My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
Home
Browse
Search
City Council Minutes 1992 09 01
PORTAL
>
CITY COUNCIL RECORDS
>
MINUTES (45.090)
>
1970-1999 City Council Minutes
>
1992 City Council Minutes
>
City Council Minutes 1992 09 01
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
3/11/2021 2:31:35 PM
Creation date
8/3/2005 8:37:34 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
City Council Records
Doc Type
City Council Minutes
Signed Date
9/1/1992
Original Hardcopy Storage
2E3
Supplemental fields
Test
CCMIN 1992 09 01
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
51
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
Show annotations
View images
View plain text
can build more than ten (10) houses <br />a quarter, but no one can live in <br />them. Club Homes (later on the <br />Agenda) also has a phasing <br />agreement. On the safety issue of <br />the bike path on the Coal Creek <br />side, one thing we might consider is <br />taking it out, because it really <br />goes to no where. It ends at Cherry <br />Street. The main bike path, if this <br />development went forward, would be <br />along the Public Service lines. We <br />should also address the dust <br />problem. <br /> <br />Franklin: <br /> <br />The EPA, the Colorado Health <br />Department, and the City look at <br />fugitive dust emissions and their <br />control. This is implicit in that <br />subdivision agreement, that it be <br />controlled through watering and <br />phasing of over lot grading. In the <br />event all of that fails, they are <br />not allowed to violate the Fugitive <br />Dust Emissions law and can be <br />prosecuted for violations of that. <br /> <br />Mayer: <br /> <br />Do you think those are sufficient to <br />ensure that we don't have a <br />significant dust problem there? <br /> <br />Franklin: <br /> <br />Diligently enforced, yes. <br /> <br />Mayer: <br /> <br />As far as should this be commercial <br />land, we have a tremendous amount of <br />commercial land in Centennial Valley <br />that's still vacant. As far as <br />could it all be left for a park, <br />given the fact that there is a ten <br />(10) acre park (Heritage Park) right <br />across the street and the <br />possibility of the Warembourg <br />property being looked upon as one of <br />the sites for a future community <br />park. As far as some of the <br />positive aspects of this <br />development, instead of 129 units, <br />it's down to 102, almost 20% of this <br />development is going to be open <br />space, which will be the first park <br />built in Louisville in ten (10) <br />years. The development will be <br /> <br />6 <br /> <br /> <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.