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i <br /> ■ Trees/tree grates should be installed that meets the City's standards. Trees <br /> provide various benefits for the road like reducing heat absorption of the <br /> sidewalks and reducing stormwater run off which can help prolong pavement life. { <br /> The City's standards for Olive Boulevard right-of-way and street design have been I <br /> established to promote pedestrian activity and visual uniformity of the Olive Boulevard <br /> corridor. As noted in the City's Olive Boulevard Land Use Study (April 2000), the Olive <br /> Boulevard corridor has the highest concentration of retail enterprises. It is also close to g <br /> many residential areas. However, pedestrian connectivity and pedestrian activity is not <br /> occurring with any frequency due to the inadequate pedestrian facilities (i.e. street i <br /> lighting, ADA accessible sidewalks, new sidewalk pavements, etc.). The physical <br /> conditions and current design of the pedestrian facilities as well as their interaction with <br /> vehicular access points (driveways and intersections) is inadequate to support the City's <br /> objectives for revitalization in the Area. <br /> B. DETERIORATION OF SITE IMPROVEMENTS <br /> s <br /> All of the parcels in the Area exhibit deterioration, and in some instances dilapidation, of <br /> site improvements. These instances of deterioration are displayed in Appendix B and <br /> include fascia in disrepair, cracking on masonry, and deteriorated asphalt parking lots, a' <br /> concrete entrance aprons, and sidewalks. These conditions are indicative of a lack of <br /> reinvestment in the Area. <br /> Examples include: <br /> ■ Pot holes, wavy pavement and cracked pavement on driveway (Parcel 2); i <br /> ■ Peeling paint and boarded windows and doors (Parcel 6); <br /> ■ Step cracking in exterior support walls (Parcel 7); <br /> ■ Spalling concrete, detached guttering, rusted fencing, and step-cracking (Parcel <br /> 1); and <br /> ■ Crumbling and wavy sidewalks. <br /> , <br /> C. IMPROPER SUBDIVISION OR OBSOLETE PLATTING <br /> The Area exhibits obsolescence in the form of obsolete platting. Obsolete platting <br /> includes parcels of limited or narrow size and configuration or parcels of irregular size or <br /> shape that would be difficult to develop on a planned basis and in a manner compatible <br /> with contemporary standards and requirements (including existing City zoning and/or <br /> development codes). Plats that created inadequate right-of-way widths for streets, 5 <br /> alleys and other public right-of-ways, or which omitted easements for public utilities <br /> should also be considered obsolete. Obsolete site configuration refers to sites that do <br /> not meet current standards for site development, such as provision for open space, <br /> landscaping, parking, or loading space. <br /> The entire Area is zoned GC - "General Commercial District". The requirements of the <br /> GC zoning district dictate that: 1) Development must occur on sites of at least 0.3 acres; E <br /> 2)The minimum property line setback requirement shall be twenty (25)feet if adjacent to <br /> a residential district; and 3) Buildings and site improvements such as parking must not <br /> occupy more than seventy (70) percent of the total land area of the parcel if it is 20,000 <br /> square feet or greater in size. u <br /> S <br /> April 7, 2008 J-1 to 6-64 <br /> a <br />