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Downtown Owensboro

Downtown Owensboro. Proposed Zoning Overlay District Standards Owensboro City Commission July 22, 2009. Illustrative Master Plan. Master Plan. Adopted in February 2009 Recommended key catalyst projects Identified different “Character Areas” with distinct development potential

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Downtown Owensboro

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  1. Downtown Owensboro Proposed Zoning Overlay District Standards Owensboro City Commission July 22, 2009

  2. Illustrative Master Plan

  3. Master Plan • Adopted in February 2009 • Recommended key catalyst projects • Identified different “Character Areas” with distinct development potential • Recommended regulatory changes to implement the Master Plan – specifically the Character Zones • Ensure “adjacency predictability” to attract new and protect existing investment in downtown • Make it “easy to do the right thing”

  4. Recommendations for Regulatory Framework • Retain existing B-2 Zoning with changes to development standards and limited use restrictions • Strengthen historic preservation standards • Appropriate design standards to implement the vision for each Character Zone • Clear standards for approval and appeals • Revise sign standards to complement downtown development

  5. Existing Zoning

  6. Why Downtowns are an attractive investment? Value Capture • Sustaining value, not just cash flow, is the new business model

  7. Conventional Development Conventional Development • single use pods of development • buffers instead of transitions • lack of a transportation network • not pedestrian-friendly, not transit-friendly • narrowly stratified market • planned obsolescence, so constructed accordingly • scrape, rezone and sometimes re-subdivide to redevelop • value drops when the intended use no longer viable

  8. Downtown Development Neighborhood Development • mixed use • transitions instead of buffers • a network of transportation, encouraging choice • easy to walk • broad market (age, socio-economic, etc.) • planned to endure • change of use often times instead of redeveloping • value holds when the current use is no longer viable

  9. Proposed Downtown Overlay Zones • Ordinance Text & Graphics – including Building Form Standards for each character zone • Regulating Plan – establishes the overlay district boundaries and other standards • Historic Preservation Standards • Design Standards • Sign Standards • Approval Process

  10. Proposed Overlay “Character” Districts • Historic Core • Downtown Core • Riverfront Core • Riverfront Edge • Downtown Transition • Frederica Blvd. Corridor • Downtown Campus • Neighborhood

  11. Form & Development Standards by Overlay “Character” District – Historic Core

  12. Form & Development Standards by Overlay “Character” District – Downtown Core

  13. Form & Development Standards by Overlay “Character” District – Riverfront Core

  14. Historic Preservation Standards

  15. Design Standards for New Development

  16. Sign Standards

  17. Current Approval Process in Downtown

  18. Proposed Approval Process

  19. Approval Process • Downtown Design Administrator (DDA) – Appointed by the City Manager to administer the Downtown Overlay District standards • Creation of a Downtown Development Coordination Committee (DDCC) – a city/OMPC staff committee appointed to facilitate coordinated development review of all downtown projects • Development that meets all regulations including Downtown Overlay Standards to be approved administratively by the DDCC • Historic Preservation Board (HPB)– Final decision on demolition of historic buildings, appeals, and major civic buildings • Zoning Board of Adjustment – Final decision on dimensional variances

  20. Goals of the Regulatory Changes • Implement the Downtown Master Plan and achieve the vision • Attract high quality, pedestrian-oriented, mixed use development • Improve predictability of development outcomes • Protect public and private investment in downtown (existing and future) • Ensure leveraging of public investment in downtown (Riverfront park, Market Plaza, etc.)

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