Fort Collins pushes Harmony gateway
By Dan MacArthur
Fossil Creek Current
Imagine a village within the city inspired by Old Town with canals reminiscent
of Amsterdam, and a riverwalk along the Poudre adapted from San Antonio's
pioneering promenade.
Trails and open space would weave around these centerpiece ponds and waterways.
They would be sculpted in a monumental earthmoving effort to transform
a former gravel pit by channeling the Poudre River and raising much of
the property above the reach of floods.
Structures of six stories--perhaps more than twice that--would sprout
from this pedestrian-oriented urban village located on the southwest corner
of Interstate 25 and Harmony Road.
This distinctive gateway would contain a mix of uses including housing,
offices and locally owned shops and restaurants. Public transit stations
would be located within easy strolling distance. There residents could
board vehicles connecting with the Mason transportation corridor transecting
the city, or whisking them to Denver to take in a Rockies game - all without
ever getting into their cars.
"This is a big change from the past thinking about what could be done with
this area," said Fort Collins city planner and project manager Clark Mapes,
noting that housing overlooking the interstate would be a first for Fort
Collins.
He and project consultants are working feverishly to make possible such
a vision proposed by developer Jay Stoner. The city is driven largely by
the need to ensure that it remains a player in the competition to capture
sales tax revenues resulting from the increasing development along the
I-25 corridor.
The proposed amendment to the Harmony Corridor Plan that would facilitate
the ambitious development plan is on a fast track. The planning and zoning
board is scheduled to review the amendment on Dec. 6 and make a recommendation
to the city council, which will conduct a public hearing on Feb. 5.
"For this retail activity (and its related sales tax) to occur, the city
needs to move quickly to accommodate it," Mapes asserted in a presentation
at a Nov. 14 public open house.
The amendment would update and refine the 1991 plan, reflecting new realities
- the principal one being that I-25 inevitably is becoming northern Colorado's
new "main street." Cities and towns along its length have raced to annex
every interchange where revenue-generating retail, commercial, office and
residential developments are rising.
The amendment would affect some 250 acres on the interchange's southwest
quadrant and about 20 acres on the northwest quadrant where the park-and-ride
is located. It would establish new standards and guidelines for design
and land use in the designated "gateway," which would be extended a half-mile
to the south.
The city's "structure plan" identifying permitted land uses also would
be amended. The entire gateway area would receive a more-flexible "employment"
designation, eliminating the "rural" and "Poudre River corridor" designations
on the south and the "commercial corridor" designation on the north.
Mapes said the changes reflect the undeniable reality that the city's original
vision for the interchange as a low-density "green edge" is no longer realistic
given developments along the interstate in the 15 years since the Harmony
Corridor Plan was adopted.
"What's happening on the east side really renders that concept obsolete,"
he said, referring to the pending construction of a Wal-Mart Supercenter
just east across the interchange in Timnath. The town also plans for further
retail development south of Harmony Road.
But there are equally profound influences farther afield. Just down the
interstate, work is underway on the million-square-foot Grand Station mixed-used
development at Highway 34. Taller buildings are rising along I-25, too.
An eight-story hotel is under construction at the Larimer County Fairgrounds,
and others ranging from six to 12 stories are planned, according to Mapes.
That aggressive competition for retail sales tax revenues has created an
urgency to ensure that Fort Collins isn't left further behind. Mapes' presentation
noted that Fort Collins' position in the retail trade area is weakening
in the face of fierce competition for the sales receipts that provide most
municipalities' operating revenues.
So it's no surprise that Fort Collins' proposed amendment closely corresponds
to the developer's desires.
"We approached the city and told them what we want to do," said Bruce Hendee
of BHA Design Inc., a planning firm serving as a consultant to Stoner.
"That's definitely the impetus," Mapes acknowledged. "Both the developer
and the city would like to get started."
However, he said, there are issues yet to be worked out concerning building
heights and the potential for big-box stores - although Hendee said none
are planned.
Stoner earlier maintained that the development would be decidedly different
than any other in the region. He said it would emphasize artistic architecture
and locally owned, human-scaled business rather than such national big-box
retailers.
The focus on alternative transportation will make the project even more
distinctive, Hendee said, by creating an urban-density regional center
poised to become a hub for the transit systems eventually serving Fort
Collins and the Front Range.
"It's a pretty big departure," he said.
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