In the future, Asheville’s downtown might be managed by a powerful independent board, with different types of development for each neighborhood “core,” better support for the arts, more green building, a shuttle system and police cameras on street corners. Those are some of the many initiatives presented in the draft of the long-awaited Downtown Master Plan. The city will hold a Jan. 15 forum on the plan.
On Monday, the City of Asheville announced that it will hold a Jan. 15 public forum at 7 p.m. in the Asheville Civic Center Banquet Hall. The team from Goody Clancy, the Massachusetts-based consulting firm that drew up the plan for $170,000, will present it before taking questions and comments. The forum will begin a three week comment period before the consultants ready the final plan, which Asheville City Council will take up in March.
This draft will also be publicly discussed at a Jan. 12 meeting of the Downtown Master Plan Advisory Committee.
The process of developing it have at times been controversial. The roll-out date for the final plan was pushed back four months in September, and rifts in the advisory committee compelled the city to bring in a mediator. In late July, a series of public meetings held by Goody Clancy revealed many divisions within the community about the plan.
The draft of the plan is an 88-page document covering many different areas. One of the major changes is that the plan recommends setting up an independent board, a “downtown management entity,” to run the “day to day operations” of downtown. While it would start as the Asheville Design District — “a function of the City of Asheville [that will] initially provide a modest set of services” — it would evolve into a “locally funded, independent entity that draws increasing leadership from, and provides greater benefits to, downtown merchants.”
The management entity would be made up of, to begin with, an ad hoc group including representatives from groups like the Downtown Commission, the Preservation Society, city staff, the Tourism and Development Authority and the Council of Independent Business Owners. It would be funded by annual fees on all downtown properties, a percentage fee on large projects as well as other sources like half the money from sales of city-owned parcels downtown and matching funds. The entity could then use that cash to fund affordable housing, business promotion, development incentives and downtown-workforce training.
In the long run, the plan says, the ADD would be completely independent and would have powers rivaling City Council: It would have its own redevelopment authority and it could broker deals, manage downtown construction, buy and sell real estate on the city’s behalf, license downtown events and performers and oversee “all things ‘clean and safe’ in the public realm,” including “coordinating security patrols” and “install[ing] pole cameras for the APD.”
How its leadership would be chosen, and by whom, is not discussed in the draft plan.
The ADD taking over the day-to-day operations of downtown is one of the seven “strategies” under the plan. The others are as follows:
• “Cultivate essential cultural and historical resources”: The plans aims to coordinate artists better by allying local artist’s organizations and providing a resource center. It also advocates supporting the construction of a performing-arts center, updating downtown’s historic district and diversifying the Historic Resources Commission.
• “Expand convenient choices for access and mobility”: Central to this is studying — and forming, if feasible — a downtown shuttle service to “address both parking and mobility” by linking employees and visitors with parking.
The plan also advocates adopting Asheville’s 2008 Comprehensive Bike Plan, including bike lanes on some downtown streets such as Asheland and Coxe and installing bike racks throughout downtown. Other steps include better coordinating parking services offered by the city, county and private companies and making downtown more walkable.
• “Inaugurate an urban design framework to extend downtown’s sense of place and community”: The plan advocates promoting more urban design in areas surrounding downtown such as along Broadway, in the Stevens-Lee neighborhood and in the River Arts District.
The plan identifies a type of desired development for each of the five designated areas of downtown, such as “sensitive infill/refill” for the traditional core, “making South Charlotte a neighborhood street” in the Eagle/Market area and “new jobs and housing” in the Patton/River Gateway neighborhood.
For example, under the plan’s goals, “Coxe should become the heart of a new residential neighborhood with a comfortable walking scale, direct links to downtown, new housing and neighborhood retail — the model of 15-minute neighborhood.”
• “Shape building form to promote quality of place”: According to the master plan, this would involve revising the city’s design guidelines by establishing “maximum height zones throughout downtown,” as well as stepping upper floors back from the street and ensuring that the shadows of buildings don’t heavily impact public parks. It notes that taller buildings would be ideally sited in the “gateway” areas on the borders of downtown.
• “Update design guidelines to be current and clear to promote sustainable development”: The city should consolidate its Unified Development Ordinance, downtown design guidelines and new criteria into a “concise official checklist” to speed the development process.
This strategy advocates substantial incentives for green building including tax incentives, a reduction in water fees and a faster permit process. It also recommends the city adopt design guidelines to make residential units in downtown more private and accessible.
• “Make project review transparent, predictable and inclusive of community input”: This strategy suggests revising the Downtown Commission’s membership and giving it more power in the development process. It would issue formal written findings stating how a project meets the development guidelines and its approval would be required on projects larger than 50,000 square feet. Projects must be reviewed at each step of the process in 90 days, the plan says, or the project is considered automatically approved.
Increased public comment earlier in the development process is needed, according to the plan, which recommends “developer-sponsored public meetings early in the review of large proposals” as well as increased public comment at the Downtown Commission, Planning and Zoning Commission and Technical Review Committee.
Under the plan, City Council would still have final say on the largest projects, known as “Level III.” If the developer does not meet approval through the normal process, they may appeal the decision directly to Council.
— David Forbes, staff writer
Why the cameras on every corner? I don’t think Ashevillians want a Big Brother watching every move we make!
Why does downtown have to become a corporation?
Do the businesses want a big brother entity directing their every move? On the surface this all sounds way to controlling. Affordable housing downtown? Ha! Ha! Ha! Sounds good but it’s tripe.
“The entity could then use that cash to fund affordable housing, business promotion, development incentives and downtown-workforce training.”
Isn’t the chamber of commerce kind of already working on the business promotion thing?
Development incentives? Every developer on the east coast is already frothing to place something in Asheville. Isn’t the profit potential enough of an incentive? Your talking about spoon feeding top feeders.
The ideas of having one place where I could learn to wait tables, clean hotel rooms, and tend a shop is the best I’ve heard this year.
Affordable housing. Oh, you mean that I could buy a 120.000 condo with my wait job at Laureys? Sure, ok. There are lots of service industry folk just waiting for more ‘workforce housing’ so they no longer have to live in crummy West Asheville with their quiet streets and friendly charm. Any housing built downtown will be occupied by professional people who have well paying jobs, a few lucky trust fund kids, and the rest will basically be urban retirement villages (see Sawyer Building).
Welcome to the further boutiqification of Asheville. It won’t end till downtown and neighboring areas are fully gentrified and we have our own nice and tidy Santa Fe-Santa Barbara. Thanks for nothing Goody Clancy!
Maybe we should hire them to find out how NOT to destroy Burton Street neighborhood!
A.D.D is a good name for this new Downtown Commission. Jeez, why don’t we just adopt a masterplan and have the city enforce the rules. Do we need an “independent” body funded by MORE layers of taxation?
I don’t feel good about this
It’s time to stand up and let the city know who the real citizens of Asheville are… you know, the people that made Asheville the place that it is…
The place that everyone want’s to move to and make it feel more “Walmarty” and “Controlled”
And of course we don’t need cameras on the streets, This is a beautiful little artsy tourist city in North Carolina with no crime rate?
Will someone else please post a “controlled rant” at least as long as mine…
(posted also at Scrutiny Hooligans)
I sit on the DTMP Advisory Committee (and on the more intimate panel that went through the 2nd draft with a toothed comb) and we will be meeting on Monday the 12th for the first round of review on this plan. Every insight and astute point that can be brought to the table is necessary. I’ll be reading over the plan this week and would appreciate any discussion that folks want to have about this plan.
As a public liaison on the Advisory Committee, I offer and request the opportunity on Sunday night, the 11th from 6:30-8:30pm @ Firestorm cafe, for anyone who would care to discuss the plan in group before it goes to into the first public review process.
My biggest concern on this plan has been, and continually seems to be the development of a downtown management entity. Not that the concept is wrong, but how it is structured in this plan is deeply flawed.
So again – to re-cap:
Open to all,
downtown master plan public talk
Firestorm Cafe
Sunday the 11th
6:30-8:30pm
If you can’t make the discussion email me ( docjen@gmail.com ) your thoughts, or better yet, post them here!
-JBo
“establishing “maximum height zones throughout downtown,”
Too bad this isnt in place now so that the new 30 story hotel cant be built. Who needs that anyway. That’s the last thing Asheville needs
“establishing “maximum height zones throughout downtown,”
Too bad this isnt in place now so that the new 30 story hotel cant be built. Who needs that anyway. That’s the last thing Asheville needs. They are trying to run the locals off and turn Asheville into the new Florida. Sick of that bs!
They are trying to run the locals off and turn Asheville into the new Florida. Sick of that bs!
All Asheville needs:
Correctly paved streets!
Intersections that make sense.
Correctly timed stop lights (with arrows).
Bike lanes. Bike lanes. Bike lanes!
More green spaces within the city limits.
Less planning for 30 story hotels, etc.
It’s time Asheville plans for it’s citizens and not the tourists.
In my estimation, the city council is being paid off to turn control of our city’s tax-payer bought-and-paid-for infrastructure over to private corporations.
I agree to the above statement by ableza:
All Asheville needs-
Correctly paved streets!
Intersections that make sense.
Correctly timed stop lights (with arrows).
Bike lanes. Bike lanes. Bike lanes!
More green spaces within the city limits.
Less planning for 30 story hotels, etc.
It’s time Asheville plans for it’s citizens and not the tourists.
Honestly I do not see why downtown Asheville needs anymore money invested into ‘new’ projects..finish what is there. About five years from now start thinking about more improvements. Personally I think Asheville’s peak has come and gone. Fix what needs to be fixed now. Do not create more unfinished projects.