Growth & Development
Do you live or work in the Estes Drive area? Do you have ideas about how the area could be improved or enhanced?
The Town of Chapel Hill will hold a Public Information Open House
for the Estes Drive Focus Area from 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 28, at the
Orange United Methodist Church, 1220 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd.,
Chapel Hill, NC 27514. An identical meeting (choose the one that works
best for you) will be held from 8 to 9 a.m. Wednesday, Aug. 29, at the
same location.
The purpose of the Public Information Open House is to create a
common community baseline of knowledge about the Estes Drive Focus Area.
After the Open House, additional community meetings
will be held to gather community input about the area and appropriate
uses for the area.
All community members are invited to help develop the process for
gathering community input and the process' next steps. If you are
interested in participating, contact Megan Wooley, a housing and
neighborhood services planner, at compplan@townofchapelhill.org or 919-968-2728.
Background
During the development of the Chapel Hill 2020 comprehensive plan,
the community participated in focused discussions about six areas
of Town which were referred to as the "Future Focus Discussion Areas."
These areas were identified as the areas most likely to change in the
future due to vacant land, underdeveloped sites, and their location
along transportation and transit corridors.
One area that was identified as a Future Focus Discussion Area was
the area located near the intersection of Martin Luther King Jr.
Boulevard and Estes Drive. As a first priority for implementation of the
Chapel Hill 2020 comprehensive plan, the community and Town staff will
work together to create process that will work towards the goal of
identifying appropriate uses and zoning regulations in and near Estes
Drive and Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard.
Currently, the process is being called the "Estes Drive Focus Area"
process. The community will have the opportunity to discuss and refine
this
name, as well as the boundary for the focus area, during the Public
Information Open House and additional community meetings.
As a general guide, the area includes the Estes Drive/Martin Luther
King Jr. Boulevard intersection and generally includes the area
extending just north of Piney Mountain Road, south to the YMCA area, and
along Estes Drive to Seawell School Road and towards the Chapel Hill
Public Library on Library Drive. The community will have the opportunity
to discuss and refine the boundary for the focus area during the Public
Information Open House and during additional community meetings.
For more information including a Frequently Asked Questions list about the Estes Drive Focus Area, visit www.townofchapelhill.org/estesdrive
Interested in Chapel Hill zoning?
Keep an eye out for updates on the Ephesus Drive Focus Area Open House, tentatively scheduled for late September 2012.
Please let us know if you have any questions, ideas, or thoughts. We
would like to hear from you, and we welcome your feedback. Please also
let us know if you would like to be added to the email distribution list
for the Estes Drive Focus Area. Reach us by emailing compplan@townofchapelhill.org or calling 919-968-2728.
Date:
Wednesday, August 29, 2012 - 8:00am to 9:00am
Location:
Orange United Methodist Church, 1220 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd., Chapel Hill, NC 27514
Do you live or work in the Estes Drive area? Do you have ideas about how the area could be improved or enhanced?
The Town of Chapel Hill will hold a Public Information Open House
for the Estes Drive Focus Area from 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 28, at the
Orange United Methodist Church, 1220 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd.,
Chapel Hill, NC 27514. An identical meeting (choose the one that works
best for you) will be held from 8 to 9 a.m. Wednesday, Aug. 29, at the
same location.
The purpose of the Public Information Open House is to create a
common community baseline of knowledge about the Estes Drive Focus Area.
After the Open House, additional community meetings
will be held to gather community input about the area and appropriate
uses for the area.
All community members are invited to help develop the process for
gathering community input and the process' next steps. If you are
interested in participating, contact Megan Wooley, a housing and
neighborhood services planner, at compplan@townofchapelhill.org or 919-968-2728.
Background
During the development of the Chapel Hill 2020 comprehensive plan,
the community participated in focused discussions about six areas
of Town which were referred to as the "Future Focus Discussion Areas."
These areas were identified as the areas most likely to change in the
future due to vacant land, underdeveloped sites, and their location
along transportation and transit corridors.
One area that was identified as a Future Focus Discussion Area was
the area located near the intersection of Martin Luther King Jr.
Boulevard and Estes Drive. As a first priority for implementation of the
Chapel Hill 2020 comprehensive plan, the community and Town staff will
work together to create process that will work towards the goal of
identifying appropriate uses and zoning regulations in and near Estes
Drive and Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard.
Currently, the process is being called the "Estes Drive Focus Area"
process. The community will have the opportunity to discuss and refine
this
name, as well as the boundary for the focus area, during the Public
Information Open House and additional community meetings.
As a general guide, the area includes the Estes Drive/Martin Luther
King Jr. Boulevard intersection and generally includes the area
extending just north of Piney Mountain Road, south to the YMCA area, and
along Estes Drive to Seawell School Road and towards the Chapel Hill
Public Library on Library Drive. The community will have the opportunity
to discuss and refine the boundary for the focus area during the Public
Information Open House and during additional community meetings.
For more information including a Frequently Asked Questions list about the Estes Drive Focus Area, visit www.townofchapelhill.org/estesdrive
Interested in Chapel Hill zoning?
Keep an eye out for updates on the Ephesus Drive Focus Area Open House, tentatively scheduled for late September 2012.
Please let us know if you have any questions, ideas, or thoughts. We
would like to hear from you, and we welcome your feedback. Please also
let us know if you would like to be added to the email distribution list
for the Estes Drive Focus Area. Reach us by emailing compplan@townofchapelhill.org or calling 919-968-2728.
Date:
Tuesday, August 28, 2012 - 7:00pm to 9:00pm
Location:
Orange United Methodist Church, 1220 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd., Chapel Hill, NC 27514
Once or twice a month I am the substitute host for D.G. Martin on his radio show Who's Talking which airs on AM 1360 WHCL Tuesday through Friday at 6:15 pm with a repeat at 10:00 pm. Tomorrow's (July 13) program may be of interest to the OP readerhip. Last year, in honor of Carrboro's 100th anniversary, Mayor Chilton starting researching the rather fascinating history of the train line from University Station to Carrboro. Tomorrow's show is a conversation with Mark on this topic as well as the current efforts to build a light rail line from Chapel Hill to Durham and on to Raleigh. For me it was interesting to see the parallels between the issues and politics for rail lines in the 1880's and today.
Listen in if you can and let me know what you think.
Details:
Chapel Hill Special Topics: "Planning Models and the Future Townscape"
The
Town of Chapel Hill Special Topics sessions return to the community
with "Planning Models and the Future Townscape" to be presented at noon
Wednesday, July 18, in the Council Chamber of Town Hall, 405 Martin
Luther King Jr. Blvd. The public is welcome and encouraged to attend.
The Special Topics series began during the Chapel Hill 2020
comprehensive planning process as a way to share information with
interested residents who want to know more about issues, trends and
studies that affect the future. For past topics, see http://bit.ly/zi4gLo.
Garrett Davis, a long range planner for the Town of Chapel Hill,
will provide an overview of the
various types of planning models the Town uses to analyze and
understand data related to future population and employment growth and
related transportation and land use impacts. Models help planners gather
and analyze information and predict possible future outcomes, based on a
set of assumptions. The presentation, which will provide an overview of
the current use of planning modes in the Triangle region and focus on
the use of CommunityViz, an interactive software platform that
integrates land use mapping and statistical analysis used by the Town
during the development of the 2020 Comprehensive Plan. The presentation
will be followed by a question and answer session.
Garrett develops analysis, Geographic Information System (GIS),
and graphic design projects to aid the Town's planning initiatives. He
also provides professional support to other Town departments and partner
agencies.
The public event will be aired live on Chapel Hill Government TV-18 and streamed on the Town of Chapel Hill website at www.townofchapelhill.org/index.aspx?page=1850. For more information, contact gdavis2@townofchapelhill.org or 919-969-5061.
Date:
Wednesday, July 18, 2012 - 12:00pm to 1:00pm
Location:
Chapel Hill Town Hall Council Chambers (405 Martin Luther King, Jr. Blvd.)
The Town Council's initial reaction to the proposed redevelopment of Colony Apartments (see "Council balks" in the CH News, 7/3/12) is classic Chapel Hill: act high-minded when, in fact, our head is buried deep in the sand. I am an affordable housing advocate and a Chapel Hill resident, but I take a different view of this development proposal.
Am I concerned by the potential loss of one of the community's few apartment complexes that serves a working class population? Of course. Yet the reason such apartment complexes are scarce is that as a community we persistently fail to understand the ongoing impact of our many protectionist, restrictive policies that curb the supply of housing. (With all the PhDs in this town, you'd think we could understand basic supply and demand by now.)
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