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bwithers1

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Posts posted by bwithers1

  1. On 12/2/2022 at 5:31 PM, smeagolsfree said:

    What they do not cover in the story is that  the multi-family building will be up to 8 stories.

    Only if the Planning Commission approves that height. The community plan policy is residential which primarily supports 3-story buildings. You need mixed use zoning - and an underlying mixed use community plan policy - to support building heights greater than three stories in most cases. 

    • Like 3
  2. On 12/5/2022 at 7:17 AM, Nashville Cliff said:

    Isn't that flood plain?  That strip of road just to the east of there got chewed up bad last time it flooded.

    This property was rezoned to an SP in 2015 by my predecessor. The SP includes single-family houses off of Village Court at the top of the hill and a multifamily building along Davidson at the bottom of the hill. The property owner is submitting a SP amendment proposal. The main change is to request additional height for the multifamily building atop the parking garage. The parking garage addresses the flood plain issue by lifting the housing above that flood plain elevation. In light of the multistory mixed use buildings that are likely to go in across Davidson along the riverfront, the property owner is requesting additional floors of residential units above the parking garage on this site.

    On 12/7/2022 at 10:46 AM, EN_5116 said:

    Where are the details on this CA south project? Is that all those industrial buildings? 

    Yes, these are all industrial buildings currently. I rezoned the 690 and 1106 Davidson Street buildings from industrial/warehouse to mixed use about two years ago. Those buildings were acquired and are being considered as part of a property assemblage for a larger mixed use riverfront project.

    • Like 3
  3. On 7/29/2022 at 11:42 AM, Bos2Nash said:

    Hmmm, obviously this means they are going for some form of zoning change or at least a BZA type request. Looking at the zoning of MUG-A (current zoning) which allows 7 stories in 105' tall, but also has a cap of 3.0 in a Floor-to-Area ratio. Maybe they would like to get up to a 5.0 FAR which would require an SP or a rezone to MUI-A (that would be a decent lift on Gallatin). It may also be a setback request as MUG-A requires a step-back at 5 floors, but with the site being on a pretty big topographic change, that can impact a development alot (I am dealing with right now in another part of town), so they may be asking for a bit of reprieve from the step-back on one of the frontages.

    @bwithers1 can you provide some insight in what at least the ask is (not asking for provide project details) 

    @Bos2NashThe potential ask is for a sky control plane special exception to allow greater height than base zoning allows on a portion of the site.

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  4. On 6/29/2022 at 1:36 PM, markhollin said:

    Dunkin' Donuts is planning a location on the vacant lot at 926 Gallatin Ave.

    More behind the Nashville Post paywall here:

    https://www.nashvillepost.com/business/retail/dunkin-planned-for-east-nashville-property/article_31b100b4-f7d2-11ec-a683-479a8cdb4cf0.html

     

    1350180174_ScreenShot2022-06-29at1_33_02PM.png

    It’s a little bit creepy to me that the map shows a geotag of my house on that arial map!
     

    But back to the topic at hand: as a reminder, the reason why some of these car-centric designs are still permitted for new builds on Main Street/Gallatin  is that the Gallatin Road SP was challenged and thrown out in court and replaced in 2013 by the Gallatin Pike UDO that makes the bulk zoning requirements of the underlying base zoning optional.

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  5. On 6/15/2022 at 9:19 AM, Mr_Bond said:

    You have greatly summed this up.  I live in The Gulch and love the vibrancy and fun of the tourists in our neighborhood.

    Items 1-3 could be addressed by adding a Business Improvement District to Lower Broadway.  The Gulch Business Improvement District pays for a daily cleaning crew, extra trash pickups several times a week, and 'ambassadors' that walk and segway around to address the homeless and add security to the streets late at night.

    Downtown and Lower Broad in particular have a Business Improvement District, which is how the Nashville Downtown Partnership pays for the extra garbage collections, the crews who clean the area continuously and other services that are in addition to the basic service levels that are provided to the entire Urban Services District. The Central Precinct provides police patrol services at a much greater rate of saturation downtown than at other areas of town. Even the Fire Department has purchased special smaller-sized vehicles to respond to ambulance and other emergency calls since regular fire engines and ambulances struggle to move around downtown’s narrow and densely crowded streets safely.

    The fact that the BID-funded special services cannot seem to keep up with the activity downtown in recent years speaks to the level of the problems that downtown business owners and residents are raising to Metro Government and in particular to the Mayor’s Office.

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