HomeMy WebLinkAboutMemo - Read Before Packet - 3/2/2021 - Memorandum From Karen Mcwilliams And Maren Bzdek Re: Housing Strategic Plan And Historic Preservation Code Requirements: Item 4
Community Development & Neighborhood Services
281 North College Avenue
P.O. Box 580
Fort Collins, CO 80522.0580
970.416.4250
preservation@fcgov.com
fcgov.com/historicpreservation
Historic Preservation Services
MEMORANDUM
DATE: February 22, 2021
TO: Mayor Troxell and City Councilmembers
THRU: Darin Atteberry, City Manager
Kelly DiMartino, Deputy City Manager
Kyle Stannert, Deputy City Manager
Caryn Champine, PDT Director
Paul Sizemore, Interim CDNS Director
FROM: Karen McWilliams, Historic Preservation Manager
Maren Bzdek, Senior Historic Preservation Planner
RE: Housing Strategic Plan and Historic Preservation Code Requirements
Bottom Line:
Our Housing Strategic Plan sets forth a vision for everyone to have healthy, safe, and
affordable housing choices. The implementation strategy for the Housing Strategic Plan
is framed to use all levers to achieve this goal. This includes optimizing current
regulations and removing barriers to implementation. As such, CDNS staff, including the
Historic Preservation team, supports analyzing the role, the barriers, and the
opportunities our historic preservation requirements may have in advancing our
prioritized housing strategies. Maren Bzdek has been serving on the housing strategic
plan project team to ensure that this coordination is already underway.
Our approach to this assessment is to include it in the scope of the Phase 1 Land Use
Code Update. This will enable a complete understanding of opportunities for
improvement and allow us to work toward solutions during that process. If a need for
more extensive analysis or more complex solutions emerges it would require additional
resources to complete that work.
Introduction:
In response to an inquiry from Council at the February 16, 2021 meeting, the following
information on the intersection of historic preservation code requirements with the
Housing Strategic Plan is offered.
Review of historic preservation code requirements will be part of the update process.
Historic Preservation staff has been participating in the housing strategic plan effort in
close coordination with other key staff. In addition, the Landmark Preservation
Commission was unanimously supportive of the Housing Strategic Plan
strategies as presented at their December 16, 2020 meeting, and will continue to
provide input through the code engagement process.
Areas for Analysis in Land Use Code Audit:
Every section of the land use code that impacts housing, including Section 3.4.7
that governs historic resources, will be evaluated for opportunities to optimize
implementation of City Plan and the Housing Strategic Plan. Based on our
assessments to date, numerous successful examples from our peer
communities, and evolving professional guidance on this topic within the field of
historic preservation, staff feels confident that we can continue to support historic
resources in Fort Collins in a manner that complements our evolving housing
needs.
Prioritized housing strategies that provide opportunities for analysis regarding
historic preservation priorities include:
o Barriers to accessory dwelling units (ADUs)
o Creation/recalibration of affordable housing incentives
o Removing barriers to permitted densities
o Providing alternative compliance options to improve upon existing
modifications process
o Any others that emerge from the community engagement process
Next Steps:
Historic Preservation staff will serve as subject matter experts during the Phase 1 LUC
update process.
Attachment: Background/Existing Code
ATTACHMENT, P.1
Community Development & Neighborhood Services
281 North College Avenue
P.O. Box 580
Fort Collins, CO 80522.0580
970.416.4250
preservation@fcgov.com
fcgov.com/historicpreservation
Historic Preservation Services
Background/Existing Code Requirements
Regarding the current influence of Land Use Code Section 3.4.7 Historic and Cultural
Resources on achieving housing priorities in the community, the following summarizes
the current code provisions:
Identification of historic resources: Assessment of historic resources on or near a
development site is part of the conceptual review process for all development
applications, including those that support our housing strategic goals. The pre-
submittal process includes identification of all existing site and regulatory
conditions for applicants, including historic resources, and occurs in conjunction
with floodplain review, zoning requirements, environmental site assessments,
and other applicable conditions.
Within 200 feet: Development projects that do not contain historic resources, but
that are within 200 feet of historic resources, are subject to building design
compatibility standards. These design compatibility standards were revised and
adopted by Council in 2019 to create more flexibility and clarity for applicants.
On-site, non-designated historic resources : Development sites containing historic
resources that are not designated landmarks must either 1) incorporate those
resources into the redevelopment plan in a manner that meets the code as
written or 2) receive approval for a modification of standards if the project meets
one of the four conditions for a modification, for which an affordable housing
On-site, designated landmarks: Development projects with designated landmark
properties on the proposed development site are subject to Article IV Design
Review of Proposed Alterations to Designated Resources in Chapter 14 of the
Fort Collins Municipal Code.
o The landmark design review process requires evaluation using the
Properties, as well as any other adopted standards, such as the Old Town
District Design Standards (adopted by Council in 2014).
o
allows staff and/or the Landmark Preservation Commission to review
proposals with other community priorities in mind. They do not pre-empt
other code requirements or adopted Council priorities. This allows us to
work with property owners and developers to find creative solutions when
ATTACHMENT, P.2
necessary, or to embed the landmark design review process into a larger
application in a complementary fashion, such as the recent Apex-Haven
Apartments project in the HMN District on W. Prospect Road. That project
does not technically meet all the standards, but the standards were used
to guide the review process while allowing for the densification of the site
to move forward.
o The Landmark Preservation Commission provides the decision on
proposed changes to designated Fort Collins landmarks, even if those
changes are associated with a development review application.
Demolition, generally speaking, does not meet the standards, but they do
allow for sensitively designed additions and other densification of
landmark properties, such as accessory dwelling units.