Monday, May 13, 2013

Rewriting the General Plan




Walnut Creek’s latest General Plan was adopted in April of 2006 after a two-year long process of public input and review.  The Plan was intended to provide a vision of what the City would be like in 2025.  We’re not even halfway there and much of the plan has been abandoned.  The same goes for various Specific Plans that were intended to cover smaller areas of the downtown in much greater detail.

The City Council has been happy to clear the way for developers of projects that call for raising the General Plan height limits and totally rewriting land use designations.  Other projects sail through the City Commissions with no apparent regard for previously established planning or design principles.

The Landing at Walnut Creek, proposed for the lot at the bottom of the Ygnacio Valley freeway off-ramp, and the 1500 No. California (Scott’s Valley Bank) Mixed Use Development, are two projects where the Council held a “preliminary review” before the projects even started the normal approval process at the City Commission level.  In both cases, the City Council SAID that they weren’t making any formal decisions, but the message to the Commissions was clear – the fact that these projects bear little or no resemblance to the General Plan shouldn’t stand in the way of their approval.

Both projects call for an increase in the General Plan height limit, and both projects call for residential densities at or above what would be allowed by the Multi-Family-Special-High (MFSH) land use designation.  MFSH is the highest density land use designation in the City’s General Plan, and the Plan is quite specific about where that designation applies.  It states that “This district occurs only in the Core Area around Alma Avenue, where the Alma Avenue Specific Plan governs development.”  The Alma Avenue Specific Plan outlined a mix of retail, commercial and residential uses along with a SUBSTANTIAL public park/ open space / greenbelt covering about a fifth of the plan’s land area.  The fact that the Landing at Walnut Creek and 1500 No. California call for similarly high residential densities with HARDLY ANY public space didn’t seem to bother the Council. 

The Council was also unbothered that the 1500 No. California project proposes 165,000 sq feet of Mixed Use development on lots extending into the traditional downtown where the current zoning ordinances would have allowed only 76,000 sq feet of commercial and retail development.  General Plan Action Item 6.3.4, “Discourage residential development in the Traditional Downtown area”, was similarly ignored.  Basically, “whatever a developer wants to build” seems to be the City Council’s idea of a standard.

The City’s Planning and Design Review Commissioners have clearly understood the Council’s direction.

The Planning Commission had no problem approving the Arroyo Apartments – a six story residential structure with 111,000 sq feet of floor area on a lot that the General Plan designated for office use, and where the zoning ordinance would have permitted less than 22,000 sq feet of commercial development.

The Design Review Commission has expressed willingness to invalidate the setback and sidewalk width standards for Brian Hirahara’s 1500 Mt. Diablo Boulevard (Cadillac Corner) project even though those standards were laid down by the Locust Street/Mt. Diablo Boulevard Specific Plan that was adopted only a few years ago.  This corner lot received was thoroughly studied as part of “Opportunity Site 1” in the Specific Plan, and the standards were well known to Mr. Hirahara when he agreed to develop the parcel. 

Design Review was also amenable to a proposal for a slick, modern, three-story high, glass-fronted, Rodeo Drive-style Davidson & Licht showplace a few doors further down on North Main Street - on a parcel that the same Specific Plan says is “intended to be preserved at much the same scale and size as currently exists.”

As someone who actively participated in the General Plan process, I’m pretty disgusted with, though not necessarily surprised by, the way things are going.  Our City Council has always considered their primary objective to be assuring profits for the business and development community.  Nothing is likely to change until the neighborhoods band together and throw the bums out. 


5 comments:

Triple Canopy said...

Excellent misinformation!

obiwan said...

Hi TC ... would you care to elaborate??? What information did I "mis-" ?

Anonymous said...

The fact that the Landing at Walnut Creek and 1500 No. California call for similarly high residential densities with HARDLY ANY public space didn’t seem to bother the Council....

I bet you'll find something in the plan. Public space can be defined by a larger sidewalk...

obiwan said...

Anon, you're right. I'm only saying that to justify MFSH densities, the standard SHOULD BE, as it was in the case of Alma Avenue, a SIGNIFICANT amount of public space - like 20% of the land area - not just a wide sidewalk or a "pocket park" that will end up be taken over for restaurant seating.

Pete Johnson said...

A welcome addition to the conversation about development and traffic in Walnut Creek among other topics....

I too have participated in the General Plan review and subsequent public forums and hearings on proposed developments and Specific Plans only to be disappointed when various City commissions and the City Council make exceptions to the agreed upon parameters to projects just to keep developers from walking away if they don't get their way. Precedents are then set for future projects to reference in their plea for exceptions to the rules.

Most recently the first project up for review under the Locust/Mt Diablo Specific Plan was granted variances to keep the developer happy despite strong reservations on the part of staff as you noted above. At the first opportunity to look at Opportunity Site #1 the DRC opted to set a precedent of allowing variances to the Specific Plan which took a couple years to come up with standards. Future developers can now ask for the Brian Hirahara Precedent or a BH Precedent. Davidson& Licht is next in line.Too bad.

These experiences could easily lead one to cynicism about the development review process and wonder why waste time going to hearings or submitting comments.