HomeMy WebLinkAboutUNION PLACE - PDP - 15-09 - MEDIA -admmtstration space, a labo-
station, a sleep center and a
rates in Family Medicine, a local
-actice partnership, will occupy a
:of the second floor, and the first
include retail health services and
cc center.
4ene Stout, clinic business service;
for for the Women's Clinic, said the
's longtime home has become out-
i by its staff and patients. "We're a lit-
ag;' Stout said before the move. "We
serve our patients as well because
,rowing. We had six MDs, one nurse
loner and one or two nurse mid-
vhen we started. Now we have 13
cur nurse midwives, two nurse prac-
s and two physician assistants."
:out said the new building, under con-
tion for more than a year, will offer
a more room and comfort for its
nts and staff.
'he new building has a new feel and a
,avant %nA .oa c.,,,t n. , ..
UNION, from 5A
ple for the project is to demonstrate sus-
tainability. "It's a spotlight for how commu-
nities can look with all these sustainable
elements," she said. "The goal is to show
there are other alternatives to building a
standard development and there are many
sustainable alternatives available,"
Brad Duckham, the company's market-
ing manager, said the use of geothermal is
one big sustainable feature of Union Place.
By drilling down to about 300 feet, air nat-
urally cooled to between 52 and 55 degrees
is delivered to buildings that only have to
provide a few more degrees to be comfort-
able in the winter. And the geothermal acts
as a heat sink in the summer, Duckham
noted, making it easier to cool the struc-
tures.
URA paying off
Other green features include the virtual
elimination of storm water piping by mak-
ing surfaces more permeable and the use of
xeriscape plantings. The southeast corner of
the development will be turned into a 2.5-
acre detention pond and a park -like feature
for the area, Merten said.
"We'll put a path around it and make it a
more aesthetic amenity for the communi-
ty," she said.
Merten said participating in the city's
URA development program, with a portion
of the taxes generated by the project applied
to infrastructure improvements, helped
make it possible.
"We wouldn't have been able to accom-
plish the project without it," she said.
Merten said she's hoping to break
ground in late June or early July and get all
of the infrastructure improvements com-
The Northern Colorado Business Report 123A
plete by the end of 2009. Building construc-
tion is expected to begin in early 2010, and
Merten said she already has 14 lots presold.
Dean Hoag, owner of RMB Recycling
Center and president of the North College
Business Association, said Union Place has
strong backing from his group. "It's obvi-
ously going to help bring development up
here, and the green part is pretty neat," he
said. "This project is going to be very
unique."
Hoag said the city's 2004 URA policy for
the North College area, which extends from
the Poudre River on the south to the
Larimer-Weld Canal on the north, is begin-
ning to bear fruit with North College
Marketplace and Union Place.
"We put the URA in place to give (the
area) a boost and I think that's helped these
projects get started and come to our area,"
Hoag said.
April 24-May 7, 2009 I www.businessreportdaiiy.com
The Northern Colorado Business Report 15A
Green development set for north Fort Collins
Developer: Union
Place will spotlight
sustainability efforts
Steve Porter
sporter@ncbr.com
FORT COLLINS — Another big North
College Avenue development is about to get
under way, this time bringing green -pow-
ered residential and commercial growth to
an area of Fort Collins targeted for blight
reduction and economic stimulation.
Union Place, a 10-acre site about a block
west of College and south of Willox Lane,
will be the second major development in
the North College Urban Renewal Area.
North College Marketplace, a 20-acre King
Soopers-anchored commercial develop-
ment near the northeast intersection of
College and Willox, is expected to open in
t gust 2010.
Union Place is expected to break ground
this summer and be ready for its first new
residents by the end of 2010, according to
city URA planner Christina Vincent.
Vincent said the mixed -use development
will include 75 housing units covering the
gamut of single-family residential, condo-
miniums, loft apartments above streetside
commercial properties and even Habitat for
Humanity pads, with 30 percent of the
homes set aside as affordable housing units.
- There will also be 19,000 square feet of
commercial space within the site plan,
1
Courtay Merten Design Studio
UNUSUAL DEVELOPMENT — Union Place develop-
ment in north Fort Collins promises to be an unusual
project, with a variety of residential housing, including
lofts, single-family houses, condominiums and even
pads for Habitat for Humanity homes, as well as com-
mercial structures, all heated and cooled with geot-
hermal energy.
Vincent said, and every unit within the pro-
be heated and cooled with geother-
mal energy brought up from 300 feet below
the surface.
"The entire site will be geothermal, she
said. "The need for natural gas will be prac-
tically nonexistent."
LEED certified
Vincent said the project has numerous
green elements in addition to- the thermal
energy component, including LEED certifi-
cation for all of the structures and even a
section with houses recycled from another
part of Fort Collins and moved into the
North College Improvements
FORT COLLINS - The city of Fort Collins is about
to begin Phase 2 of its North College Improvements
Project to make North College Avenue more attrac-
tive to development.
Phase 2 will include safety improvements for
bicyclists and pedestrians, storm water improve-
ments and new streetscape designs from Vine Drive
on the south to the Hickory -Conifer intersection on
the north.
Jennifer Petrik, a city transportation planner,
said an April 8 open house to discuss the proposed
$5.6 million improvements - to be funded by a quar-
ter -cent tax passed by city voters in 2005 called
Building on Basics - was attended by more than 100
people.
"There's a lot of interest in the project from the
business association, residents and property own-
ers," Petrik said.
Phase 1 of the project was completed a few
years ago, Petrik said, with about $4 million spent .
development. Local developer Mike Jensen
plans to relocate 10 homes on the city's
south side into the project, Vincent said.
"This is just the project we've been wait-
ing for in terms of the priorities of the
URA;-" she said, noting that Union Place will
use renewable resources, provide affordable
housing, be a destination work. and living
site for the area and add needed infrastruc-
ture to a part of the city that's been under-
developed for decades while other sections
of Fort Collins have been growing rapidly.
on street lighting, sidewalks, a detached bike path
and roadway reconstruction in a section of North
College between Jefferson Street and the Poudre
River.
Petrick said two more open houses are sched-
uled for Phase 2 on May 21 and tentatively for July
8. She said the improvements project is aimed at
making the North College corridor a more vibrant
northern entry to the city.
"I think any improvements in that area will ben-,
efit existing business and future development in the
area such as Union Place," she said. "The primary
goal of the project is increase safety and functional-
ity of the infrastructure, but improving the aesthet-
ics of the area is also important. As more funding
becomes available, more improvements can be
affected and the area can become an attractive
north gateway to the city:'
- Steve Porter
�r�ssi�`L
The $27 million project will receive
about $2.2 million in tax -increment financ-
ing to help build infrastructure improve-
ments, including a north entrance to Mason
Street that will eventually connect with the
Mason_ Corridor transit project that now
has its northern end at Cherry Street.
Union Place is being developed.by
Boulder developer Donna Merten, owner of
Merten Inc. Merten said the guiding princi-
See UNION,'23A