wednesday night and encouraged the Planning Commission to do the same. Planning commissioners received a project presentation last Thursday but did not vote.

The El Dorado County Board of Supervisors will ultimately vote to approve or deny the El Dorado Hills Apartments project, which needs a General Plan amendment since the project calls for 47 dwelling units per acre. The parcel’s current General Plan land use designation allows a maximum of 24. When the project was first proposed in 2014 developers designed it with 56 units per acre. The four-story luxury apartment complex is 15 percent less dense today, with 214 units, ranging from studio to one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments.

Representatives from developer Spanos Corporation spoke at an APAC meeting last Wednesday night inside El Dorado Hills Fire Station 85 ahead of the vote. The project would consist of two, four-story apartment buildings, outdoor recreation areas and an informal open space area. There would also be a five-story parking structure that would house 411 enclosed parking spaces for residents, 22 motorcycle spaces and 54 guest spaces.

Spanos Corp. Division Manager Jeff Morgan said, “We went back to the drawing board. We believe in this project.” He described it as “Old World architecture,” blending in with Town Center’s aesthetics.

Morgan, citing a change in the market since 2014, declined to share expected rents, only saying, “Rents would be competitive.”

Three years ago Spanos Corp. officials said rents would range between $1,600 to $2,200 per month.

El Dorado Hills resident John Davey read a committee report of non-support written by El Dorado Hills Community Council members who extensively studied the project. The first concern was that the project would “nearly double the density under the General Plan,” Davey said. “This would set a precedent.”

Davey said the committee was also concerned about traffic. Several residents in the audience Wednesday night asked questions, uneasy that 54 guest spots wouldn’t be enough and would impact the already limited parking in Town Center.

Morgan said the development company “used historical data” to determine how many guest spaces are needed. “It’s a substantial number,” he added. “This parking ratio works well in our other communities.” When asked, Morgan said Spanos does not have a similar project in the greater Sacramento area but has many across the country.

Davey read the next concern, regarding whether the project would “revitalize” Town Center as a place where people would live, work and play. “We don’t buy the argument,” he said. “There is no job center here. People who live in the complex would most likely be commuting to Sacramento or somewhere else to work.”

Davey continued that the complex “doesn’t address our affordable housing issue” in El Dorado Hills, adding, “This isn’t it. Luxury and affordable are at odds.”

There were also concerns about noise and the potential loss of community events, such as the Santa Run, fireworks, concerts and farmers market.

“How will this benefit the community?” Davey read from the report. A hotel was once planned for the vacant lot, but with this plan, “Transient Occupancy Taxes would continue going to Folsom.”

While Davey, and then APAC members, thanked Spanos representatives for working on reducing density and for coming to the meeting, he ended by saying, “We don’t believe this project is the cure-all for the ails of Town Center.”

Voting members of APAC agreed. At the end of the meeting they voted 7-0 against approval of the project, citing traffic as their “biggest issue.”

Read the full article at the El Dorado Hills Village Life website

 

El Dorado Hills Apartments At Town Center Project Initial Consultation Notification

The El Dorado County Community Development Service Planning And Building Department has issued the following Initial Consultation notice to concerned agencies in El Dorado County, regarding the proposed General Plan Amendment A16-0001, Specific Plan Amendment SP86-0002-R, Rezone Z16-0004, and Revision to Planned Development Permit PD94-0004R for the El Dorado Hills Apartments at Town Center East.

August 4, 2017
TO ALL CONCERNED AGENCIES:
Please find enclosed the Project Consultation information for your review and comment regarding the following application:
General Plan Amendment (A16-0001), Specific Plan Amendment (SP86-0002-R), Rezone (Z16-0004), Revision to Planned Development Permit (PD94-0004-R)/EL DORADO HILLS APARTMENTS (David Pick Family PTN LP/The Spanos Corporation/TSD Engineering): Proposed El Dorado Hills Apartments consisting of the following entitlements requests:1) General Plan Amendment adding a new policy under objective 2.2.6 (site specific policy section) increasing the maximum residential density allowed in the general plan from 24 dwelling units/acre to a maximum of 47 dwelling units/acre for the 4.565-acre site within the town center east planned development area. 2) El Dorado Hills Specific Plan Amendment incorporating multifamily residential use, density, and related development standards for the project site. Subject site would be designated as “Urban Infill Residential” within the Village T area of the El Dorado Hills Specific Plan; 3) Rezone of project site from General Commercial-Planned Development (CG-PD) to Multifamily Residential-Planned Development (RM-PD) and revisions to the RM-zone district development standards applicable to the proposed 214-unit apartment complex development plan; and 4) Revision to the approved Town Center East Development Plan incorporating multifamily residential use, density, and related design and development standards for the proposed 214-unit apartment complex within Planning Area 2 of the Town Center East Development Plan. The proposed apartment complex would be contained in a maximum 4-story, 60-foot-tall building with a 5-story, 60-foot-tall parking garage and other amenities. The property, identified by Assessor’s Parcel Numbers 121-290-60, -61, -62, consists of 4.6 acres, is located at the northwest corner of Town Center Blvd and Vine Street within the El Dorado Hills Town Center, in the El Dorado Hills area.
Project information is available for review online:
http://edcapps.edcgov.us/Planning/ProjectInquiryDisplay.asp?ProjectID=20754

Please note that a Draft Environmental Impact Report (DEIR), analyzing the potential project environmental impacts, has been prepared and may also be accessed from the web link provided above.

Review and comment by your agency is requested for consideration by the County during application processing in order to develop conditions of approval for the project. Your agency’s written responses must be received by the Planning Services no later than September 4, 2017. If we do not receive written correspondence from your agency by that date, we will assume your agency has no comment and your agency’s concerns may not be reflected in our recommendations.

The Technical Advisory Committee (TAC) will meet on September 11, 2017 to take one or more of the following actions; 1) Determine Final project conditions and/or, 2) Confirm the public hearing date. The meeting will be held in the El Dorado County Planning Commission Conference Room, at 2850 Fairlane Court, Placerville, CA. Please call this office one week prior to the meeting for the scheduled time. Technical Advisory Committee meetings are for agency discussion with the applicant and/or agent only. Other interested individuals may obtain project information by contacting the project planner.
If you have questions or need additional information, please call Planning Services office at (530) 621-5355.

To review the full project information, visit the project status page on the El Dorado County website here

This project will be one of the issues discussed at the August 9 2017 EDH APAC Meeting at Fire Station 85 on Wilson Blvd in EDH at 7PM.

Montano De El Dorado Phase II Master Plan

Notice of Preparation of a Draft Environmental Impact Report and Notice of Public
Scoping Meeting for the Montano De El Dorado Phase II Master Plan

The County will hold a public scoping meeting to provide additional information about the Project and to
receive verbal and written comments.
Date: Thursday, August 3, 2017
Time: 6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.
Where: El Dorado Hills Fire Department Station 85
1050 Wilson Boulevard
El Dorado Hills, CA 95762
The scoping meeting format will be an open house; interested parties may arrive at any time during the
2-hour window to receive information on the Project or provide comments.

From the Notice of Preparation of the DEIR:

The project site is approximately 16.8 acres (731,808 square feet) of undeveloped nonnative grassland
and ranges in elevation from approximately 575 to 640 feet above sea level sloping gently south to
north.
Project Characteristics
1. Site Design
The project is Phase II expansion of an existing retail center (Phase I of the Montano de El Dorado
Master Plan) located north of the project site that would include additional retail space, an office
building, a boutique hotel, and a small amphitheater to host occasional events (see Exhibit 3).
The retail element of the project consists of development of eight buildings containing
approximately 74,000 square feet (sf) of retail space. These buildings would range in size from 3,200
sf to 30,000 sf with suite sizes ranging from 1,000 sf to a maximum of 30,000 square feet. As shown
in Exhibit 3, the retail buildings would be dispersed along the eastern and western boundaries of the
site with one of the retail buildings located near the center of the site. The retail buildings would be
between 24 and 50 feet in height, with some architectural elements reaching 70 feet.
County of El Dorado Montano De El Dorado Phase II Master Plan

An office building containing approximately 6,000 sf of office space would be in the southernmost
portion of the site with a maximum height of 43 feet.
An approximate 63,000 square foot hotel is proposed on the north-western portion of the project
site at Latrobe Road (south of the existing Pottery World Building). The hotel would include up to 99
guest rooms, two ground level conference rooms (approximately 1,000 square feet each), a lobby
area, and other typical amenities featured in boutique non-full-service hotels (e.g., a small sundry
sales area and minimal bar area). The hotel building would be diagonally positioned along the
western boundary of the project site. To compensate for hillside elevation variations, the hotel
would be trellised where the parking area on the north side of the building is at the second level of
the hotel and the west side of the building hosts the main entrance at the first level with the portecochere
facing the proposed main signalized entrance to the shopping center at Post Street and
Latrobe Road. The hotel would be four-stories and 47-feet in height, with some architectural
elements reaching 70 feet.
A small amphitheater is proposed near the center of the site to host occasional local events for the
El Dorado Hills community and others who are visiting the area. Typical events may include plays,
music, and local celebrations. The amphitheater would be constructed in a lowered grade
configuration to minimize and contain noise levels from travelling into nearby neighborhoods.
Specifically, the stage area would be located approximately 15 feet lower than the top of the
viewing area to the south, and approximately 20 feet lower than the grade level of a retail building
proposed just north (see Exhibit 3). Sound barrier walls would surround the stage at approximately
20 feet below grade on three sides and heavy landscaping would further dampen noise as well as
add ambiance. The seating area facing the stage would be a combination concrete/grass “step
down” area that gradually transitions to the lowered stage area.

Read the full Public notice here

EDH APAC Seeks Review Period Extension for El Dorado Hills Apartments DEIR

The El Dorado Hills Area Planning Advisory Committee requested a thirty day extension of the review period of the lengthy El Dorado Hills Apartments at Town Center Draft Environmental Impact Report ( File No. A16-0001, SP86-0002-R-3, Z16-0004, and PD94-0004-R-3 ), scheduled to be completed on August 14, 2017.

The El Dorado County Community Development Services Planning And Building Department has responded with a fifteen day extension period. The public review period will now end on August 30, 2017.

To implement the proposed development, the applicant is requesting an amendment to the El Dorado County General Plan (File No. A16-0001), an amendment to the existing El Dorado Hills Specific Plan (File No. SP86-0002-R3), a rezone of the project site (File No. Z16-0004), and a revision of the approved Town Center East Development Plan (File No. PD94-0004-R3.

The application status, and the DEIR can be viewed online here

 

 

Springs Equestrian Center – Awaiting CDFW Botanical Survey

The California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) stating that a botanical survey meeting current protocols would be required for the project as the past surveys are older than five years and do not meet current protocol. In order to meet current CDFW survey protocols there must be three on-site surveys during the blooming season before a final report is produced. The biological consultant has stated that the final on-site survey would be completed July, 2017. After the final report is received by the County, the CEQA Initial Study/Mitigated Negative Declaration (IS/MND) must be revised to include the results. When this is complete a new hearing date will be scheduled for the project.

Review the Links the on Springs Equestrian Center Document Page

El Dorado Hills Apartments At Town Center 2017

From  EDC Planning Services
Z 16 0004  – EL DORADO HILLS APARTMENT TC

REZONE OF PROJECT SITE FROM GENERAL COMMERCIAL-PLANNED DEVELOPMENT (CG-PD) TO MULTIFAMILY RESIDENTIAL-PLANNED DEVELOPMENT (RM-PD) AND REVISIONS TO THE RM-ZONE DISTRICT DEVELOPMENT STANDARDS APPLICABLE TO THE PROPOSED 214-UNIT APARTMENT COMPLEX DEVELOPMENT PLAN

Project Location – NORTH SIDE OF TOWN CENTER DRIVE WEST OF THE INTERSECTION WITH VINE STREET IN THE EL DORADO HILLS TOWN CENTER.

 

4/18/2017
Revised Applications_A16-0001,Z16-0004,PD94-0004-R-3,SP86-0002-R-3

 

4/13/2016
Application Packet

 

A 16 0001  – EL DORADO HILLS APARTMENT TC

GENERAL PLAN AMENDMENT ADDING A NEW POLICY UNDER OBJECTIVE 2.2.6 (SITE SPECIFIC POLICY SECTION) INCREASING THE MAXIMUM RESIDENTIAL DENSITY ALLOWEDIN THE GENERAL PLAN FROM 24 DWELLING UNITS/ACRE TOA MAXIMUM OF 47 DWELLING UNITS/ACRE FOR THE 4.565-ACRE SITE WITHIN THE TOWN CENTER EAST PLANNED DEVELOPMENT AREA IDENTIFIED AS APNS 121-290-60, -61, AND -62

Click here for the Draft Environmental Impact Report