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Could something like this happen here? haha
Internet |
Updated 1/29, 1:01 PM
Quadrant is working with the City to develop "Business District" property at the intersection of NE 124th Street and Willows Road on the Southwest corner. The Planning Commission was very involved.
Here goes.
The Applicant (Fred Proctor) is proposing a mixed-use development consisting of
approximately
370 residential units with a variety of housing types that would include for-sale
townhomes, triplex and traditional for-rent apartment style dwellings. The development
would also include a minimum of 20,000 sq. ft. of ground-level or stand-alone retail or
commercial space, to include neighborhood-scale commercial uses, office, and/or day care
center uses.
Willows Road is already congested and traffic is poor here; and will be more challenged when Facebook moves in. Council member Myers calls this development "a ten minute community" where many of the residents can work nearby, keeping cars off the road (with some shopping at Totem Lake.) A necessary signal on 124th is sure to slow traffic. The development is virtually it's own neighborhood.
To mitigate traffic the City will try to work with Metro for all day service. Right now it's AM / PM. Whenever possible, I won't be driving through this corner. A new sidewalk is planned on 124th is to connect a northern and western trail, I assume for pedestrian and bicycle mobility.
The range of housing types creates needed flexibility to integrate with the site and creates more variation in
housing affordability:
>10% of the townhomes will be at 80% of average monthly income.
>10% of the apartments will be at 70% of average monthly income.
The development will include open space tracts, landscaped active and
passive recreation, a trail network, and potentially, a gateway/bike rest stop feature on the
northeast corner of the site.
Open space is 20% of the site.
Green development incentives specific to the site are 1) electric vehicle charging, 2) green roofs, 3) solar panels on townhomes, 4) solar panels on community buildings. Quadrant is required to use two of the four options. Council member Myers said solar is a poor choice for our region since "there is a -500% rate of return."
What's your opinion?
For development diagrams, plans and
mapping click this link.
https://redmond.legistar.com/View.ashx?M=F&ID=6991868&GUID=8B0CADAE-4CB4-498E-B110-FFD3C43BA5D7
-- Bob Yoder, opinion
Source: 1/27/2019 Council study session & memo