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Board of Architectural Review Meeting   12/21/2021

Attachments
  • December 2021 BAR Agenda_01.pdf
  • December 2021 BAR Packet_02.pdf
  • Board of Architectural Minutes.pdf
    • SPEAKER_02
    • 00:00:01
      Are Breck and Cheri presiding over tonight's meeting?
    • 00:00:03
      Okay, so I'll make sure to introduce Breck as the chair.
    • 00:00:09
      Good evening, everybody.
    • 00:00:10
      Welcome to the December 2021 Charlottesville Board of Architectural Review virtual meeting.
    • 00:00:16
      We should now be live on channel 10.
    • 00:00:18
      And we're continuing to stream on the city's streaming channels.
    • 00:00:22
      My name is Robert Watkins.
    • 00:00:24
      I'm city staff and I will be moderating tonight's meeting on the virtual side of things to make sure that things run smoothly.
    • 00:00:30
      Before I hand things over to Brett Gastinger, our chair, I'm going to go over a few guidelines and housekeeping tips just to make sure the meeting runs smoothly for everybody participating.
    • 00:00:41
      So first, for anybody who might be watching from home, I will introduce the meeting participants who are online right now.
    • 00:00:48
      First, we have Carl, not Carl, we have Brett Gastinger, the chair of the BAR.
    • 00:00:54
      We're also joined by Cheri Lewis, the vice chair, as well as members Jody LeHendro, Ron Bailey, James Zehmer, Robert Edwards, and Carl Schwartz.
    • 00:01:07
      We're also joined by Jeff Werner and James Fries, who are both city staff.
    • 00:01:12
      And throughout the meeting, applicants and other participants will join the meeting as needed.
    • 00:01:17
      For members of the public who are on the call right now who wish to provide comment, there are several places in the meeting where you can speak.
    • 00:01:25
      At the beginning of each meeting, we allow time for comments from the public for items not on the agenda.
    • 00:01:30
      Then, before the BAR deliberates on each individual application, we allow time for public comment as well.
    • 00:01:37
      In order to provide comment, we ask that you register for the meeting in case you're watching on channel 10.
    • 00:01:43
      And then you'll become an attendee.
    • 00:01:44
      And when we get to the comment portion, you can raise your hand and we will unmute you.
    • 00:01:51
      For applicants who are currently online already, for your applicant presentation, I will share my screen through pages of your application that you submitted for the visual aid and assistance for the board.
    • 00:02:05
      While the BAR deliberates, I'm happy to share my screen again to reference specific pages or drawings.
    • 00:02:10
      Just please give me a page number so I can navigate to that page in the packet.
    • 00:02:17
      As we've done in past meetings, we'll have short periodic breaks if needed, and our chair will direct us for when those are necessary.
    • 00:02:26
      I can go ahead and pass things over to Brett Gastinger, our chair, but please let me know if you have any additional questions.
    • 00:02:32
      Thank you.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 00:02:34
      Thanks, and thanks, everybody.
    • 00:02:35
      Welcome to this regular monthly meeting of the Charlottesville Board of Architectural Review, the last one of the year, last one for our esteemed chair, Carl Schwartz.
    • 00:02:45
      And I hope Tim pokes his head in at some point this evening.
    • 00:02:48
      It's his last meeting.
    • 00:02:49
      He'll be here in a sec.
    • 00:02:53
      As we move forward, staff will introduce each item followed by the applicant's presentation, which should not exceed 10 minutes.
    • 00:03:01
      And I will ask for questions from the public
    • 00:03:04
      followed by questions from the BAR.
    • 00:03:06
      And after questions are closed, we'll ask for comments from the public.
    • 00:03:10
      And for each application, members of the public are allowed three minutes for both questions and comments.
    • 00:03:17
      Speakers should please identify themselves and provide their address.
    • 00:03:22
      Comments should be limited to the BAR's purview, that is, these things that relate to the exterior aspects of the project
    • 00:03:31
      Following the BAR's discussion and prior to taking action, the applicant will have up to three minutes to respond.
    • 00:03:37
      Thank you, everyone.
    • 00:03:39
      The first item on the agenda is matters of the public not on the agenda.
    • 00:03:46
      So if there's anyone who would like to speak to something, please raise your hand or hit star nine.
    • 00:03:55
      Is that right?
    • SPEAKER_02
    • 00:03:56
      Yes, that's right.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 00:03:59
      You'll have up to three minutes for any items not on the agenda.
    • SPEAKER_02
    • 00:04:04
      Mr. Chair, I see three attendees in the queue and none of them are raising their hands.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 00:04:11
      Okay.
    • 00:04:14
      Next, we'll move to the consent agenda.
    • 00:04:17
      On the consent agenda, we have two items.
    • 00:04:19
      Number one is approval of the meeting minutes from May 18th, 2021.
    • 00:04:24
      And the second is a certificate of appropriateness
    • 00:04:28
      for 112 West Market Street, The Haven, that has also some additional language that has been suggested by staff.
    • 00:04:38
      Do I hear a motion?
    • Jody Lahendro
    • 00:04:40
      I move that the consent agenda be approved.
    • SPEAKER_02
    • 00:04:42
      Second.
    • 00:04:46
      I will call the vote.
    • 00:04:48
      Mr. Zehmer?
    • 00:04:50
      Aye.
    • 00:04:51
      Mr. Bailey?
    • 00:04:53
      Yes.
    • 00:04:54
      Ms.
    • 00:04:54
      Lewis?
    • 00:04:55
      Aye.
    • 00:04:56
      Mr. Gastinger?
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 00:04:58
      I will abstain.
    • 00:04:58
      I have a relationship to the project on the consent agenda.
    • SPEAKER_02
    • 00:05:02
      Thank you.
    • 00:05:03
      Mr. Lehendro?
    • 00:05:04
      Aye.
    • 00:05:06
      Mr. Edwards?
    • 00:05:07
      Aye.
    • 00:05:08
      And Mr. Schwartz?
    • Carl Schwarz
    • 00:05:09
      Yes.
    • SPEAKER_02
    • 00:05:11
      Thank you.
    • 00:05:11
      The vote is, well, with one abstaining, unanimous.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 00:05:17
      Okay.
    • 00:05:18
      Thank you.
    • 00:05:19
      We'll move on to deferred items.
    • 00:05:22
      And the next item is the certificate of appropriateness for 517 Rugby Road.
    • Jeff Werner
    • 00:05:30
      Okay, so get going here.
    • 00:05:32
      This is, you all reviewed this back in April of this year.
    • 00:05:38
      It come in as a formal application, but it was a, that's when they had their preliminary discussion.
    • 00:05:47
      This is 517 Rugby Road.
    • 00:05:49
      It is within the Rugby Road, University Circle, Bentable neighborhood, ADC district.
    • 00:05:55
      This house was constructed around 1910.
    • 00:05:59
      and it is a contributing structure within the district.
    • 00:06:02
      It's also contributing structure to the National Register District.
    • 00:06:10
      One of the things we discussed the last time, there was this request to expand the front porch as well as an addition on the rear of the house and some other exterior alterations.
    • 00:06:23
      But just to be clear, there was some,
    • 00:06:27
      We had some confusion about whether it had been shingles on the house or in siding and the understanding is that the wood shingles that were shown in the city survey had actually been installed on top of wood siding in the 1980s.
    • 00:06:45
      The shingles were moved, also the original
    • 00:06:51
      Siding was removed and the current Masonite siding that you see now is what's there.
    • 00:06:58
      So this is not original siding on the house.
    • 00:07:02
      And also just to be clear on the request relative to the porch, there are segments of it which are original or at least appear to be based on the photographs, but it is not from the entablature of it's not
    • 00:07:17
      not original.
    • 00:07:18
      So just to, this is a request for a COA for front porch extension and reconstruction, the addition to and rehabilitation of the existing house and related site work and landscaping.
    • 00:07:33
      And it's a rather lengthy list of things here, but I've broken it down into description of work that's being done to the existing house.
    • 00:07:43
      involving replacing the siding, some roof repairs, gutters, downspout replacements.
    • 00:07:51
      Second is the front porch, the work there.
    • 00:07:54
      The BAR had approved extension on either side of the front porch.
    • 00:07:59
      I don't recall when, but so they've got that there.
    • 00:08:03
      This had come in to you all in April, the idea of reconstructing the front porch as a longer single porch.
    • 00:08:12
      What's come back is an effort to retain that original section and then construct porch wings on either side, if you will.
    • 00:08:23
      And then the third piece is the rear addition that will be added to the back of the house
    • 00:08:30
      Excuse me, it will look similar to the house, but it will be differentiated with a different exposure on the siding, a different type of trim.
    • 00:08:40
      The windows will obviously be slightly different.
    • 00:08:42
      And then with that, there's some landscaping associated lighting going on with this project.
    • 00:08:47
      So it was, don't really make a recommendation.
    • 00:08:55
      I did offer some thoughts in here about the,
    • 00:09:00
      the front porch, again, differentiating between the new and the existing that you all can, there's nothing that says, speaks against what they're doing, the fact that it's been bastardized somewhat, but in this, again, as staff before you see that April, 2021, where the idea was a continuous new porch and here next to it, you see that differentiation between the centerpiece and the two wings.
    • 00:09:27
      The,
    • 00:09:30
      I did say in here that if perchance, and I know that Eric can explain better, but they are looking to move forward with construction of this hopefully at the end of the semester.
    • 00:09:44
      So if for any reason,
    • 00:09:48
      There's an issue with the porch, whereas the siding, I'm sorry, the rear addition may be acceptable.
    • 00:09:57
      You all could break this up, but not into
    • 00:10:03
      you would have to simply prove what you wanted and then omit any elements that were left out.
    • 00:10:09
      That would have to come back later as a separate request.
    • 00:10:13
      So it would not be, we're gonna approve the addition but defer the porch.
    • 00:10:19
      Tonight would be anything that you aren't accepting would be omitted if you were gonna approve other pieces.
    • 00:10:27
      Aside from that, the only two recommendations for any conditions would be our standard regarding lamping for exterior lighting and that the cementitious siding and trim materials use the smooth side and not the faux grain side.
    • 00:10:46
      So are there any questions for me?
    • 00:10:48
      Otherwise I know Eric's here.
    • 00:10:49
      He looks like he's on site, ready to point to things for us.
    • SPEAKER_05
    • 00:10:59
      All yours.
    • 00:11:01
      OK.
    • 00:11:02
      I'm Eric Antman.
    • 00:11:04
      Ready, Robert?
    • 00:11:05
      Yeah, I'm good.
    • 00:11:06
      Great.
    • 00:11:08
      I'm Eric Antman from DGP Architects here in Charlottesville, 206 Fifth Street Northeast.
    • 00:11:14
      And happy to be here to present on behalf of the Alpha Mu Chapter of Delta Sigma Phi Fraternity at UVA.
    • 00:11:21
      And Jeff gave a very good summary.
    • 00:11:25
      Thank you for that.
    • 00:11:28
      the main points of the scope of work.
    • 00:11:30
      So that was a good introduction.
    • 00:11:34
      This first slide I'd like to start with just sort of going through briefly the various periods that we've seen the building in and make a clear distinction so we all have the same understanding of existing historic
    • 00:11:51
      versus existing non-historic to the period of significance which we're calling early 20th century circa 1915.
    • 00:12:00
      and proposed or new construction.
    • 00:12:04
      Jeff touched on that regarding the shingles as being one of those items.
    • 00:12:08
      So that the top left photo is circa 1915, built roughly 1910.
    • 00:12:15
      And what we can see there is a slate shingle roof as evidenced by the most likely lead hip caps and then a horizontal siding and corner boards.
    • 00:12:29
      And if you zoom in, you can see there are 41 rows of siding in this existing historic condition.
    • 00:12:35
      We can come back to that later on.
    • 00:12:38
      And then you can see on the south side, which in this photograph is the left, there is an open porch.
    • 00:12:44
      Again, that original
    • 00:12:46
      Well, at least within five years of being built, original circa 1915 from 1910, as well as shutters on both the primary east facade, which is the entry facade, and the north facade, again, being on the right.
    • 00:13:03
      I think I said that correctly earlier.
    • 00:13:05
      The porch on the left is south.
    • 00:13:06
      I think I said that.
    • 00:13:08
      And then you can see a dye style, center bay,
    • 00:13:14
      Entry porch with a low slope, most likely very close to almost flat roof with a balustrade.
    • 00:13:23
      Probably saturated tar paper up there for the roofing material, possibly flat seam metal.
    • 00:13:33
      Can't tell from the photograph, but what we can see is that it's very low slope.
    • 00:13:38
      As well as a railing from the front column connecting to the house.
    • 00:13:44
      We know it's got vertical pickets zooming in.
    • 00:13:47
      Can't really see distinguish any details.
    • 00:13:50
      So those are the significant existing historic conditions.
    • 00:13:55
      Moving to the top right photo circa 1983, as already explained by Jeff, the corner boards and siding were completely obscured with shingles overlaid.
    • 00:14:10
      That's what previous reports say it covered the existing, sorry, the previous historic siding material.
    • 00:14:18
      All I can say for certain is today those shingles are gone and the siding underneath is existing non-historic being Masonite.
    • 00:14:28
      The corner boards do appear to be historic.
    • 00:14:33
      If they're repairable, we certainly would like to keep them in their existing
    • 00:14:40
      position.
    • 00:14:41
      Then you can see for the center entry porch, retains its dyestyle configuration, appears to have close to the historic entablature from the architrave up through the coordinates in place.
    • 00:14:56
      But the roof has been removed and replaced.
    • 00:14:59
      You can see the peak of that hip comes up almost to the windowsill.
    • 00:15:03
      We're obviously in the historic circa 1915 photo.
    • 00:15:07
      That is not the historic condition.
    • 00:15:09
      The porch on the south side to the left has been enclosed and it appears that gutters and downspouts are close to their original historic configuration.
    • 00:15:23
      Moving on to the lower left, sort of looking at some more existing non-historic conditions, we have siding in place, which is non-historic shutters remaining on the east elevation, which is the entry elevation.
    • 00:15:40
      Again, non-historic, it's obvious from their fabrication that they are
    • 00:15:44
      not pegged style and rail shutters from early 20th century.
    • 00:15:48
      They're shop fabricated mid-century, maybe 70s.
    • 00:15:55
      The windows have also been replaced.
    • 00:15:58
      So the existing windows, I can't tell you what was there in 1983, but we do know that the double hung two over two windows that are there now are not the historic windows.
    • 00:16:09
      They were also not replaced with sash replacements as proposed in, I believe it was 2014, the last time this project came before the board.
    • 00:16:21
      Sash replacements with the existing non-historic frames was approved, but that work was not done.
    • 00:16:29
      So we still have the mid-century windows and we'll be proposing to repair those in place.
    • 00:16:37
      There are some details regarding the porch, the entry porch.
    • 00:16:41
      I have some photographs that are detailed photos that we'll come to later.
    • 00:16:45
      Suffice it to say that the understructure, meaning the floor and flooring, are existing non-historic, and there are various conditions of historic or not above the bed mold, and we'll see those in the detailed photos.
    • 00:17:02
      Then in our proposed elevation, and you'll see this in the plan in a minute, it also shows better.
    • 00:17:08
      We're proposing to retain the historic center bay porch in place and adding wings and there would be distinguishing details so that we are not copying the historic conditions.
    • 00:17:23
      And again, there are details for that that we'll look at in a few minutes.
    • 00:17:27
      So that's sort of the survey of the three conditions of existing historic, existing non-historic and proposed.
    • 00:17:33
      We'll sort of come back to all of those as we go.
    • 00:17:37
      And I don't know if I'm supposed to stop for questions, but maybe I should before I keep rolling, Robert, do we want to see if there anything about that or should I just keep presenting?
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 00:17:50
      What do you think, Brett?
    • 00:17:52
      I think that's probably sufficient.
    • 00:17:53
      We'll have a chance for public and great questions for the conversation.
    • SPEAKER_05
    • 00:17:58
      Perfect.
    • 00:17:59
      So next slide, Robert, please.
    • 00:18:06
      So for context, we're on the southwest corner of University Circle and Rugby Road.
    • 00:18:13
      Might be helpful to zoom into just the house if you can do that.
    • 00:18:17
      And the purple to blue areas, perfect, thank you.
    • 00:18:20
      So in the center, the part of the house that's shown as tan is the existing historic footprint, of course, with the enclosed porch on the south, which again is to the left.
    • 00:18:33
      Purple areas are areas of proposed new construction of covered parking area and terrace to the west and open uncovered terrace to the south.
    • 00:18:44
      And then the in that same area those cross hatched red areas are selective removals of existing non historic additions which are kind of
    • 00:18:55
      glommed on the back.
    • 00:18:56
      We'll see photographs of those in a minute.
    • 00:18:58
      And then the blue areas on the east elevation there on the entry side, the blue areas would be the proposed porch extensions.
    • 00:19:08
      And actually, since we're on the plan, could you zoom into that a little tighter, please, Robert, just the porch area?
    • 00:19:13
      Thank you.
    • 00:19:15
      So you can see the die style round columns and then the half rectangular pilasters all historic engaged to the east wall.
    • 00:19:26
      And then we would be proposing to add half engaged pilasters of different profiles and round columns at the outside corners.
    • 00:19:37
      And I think that's it for this slide is just general orientation.
    • 00:19:42
      Then this slide, I won't read every one of these bubbles to you, but they distinguish all of the specific materials and so forth.
    • 00:19:51
      Landscaping, we've got city plant list items called out as appropriate.
    • 00:19:57
      There are some existing steps that lead up to the center entrance which will be reconstructed with retaining walls as well as a second new sidewalk instead of steps slightly to the south.
    • 00:20:10
      Retaining wall rebuilt between those two stairs because it's basically a
    • 00:20:15
      Field Rubble Wall that's completely disintegrated.
    • 00:20:18
      There is an existing tree there.
    • 00:20:20
      Number three, just to the left of the driveway, the biggest tree in the front yard.
    • 00:20:24
      It's in good condition.
    • 00:20:25
      It'll be retained.
    • 00:20:27
      And the southeast corner of the house, there's a tree noted as new.
    • 00:20:32
      It's number 14 there.
    • 00:20:35
      You'll see in the photographs, there is a tree shown there.
    • 00:20:38
      That tree is no longer there.
    • 00:20:42
      Met an unfortunate demise about two years ago.
    • 00:20:45
      And I'll just say, we'll leave it for questions.
    • 00:20:50
      If anybody has questions about the details, I think I've covered it pretty well.
    • 00:20:55
      The only distinction is that on this plan, you see where the two red arrows are.
    • 00:20:59
      It's sort of a split plan.
    • 00:21:00
      We're showing the
    • 00:21:02
      first floor, which is one story higher to the east on the entry side.
    • 00:21:07
      And then to the west, it's the lower floor, which is down at that lower level of parking on the west side because the driveway goes down.
    • 00:21:17
      Can we move on, please, Robert?
    • 00:21:21
      Existing condition photographs, you can see there's
    • 00:21:28
      aggregation, I'll say, of various conditions of that porch.
    • 00:21:32
      We have treated lumber ballast rods and decking and treated lumber floor joists all in states of dangerous disrepair, certainly non-historic.
    • 00:21:45
      I'll get back to the porch details because there are better photographs of that.
    • 00:21:49
      And then in the lower right, that's the existing set of steps and the
    • 00:21:56
      essentially non-existent retaining wall.
    • 00:21:59
      Okay, next please.
    • 00:22:03
      Top left photograph is the northeast corner, which shows how the driveway goes down towards the west side of the site and the lower level, as well as some views from adjacent properties on the next three photographs.
    • 00:22:16
      The two at the bottom, you can see the existing non-historic accretions on the back.
    • 00:22:23
      And we're certain that these are non-historic because the brick and the mortar is clearly later period than the main house.
    • 00:22:31
      the intersection of the second floor.
    • 00:22:34
      It's lower, first, second, and then attic is the third.
    • 00:22:38
      So on that second floor, the intersection of that little rooflet and the historic harness would not have been done that way and in historic condition.
    • 00:22:46
      It's clearly an afterthought of later addition.
    • 00:22:51
      Then the next slide I believe has all of that.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 00:22:54
      And Eric, I didn't might say we've, we have had the chance to review these so I just maybe keep your comments to anything that you felt we needed special attention.
    • SPEAKER_05
    • 00:23:03
      Yep.
    • 00:23:05
      I think I'll be within 10 minutes I'm almost done here so let's go ahead and skip the slide.
    • 00:23:11
      Then adjacent properties.
    • 00:23:13
      We don't need to touch on that one.
    • 00:23:14
      This one shows the areas to be removed.
    • 00:23:18
      Again, clearly non-historic.
    • 00:23:22
      details with elevation tags for all of the proposed materials.
    • 00:23:27
      I think the main thing to focus on on these elevation renderings is the change in details that provide information for the viewer of what is historic and what is non-historic.
    • 00:23:43
      And so speaking to just the main house first, there is an existing frieze board which shows in the historic photographs.
    • 00:23:52
      So that's been sort of recreated.
    • 00:23:55
      Well, it's I'm sorry, it exists in its historic condition along with the corner boards.
    • 00:24:00
      So we would retain that.
    • 00:24:02
      And there is no trim board or rim board, skirt board at the bottom.
    • 00:24:06
      And we have 41 courses.
    • 00:24:08
      So as you move around to the north elevation, we could go there.
    • 00:24:14
      One more.
    • 00:24:15
      Yeah, so we've sort of, you can see the two conditions there side by side, existing historic on the left and proposed on the right with changes in the siding spacing, the reveal going from six to seven and a half inches and also changes in the molding profiles and locations.
    • 00:24:36
      And then if we can scroll back up one, I'd like to hit the porch here.
    • 00:24:41
      So you can see if you could zoom in to the red and blue bubbles and notes.
    • 00:24:47
      So what's in blue, and you'll see this in the photographs, is existing historic columns from the bases up to the capitals.
    • 00:24:56
      the architrave, the frieze, and the bed mold in some locations.
    • 00:25:02
      On the south side, the bed mold's been removed and replaced with a piece of crown molding of different profile, which is obviously not a good mitered connection, and then the non-historic roof above, and then the proposed areas flanking left and right.
    • 00:25:19
      Okay, ready to move on?
    • 00:25:28
      Nothing different or notable in this elevation?
    • 00:25:31
      Oh, it's actually one small point.
    • 00:25:33
      It shows better on the next slide.
    • 00:25:35
      Please go to 13.
    • 00:25:38
      So you can see on the left, which is the south where the 14 is, that's the new dormer on the back with siding parallel to the roof.
    • 00:25:49
      And then that would have a three over three window.
    • 00:25:53
      And then number three dormer on the right, which is the historic condition with its horizontal siding.
    • 00:25:58
      So again, there are changes in profiles and siding that indicate it's subtle, but it's enough for DHR and Interior Secretary standards.
    • 00:26:08
      for a distinction of historic and new or different era.
    • 00:26:12
      Okay.
    • 00:26:17
      So photo documentation of existing front porch, existing column based on the left, and then that sort of non-historic replaced above the bed mold condition.
    • 00:26:29
      That's all new structure and trim above the bed mold, as well as this sort of
    • 00:26:36
      Crown and Bedmold miter joint there that shows a non-historic piece.
    • 00:26:40
      Okay.
    • 00:26:43
      Same thing for the pilaster attached to the house.
    • 00:26:46
      You can keep going.
    • 00:26:47
      And then what the drawing on the left is the sort of
    • 00:26:52
      Field measurements of the existing conditions.
    • 00:26:55
      And then that would be for the center bay.
    • 00:26:57
      And then we're proposing to construct for the left and right flanking bays detailed on the right.
    • 00:27:04
      So we have a the existing is a Roman Doric.
    • 00:27:09
      It's simplified.
    • 00:27:10
      The profiles aren't elaborate as much as they would be in a truly classical.
    • 00:27:16
      But it is Roman Doric.
    • 00:27:17
      And we're proposing to look, have the new details more in line with
    • 00:27:23
      Tuscan order.
    • 00:27:24
      You can see there's a difference between the attic base on the left and the torus base on the right as well as necking and capital differences and then changes in the moldings in the architrave and bed mold.
    • 00:27:39
      There's also detail for how the section for how we would do the railing.
    • 00:27:45
      And this is appropriate for a mid-century addition to an early 20th century porch.
    • 00:27:51
      On the left, that's the wood railing.
    • 00:27:53
      And then the detail on the right is the metal handrail, which you get around on the southwest side of the terraces.
    • 00:27:59
      OK?
    • 00:28:04
      Lighting cut sheets.
    • 00:28:07
      The downlight goes over the lower level entrance door.
    • 00:28:13
      The wall or soffit mounted security lighting is indicated in various locations all on the rendered elevations.
    • 00:28:22
      We have those as low as we can get them to minimize light throw onto adjoining properties.
    • 00:28:29
      but high enough to actually light the area that needs to be lit and out of the reach range of tampering.
    • 00:28:35
      And then those are the recessed ceiling lights above the parking area and a cut sheet for the Pella Reserve window we're proposing to use.
    • 00:28:45
      I think that's it.
    • 00:28:49
      Thank you.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 00:28:49
      Great.
    • 00:28:51
      Thank you.
    • 00:28:52
      Do we have any questions from the public?
    • 00:28:56
      Please either raise your hand or hit star nine if you're calling in.
    • SPEAKER_02
    • 00:29:00
      I do see a raised hand, Mr. Chair, from Eric Edwardson.
    • 00:29:04
      Mr. Edwardson, I'm going to ask you to unmute or I will allow you to talk and then you'll need to unmute yourself one sec.
    • 00:29:16
      But can you try talking at my own?
    • Carl Schwarz
    • 00:29:19
      OK, OK.
    • 00:29:21
      Not a question.
    • 00:29:21
      I just wanted to let you all know I'm from the Alumni Corporation board from the fraternity there and just want to let you know it's here.
    • SPEAKER_09
    • 00:29:30
      Great, thank you.
    • 00:29:33
      Any others?
    • 00:29:36
      Doesn't look like it.
    • 00:29:39
      All right, any questions from the board?
    • 00:29:48
      James?
    • 00:29:49
      Yeah.
    • SPEAKER_13
    • 00:29:51
      Hey, Eric, how's it going?
    • 00:29:54
      I think the first plan that shows the demolition, the one that had the areas in red.
    • 00:30:04
      Yeah, if you could zoom in, Robert.
    • 00:30:14
      There's a couple.
    • 00:30:15
      It looks like windows.
    • 00:30:18
      shown here is being removed, but I didn't see those as being removed on the elevations.
    • 00:30:23
      Just wondering if you could speak to that.
    • 00:30:24
      Are those going to be removed?
    • SPEAKER_05
    • 00:30:26
      Yeah, they'll be removed and replaced with new units to match the rest of the new units that are going in on the first and second floors and actually up in the attic level.
    • 00:30:44
      That's all embedded within the new construction.
    • 00:30:48
      Sorry, except for the porch on the south, that's still exterior.
    • 00:30:52
      And then down on the lower level, those need to be doors that go out to the, that covered terrace area in the center.
    • 00:31:03
      And then the flanking doors, sorry, windows are shown as relocated.
    • 00:31:08
      That's correct.
    • SPEAKER_13
    • 00:31:11
      And there's one on the north side there at the driveway.
    • SPEAKER_05
    • 00:31:16
      Uh, that's at the lower level.
    • 00:31:19
      Uh, I'm honestly not sure why that's shown as removed.
    • 00:31:23
      Let me look at the elevations.
    • SPEAKER_09
    • 00:31:32
      That's a small like coal hopper window.
    • SPEAKER_05
    • 00:31:35
      Um, I'm honestly not sure why that's being shown as to be removed.
    • SPEAKER_13
    • 00:31:42
      I see it.
    • 00:31:43
      Right.
    • SPEAKER_05
    • 00:31:44
      Yeah.
    • SPEAKER_13
    • 00:31:45
      So and I guess the diagram says those are all non-historic.
    • SPEAKER_03
    • 00:31:51
      Correct.
    • SPEAKER_13
    • 00:31:51
      And is that just the sash that's not historic or the opening itself?
    • SPEAKER_05
    • 00:31:58
      In the first and second floors or the ones that are being removed?
    • 00:32:02
      The ones that are being removed.
    • 00:32:06
      They are non-historic, the entire window assembly frames, sashes, leaves, everything.
    • 00:32:12
      They date to mid-century.
    • 00:32:14
      That lower level has been reconfigured.
    • 00:32:17
      Okay.
    • SPEAKER_09
    • 00:32:18
      Got it.
    • 00:32:19
      Okay.
    • 00:32:19
      Thank you.
    • 00:32:26
      Are there other questions from the board?
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 00:32:28
      We've got a couple of questions.
    • Carl Schwarz
    • 00:32:30
      Excuse me.
    • 00:32:32
      On the, what sheet is this?
    • 00:32:36
      Sheet three.
    • 00:32:39
      Some of the landscaping, or a reference to some of the landscaping.
    • 00:32:46
      I can't find item 16, the sweet shrub.
    • 00:32:50
      Oh, wait, nevermind, I just did.
    • 00:32:52
      Sorry, I looked for that for, okay, that's embarrassing.
    • SPEAKER_05
    • 00:32:55
      Just in front of the courts.
    • 00:32:57
      Well, they're really, really little.
    • 00:32:58
      Long plan.
    • Carl Schwarz
    • 00:33:01
      They're awfully
    • 00:33:02
      Tall, is that intentional to let them get that tall?
    • 00:33:06
      Or I guess I got the sweet shrub, but it looks like Google told me those would be about 13 feet tall.
    • 00:33:11
      You have in front of the front porch and in the button bush, six to 12 feet, you've got along the street.
    • 00:33:20
      Is the intention to let those get the full height?
    • SPEAKER_05
    • 00:33:23
      No, they need to be maintained down at the street level around five feet, maybe six.
    • 00:33:30
      And foundation planning's next to the porch, three feet.
    • 00:33:36
      We don't want those up over the floor level and we've got about 28 inches of vertical there.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 00:33:42
      I don't think we travel that tall.
    • 00:33:47
      It's not getting 13 feet.
    • Carl Schwarz
    • 00:33:49
      How tall is it getting, Brock?
    • 00:33:52
      OK, well, so much for Google.
    • 00:33:56
      All right, that was, I think, my PDF keeps freezing.
    • 00:34:03
      Sorry.
    • 00:34:06
      If they survive.
    • 00:34:10
      Well, sounds like you've got something to say about that.
    • 00:34:12
      I think that was all my questions.
    • 00:34:15
      I can't find the other ones.
    • 00:34:16
      I'm sure I'll find them later.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 00:34:18
      While we're on that plan, can I insert my question?
    • 00:34:21
      I was curious, Eric, I saw the, and you referenced the new retaining wall on Ruby, but I didn't see a material or height or what, I don't see much information about that in the documentation.
    • SPEAKER_05
    • 00:34:35
      Yeah, sorry.
    • 00:34:37
      Jeff and I did discuss that via email.
    • 00:34:39
      I just didn't, I guess, get into what was submitted on record.
    • 00:34:44
      We'll do either a block or concrete retaining wall with stone facing or just a stone wall.
    • 00:34:54
      And the intent would be to have it be rounded fieldstone that looks like it's natural to that area.
    • 00:35:01
      and the only reason I don't say if it's a reinforced concrete wall or just a stone wall, mass stone wall, yes, because I'm not sure how high it is and we need a structural engineer to detail that, but it's not going to be, you know, an engineered self-stacking non-mortared wall from Lowe's.
    • 00:35:19
      The intent is to have it look like a field stone retaining wall.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 00:35:23
      And that would be a stone cap as well?
    • SPEAKER_05
    • 00:35:27
      Not with a cap like you think of as a ledgestone, as just like the rubber wall, you know, up to a mortar top.
    • 00:35:34
      Exactly.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 00:35:35
      Gotcha.
    • SPEAKER_05
    • 00:35:35
      Thank you.
    • Carl Schwarz
    • 00:35:39
      I did find my other question.
    • 00:35:42
      The front porch roof, you mentioned it when we were looking at the historic photographs that the current roof goes up to the just on the underside of the windowsill.
    • 00:35:53
      Your drawings show it a little bit lower
    • 00:35:56
      but then just labels it as a historic roof to be re-roofed.
    • 00:36:00
      Are you intending to lower the framing down or the slope of the roof?
    • 00:36:03
      Or are you?
    • SPEAKER_05
    • 00:36:05
      No, we wouldn't be changing the framing unless it needed to be so changed.
    • 00:36:11
      So, you know, if it's a matter of inches of where that ridge comes in, I have to take off for drawing in accuracy.
    • 00:36:19
      Sorry about that.
    • Carl Schwarz
    • 00:36:20
      That's okay.
    • 00:36:20
      So, but it will be,
    • 00:36:22
      I guess it'll match what is existing, which is basically just the underside of the windowsill.
    • SPEAKER_05
    • 00:36:27
      Yeah, the existing non-historic roof framing will stay where it is and be repaired in place if necessary.
    • SPEAKER_09
    • 00:36:34
      Okay.
    • 00:36:40
      Any other questions from the board?
    • 00:36:43
      Cheri?
    • SPEAKER_16
    • 00:36:47
      So Eric, you're saying that all the windows in the
    • SPEAKER_17
    • 00:36:51
      back of the house, north, I guess, side of the house are not original.
    • SPEAKER_05
    • 00:36:59
      So none of the windows surrounding the house to my knowledge are historic.
    • 00:37:05
      They've all been replaced roughly mid-century.
    • 00:37:09
      They have aluminum sash liners, glazing compound conditions that are not historic.
    • 00:37:18
      It's not glass from 1910.
    • 00:37:21
      So I can't speak for sure about the frames inside the walls because we haven't taken them apart.
    • 00:37:29
      Bottom line is we're not changing them, except on the east elevation where they become embedded within the new construction addition.
    • 00:37:39
      So they're they're being just prepared in place.
    • SPEAKER_17
    • 00:37:43
      But they're going away on the on the backside because of the addition.
    • SPEAKER_09
    • 00:37:46
      So they're correct on the west side.
    • SPEAKER_17
    • 00:37:49
      That's right.
    • 00:37:51
      So but do you think the placement of the windows is original?
    • 00:37:53
      I'm just curious.
    • SPEAKER_05
    • 00:37:57
      I think they're slightly different sized because we have looked zoomed in on the siding spacing and we know where the bottom and the top boards are and you count off 41 courses in the existing photograph and then you do the same on the historic photograph and the windows don't line up so I think they have moved subtly from the historic condition but again not changing them so
    • SPEAKER_17
    • 00:38:27
      And what about the door?
    • 00:38:30
      Is that thought to be original on the back, and is there a transom that's been painted over it, or what is that detail?
    • SPEAKER_05
    • 00:38:38
      On the back being- Facing the parking area, I guess facing what?
    • SPEAKER_17
    • 00:38:45
      The directions are unclear, to be honest.
    • 00:38:49
      I think it's south and west, maybe.
    • 00:38:53
      on the side that does not face Robey Road.
    • 00:38:55
      How about that?
    • 00:38:56
      Right, so the door that's elevated that is on the second story if you're looking in the back of the structure.
    • SPEAKER_05
    • 00:39:04
      OK, so the main floor level with, oh right, with the transom on the porch.
    • SPEAKER_09
    • 00:39:12
      Yeah.
    • SPEAKER_05
    • 00:39:13
      I'm honestly not sure.
    • 00:39:15
      Since we were planning on that being within the new construction, we haven't surveyed that door closely.
    • SPEAKER_08
    • 00:39:26
      OK, thank you.
    • SPEAKER_09
    • 00:39:29
      Last chance for questions.
    • 00:39:34
      Comments from the, oh, Tim, you're muted.
    • 00:39:36
      Tim, you're still muted.
    • 00:39:45
      Still muted.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 00:39:49
      Well, you can put it in, there you go.
    • 00:39:52
      Eric, the security lighting, is that something that's,
    • 00:39:55
      How do you envision that being used?
    • 00:39:58
      Is that just for, you know, because there's a security situation or is that something, those things are going to be on all the time?
    • SPEAKER_05
    • 00:40:07
      A little bit of both.
    • 00:40:09
      So if you go to the photograph that shows, I just want to make a distinction between some lighting that's already there and what elevation it's at.
    • 00:40:16
      Okay.
    • 00:40:19
      So up there above the Delta Sigma Phi letters, if you can zoom in on that top left photo,
    • 00:40:27
      So there was some security lighting up there by the downspout and on the other corner on the left, the southeast corner in the same location.
    • 00:40:35
      So those are all the way up at roof level and we'll be keeping those in place, repairing if necessary.
    • 00:40:43
      Everything else is proposed to be new.
    • 00:40:46
      So, you know, we have a situation here where there's a lot of pedestrian traffic at night
    • 00:40:52
      after social events or coming home late from the library.
    • 00:40:58
      And parts of this building are out of sight, hidden from view of the street in secluded
    • 00:41:06
      areas with no sight line.
    • 00:41:08
      So that's why I'm calling them security lighting.
    • 00:41:12
      And we can have them motion activated if that's something that the board feels strongly about.
    • 00:41:19
      There would be periods during a social event, for example, where they'd be turned on and left on for extended periods of time.
    • 00:41:28
      But again, around the other three sides, we've got them basically at one floor level above
    • 00:41:33
      wherever the ground level is.
    • 00:41:36
      So not all the way up at this very high roof level where you'd get a lot of light wash spreading further than it needs to.
    • 00:41:43
      Tried to keep them down low so it would be just lighting the walking areas below them.
    • SPEAKER_13
    • 00:41:47
      OK, thanks.
    • 00:41:52
      Sorry, I had one more question.
    • 00:41:55
      So on the front porch, I think it's slide 16, you're discussing the
    • 00:42:01
      The existing porch is Roman Doric and then the additions being Tuscan.
    • 00:42:06
      And I guess I'm just curious, we'll get into the comments.
    • 00:42:11
      I do think you've been successful at trying to retain that center section of the porch and kind of pulling your wings back a little bit.
    • 00:42:17
      Correct.
    • 00:42:19
      So I think that's nice.
    • 00:42:21
      I guess I'm worried about where the entelature from the two wings crashes into the original porch.
    • 00:42:30
      You know, are those entablatures the exact same or it looks like the, I guess the tinea, like the top of the architrave before it goes to the frieze might be slightly different.
    • SPEAKER_05
    • 00:42:41
      Yes, it's the same.
    • 00:42:43
      That tinea there is the same height.
    • 00:42:45
      So it would intersect well, but not be a molding profile.
    • 00:42:50
      You know, it's basically a flat distillation of the curved molding.
    • 00:42:56
      OK.
    • 00:42:58
      So just cope around with the curve, I guess?
    • 00:43:00
      Exactly, yes.
    • 00:43:02
      OK.
    • SPEAKER_13
    • 00:43:02
      But all the other elements line up?
    • SPEAKER_05
    • 00:43:05
      Correct.
    • 00:43:06
      The bed mold would and the crown mold would.
    • SPEAKER_13
    • 00:43:09
      OK, great.
    • 00:43:10
      That answers my question.
    • SPEAKER_05
    • 00:43:12
      Thank you.
    • 00:43:15
      Similar effort was taken with where the rail intersection is around the two bases so that we're trying to get that bottom rail to sort of nest in there with the profile on the attic base.
    • 00:43:28
      of the historic, so it can be sort of coped in without chopping up that base or having an awkward connection.
    • SPEAKER_09
    • 00:43:37
      Sounds good.
    • 00:43:37
      Thank you.
    • 00:43:42
      Any further questions?
    • 00:43:45
      Any comments from the public?
    • SPEAKER_02
    • 00:43:46
      I don't see any raised hands, Mr. Chair.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 00:43:53
      Okay.
    • 00:43:53
      Comments from the board?
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 00:43:58
      I'll jump in real quick.
    • 00:44:01
      The spotlights definitely concern me.
    • 00:44:04
      I mean, at the very minimum, it seems to me they ought to be hooded because they're just sort of glare bombs with power lamps without any kind of shroud on them.
    • SPEAKER_05
    • 00:44:17
      Yeah, we can certainly do that.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 00:44:19
      Yeah, I just think that's kind of an antiquated lighting system.
    • 00:44:25
      So I just think doing something
    • 00:44:27
      You know, reduce the amount of light spray and make sure they really are pointing down.
    • 00:44:32
      Makes sense.
    • 00:44:32
      I actually think, generally speaking, they're probably more effective up high, just for the simple reason that you can make them point down.
    • 00:44:40
      Right.
    • 00:44:40
      So in terms of because the house is a little bit below the street too, right.
    • SPEAKER_03
    • 00:44:45
      Correct.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 00:44:47
      You know, if you have them on that lower level, well, these on the front side, which I don't think you do.
    • SPEAKER_05
    • 00:44:52
      Yeah, they're up there.
    • 00:44:53
      The existing are up high at the roof level on the entry side.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 00:44:56
      They're not in your face, you know, but I just I think I just, you know, I'd rather see a strategy of downlights rather than something that's on the house projecting away from the house or is something actually lighting from outside toward the house.
    • 00:45:12
      I don't know how the rest of the board feels about it.
    • 00:45:14
      So that's one item.
    • 00:45:15
      And then the other thing I just wondered about, what's the pitch on that side, this side, if I'm looking at the front of the house, you know, the shed to the left, what's the pitch on that guy?
    • 00:45:25
      It's like two and one, or one and a half?
    • SPEAKER_05
    • 00:45:30
      I'm sorry, I don't know.
    • 00:45:31
      Are we talking about the porch?
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 00:45:33
      Actually, I'm looking at the shed to the left of the porch.
    • 00:45:37
      If you're looking head on, you know,
    • SPEAKER_05
    • 00:45:42
      I'm not sure.
    • 00:45:42
      It's existing, so I haven't measured it.
    • 00:45:45
      It's shown the way it exists, but I can't tell you exactly the slope.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 00:45:50
      It looks pretty flat.
    • 00:45:52
      So I'm just wondering if to make, particularly since you can be up above the house and the photographs you take don't, you know, make it appear like you don't see the roof, but what about putting a flatter pitch on the two wings so that you really do get some sense of the prominence of the center section rather than having the same slope?
    • SPEAKER_05
    • 00:46:11
      Yeah, Tim, that's actually a good idea.
    • 00:46:12
      We'd be amenable to that, and the roofing material can accommodate that as well.
    • 00:46:17
      We have a 4-12 slope on there right now, and that painted standing seam metal roof can accommodate down to a 2-12.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 00:46:25
      I didn't really read more than it's kind of a flat section, and then I think it has a little more identity, and the centrality of the original porch remains.
    • SPEAKER_05
    • 00:46:35
      Yeah, I like that idea, and we can certainly accommodate that.
    • 00:46:38
      That's a good suggestion.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 00:46:41
      And that's my two cents.
    • SPEAKER_05
    • 00:46:44
      Regarding the security lighting, I'd suggest the board consider making just a note in their approval that sort of final fixture be approved administratively.
    • 00:46:56
      And we can certainly accommodate that.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 00:46:58
      With those par lamps, you know, you see the side of the lens and they're able to.
    • 00:47:04
      I understand.
    • Jody Lahendro
    • 00:47:05
      Yeah.
    • 00:47:09
      Can I make a comment?
    • 00:47:11
      Robert, could you go to page 76 of the packet?
    • 00:47:19
      So I'm concerned about the two different columns, and I'm curious to know what the board members think.
    • 00:47:31
      I understand the intent to have some subtle differences between the two, so
    • 00:47:39
      that you can tell which one, a trained eye can tell which one's original, which one's the later.
    • 00:47:46
      But I worry that instead of a deliberate decision to make a subtle difference, it's going to look more like a clumsy mistake in trying to match something.
    • 00:48:01
      I'd prefer even a simple square column for the porch extensions and leaving the dork original columns for the original porch as a distinction between the what's new and what's historic.
    • 00:48:22
      But I just throw it out there.
    • 00:48:25
      This is the one thing that
    • 00:48:27
      the necking being different.
    • 00:48:31
      I just think that looks a little clumsy.
    • SPEAKER_05
    • 00:48:35
      Can I respond to that first, Robert?
    • 00:48:38
      Is that alright?
    • 00:48:40
      Jody, I think that's an interesting comment and we actually looked at a couple different schemes that considered square columns there with simpler profiles to them.
    • 00:48:56
      What we thought was that it looked too weak and that there was too much of a distinction.
    • 00:49:02
      between the two.
    • 00:49:04
      However, with the change in the roof slope now as also indicating more of a distinction, it's gonna have a lighter feel above that entablature.
    • 00:49:16
      I think that might actually also be a good idea and more distinction that's clearly differentiated, not as sort of a bad match.
    • Jody Lahendro
    • 00:49:30
      So what other board members think?
    • 00:49:35
      Am I making something up?
    • 00:49:39
      Is this a concern of anyone else's?
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 00:49:43
      No, I think that's a very good point.
    • 00:49:44
      I mean, I could even see if you're, I think, I think you're right about the roof, Erica, but making those two more of an alliance, but I could even see if you're worried about the
    • 00:49:55
      The sense of scale, even doing a corner condition where you've got three columns or something like that, if you wanted to make it more distinct and make them square, get the scale you're looking for.
    • 00:50:08
      But that would create enough of a distinction from how the corner is turned with the old house with the round columns versus three square columns.
    • Jody Lahendro
    • 00:50:17
      Good point.
    • SPEAKER_05
    • 00:50:18
      To that point of paired columns, Tim, we also had where we sketched and looked at where the new cornice or the new entablature is going to say hanging on the historic entablature where that T intersection is.
    • 00:50:36
      We had another column there.
    • 00:50:39
      So it looked like a paired column sort of at that center bay.
    • 00:50:42
      And then it was just becoming like too much.
    • 00:50:45
      So we took it out.
    • 00:50:47
      But with more slender members, I think we would revisit putting that column back there as well, which sort of then brackets that both of those side bays instead of just letting it kind of hang off, hang off the end.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 00:50:59
      Yeah.
    • 00:51:00
      And then I think if you reinforce that corner with it, you know, basically a triple, two doubles, whatever you want to call it.
    • 00:51:07
      That would really get the distinction between how one turns a corner and how the other turns a corner.
    • Jody Lahendro
    • 00:51:13
      Yeah, I like all those suggestions.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 00:51:17
      I still have a concern and really can't support the extension of the porch generally.
    • 00:51:24
      I don't think our guidelines support it.
    • 00:51:29
      I don't think that's the spirit of the Secretary of Interior standards.
    • 00:51:37
      In particular, the number seven of section D, do not remove or radically change entrances and porches important in defining the building's overall historic character.
    • 00:51:49
      And from the historic photos, this has been defining from its construction.
    • 00:51:56
      I don't mind the extension of the paved surfaces that are existing there.
    • 00:52:03
      currently are remaking those into something that's more safe.
    • 00:52:08
      But I'd also just note that in prior board review, at least as according to the staff notes, that in 2014 enlargement of the decks that might have been proposed at that time was also deemed not appropriate.
    • 00:52:24
      So I am supportive of the project otherwise.
    • 00:52:28
      I think the approach in the back makes sense.
    • 00:52:33
      I don't have really too much concern about that, but I do feel this is quite a big change to this historic structure.
    • Carl Schwarz
    • 00:52:48
      Not that, I guess since
    • 00:52:51
      I'm going to be gone soon.
    • 00:52:52
      It isn't going to matter so much, but I do feel like there's enough questions about this porch that we need to separate the COA between the big addition and the porch so that you get a chance to look at the columns, look at the roof slope, and then bring it back to the board.
    • 00:53:14
      But it might be important to see
    • 00:53:16
      Before you do that, how many people on the board would be supportive of that porch?
    • 00:53:23
      And noting that Tim and I are both going to be gone.
    • SPEAKER_09
    • 00:53:30
      Other comments from the board?
    • SPEAKER_13
    • 00:53:33
      I was going to say that it sounds like
    • 00:53:41
      The changes that we were talking about, we might need to see the revision to the porch regardless.
    • 00:53:49
      So it may be where we could approve the revision and let them keep moving ahead because obviously there's a lot of design work there.
    • 00:53:57
      If we were to revise the porch dramatically, I think we'd probably want to see it again.
    • SPEAKER_16
    • 00:54:09
      Hey James, can you repeat that?
    • SPEAKER_13
    • 00:54:12
      Yeah, sorry.
    • SPEAKER_16
    • 00:54:13
      She was louder than you were.
    • SPEAKER_13
    • 00:54:14
      Yeah, sorry.
    • 00:54:17
      She didn't like the porch, she was crying.
    • 00:54:18
      No.
    • 00:54:21
      Basically, if we go down the road of thinking about adding roofs to the side porches, and that's something we want to accept, but there's going to be changes in slope and changes to the columns, I think we'd like to see it again.
    • 00:54:38
      to come to the BAR again, but I would support possibly approving the rear addition and then asking them to bring the porch back.
    • 00:54:49
      That sets aside Brecht's point of whether it's acceptable to the Secretary of Interior standards.
    • 00:54:56
      Does that answer your question, Carl?
    • Carl Schwarz
    • 00:55:02
      Well, that's more your decision.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 00:55:06
      Well, no, it's our decision.
    • 00:55:07
      I guess that maybe is there anyone who's ready to approve the porch as documented tonight?
    • 00:55:13
      I don't think we'll be there.
    • 00:55:18
      Are there any, so let's set that aside and see if there's any other questions related to the rear addition or any other comments related to the rear addition or the site plan.
    • Carl Schwarz
    • 00:55:29
      I had a comment on the site plan.
    • 00:55:31
      The plantings along the street, this could just be me, but it's, I, when you put up, I always, if it's a solid line of hedges, I treat it like a wall or a fence and five or six feet is too tall to me.
    • 00:55:49
      So if it could be a species that could be lower, I find it problematic to just say that it'll be cut lower because it never happens.
    • 00:55:59
      And then we end up with, you know, once it's up tall, it's forever that way.
    • 00:56:06
      But I don't know if that's something that we can request on this or not.
    • SPEAKER_09
    • 00:56:25
      Or is it just me?
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 00:56:27
      Any thoughts?
    • 00:56:28
      Well, I mean, button push is a little bit tricky.
    • 00:56:32
      It's not a particularly robust shrub necessarily.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 00:56:35
      I did have one thing I just wanted to say relative to Brett's comment is I find the decks going off more incompatible with the house than the porch wings.
    • 00:56:46
      They seem like real anomalies to me.
    • 00:56:50
      So I just wanted to put that out there.
    • 00:56:53
      I mean, I think, you know, it does make sense that all the buildings continue to evolve to some degree.
    • 00:56:59
      So I'm not, I mean, I understand Brett's point, but I'm not, I think the porch can be done in such a way that I don't feel like it, you know, it'd be one thing if this was an absolute architectural gem, but I mean, it's a nice house and all that, but I mean, it's not, it's not, you know, I think it can take some modification over time without compromising its character, but.
    • 00:57:22
      The low decks just don't do it for me, ever.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 00:57:33
      Any other comments on the rear portion or the site plan?
    • 00:57:36
      Or are we ready to make a motion on those elements?
    • Jeff Werner
    • 00:57:46
      I just was looking this up.
    • 00:57:49
      Last time you guys looked at a hedge,
    • 00:57:52
      there was a 128 Madison Lane is a fraternity house and they were adding just continuing to hedge around it.
    • 00:58:03
      And you all had made the recommendation that the front hedge be maintained at four feet or lower than any side hedge on the property maintained at five feet or lower.
    • 00:58:14
      So it was a recommendation.
    • 00:58:17
      And if I recall the conversation was one of
    • 00:58:20
      including the enforcement, but I do believe that if you establish a height as a condition of approval, then that allows us to, I mean, we're not out policing it, but if there is ever an issue with it, then we have something to fall back on.
    • 00:58:39
      So I don't think it's outside of the possibilities of what you all can establish as a condition, but certainly you in the past have added it as a recommendation.
    • Carl Schwarz
    • 00:58:50
      Brick, you're a landscape architect.
    • 00:58:52
      I mean, I don't know.
    • 00:58:53
      I don't know what a button bush is.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 00:58:56
      A bush is a native shrub.
    • 00:58:58
      It is a good species, but it's found in the woods in the kind of damp areas.
    • 00:59:02
      It's not necessarily doesn't have a huge track record as a as a particularly robust hedge in our city.
    • 00:59:11
      So I would be I would recommend strongly to the group that they that they consider something off the city.
    • 00:59:21
      Does the city have a hedge species?
    • 00:59:23
      I don't even know.
    • 00:59:24
      But something a little bit, something more that is going to be a little bit more robust and deal with the foot traffic and the conditions right there on that busy corner.
    • 00:59:37
      I do like the recommendation of keeping it maintained at four feet or lower.
    • 00:59:42
      Yeah, that seems to make sense.
    • Carl Schwarz
    • 00:59:48
      And just for precedent, we did.
    • 00:59:49
      It's been a long time, but when Chris Long was doing his house on Park Street, I know we held him up for at least three meetings because of a hedge that he wanted in the front and finally got him down to a boxwood that was short, which he then proceeded to plant something behind it that was about 10 feet tall and is still there.
    • SPEAKER_05
    • 01:00:15
      We're not interested in trying to circumvent board requirements or desires on this.
    • 01:00:26
      We're trying to add landscaping that's an improvement to the neighborhood, and we're open to all kinds of suggestions.
    • 01:00:33
      You know, three feet, two feet, it's fine.
    • 01:00:36
      Different species, it's fine.
    • 01:00:38
      It's all good.
    • Jeff Werner
    • 01:00:39
      But Bush is on the list.
    • 01:00:40
      And I, in fact, when I talked to Eric a couple of weeks ago, we just said, you know, stick with the, the trees and shrub lists.
    • 01:00:47
      So yes, we do have a shrub list, but we don't call them shrubberies because we know Brecht doesn't like that word.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 01:00:56
      Excellent.
    • 01:00:57
      Well, um, I think there's gender, it sounds like there's general support.
    • 01:01:01
      I haven't heard any, um, strong concerns about the rear edition.
    • 01:01:08
      The kinds of conditions that I have heard relate to the ones that the staff has already recommended.
    • 01:01:16
      Shrouds on security lighting, the retaining wall of rugby to be fieldstone or fieldstone clad wall and the recommendation of the site of the hedge at the street to be maintained at four feet or lower.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 01:01:34
      And do we want motion detectors on security lighting so it's not on all night long?
    • 01:01:40
      I mean, that sort of goes back to the city having a lighting ordinance, but I just think light pollution is an issue.
    • 01:01:49
      Just a thought.
    • Jeff Werner
    • 01:01:53
      I will say that retaining wall at the front
    • 01:01:57
      I did include this from Eric and I talking on the third page of the staff report retaining wall with steps of front yard at 20 to 30 inch plus a mile height, field stone wall similar to existing alternative, the concrete or CMU concrete wall with stone facing pending final wall height.
    • 01:02:17
      So it's in the staff report as an option, it's there.
    • 01:02:21
      So in any reference to as presented in emotion, we kind of cover that.
    • SPEAKER_17
    • 01:02:30
      Mr. Chair, I'm ready with the motion and I'm happy to accept any friendly amendments on some of these conditions.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 01:02:37
      Please.
    • 01:02:38
      Thank you.
    • SPEAKER_05
    • 01:02:42
      May I ask a question?
    • 01:02:44
      Just please, before you do that, would it be better for the applicant to remove consideration of the porch from this application to be presented in a new application at a later date so it doesn't have to be declined in this motion?
    • Jeff Werner
    • 01:03:02
      You could do it either way.
    • 01:03:03
      You could omit it from the motion, you know, admit it from the consideration for approval.
    • 01:03:08
      It's not a denial.
    • SPEAKER_05
    • 01:03:09
      Okay, so whatever is the easiest way to do that.
    • 01:03:11
      We'd like to do that to pull the port superstructure off this application, however you want to handle it.
    • 01:03:17
      Sorry for interrupting.
    • 01:03:18
      Thank you.
    • SPEAKER_17
    • 01:03:19
      No, my motion wasn't going to have any kind of denial and it was just going to be straight up approval of the back edition and the demo and everything so
    • 01:03:27
      Let me find this again.
    • 01:03:28
      Having considered the standards set forth within the city code, including the ADC design, district design guidelines that moved to find that the demolition and addition to and rehabilitation of the existing house, specifically the rear addition and related site work and landscaping at 517 Rugby Road satisfies the BAR's criteria and is compatible with this property.
    • 01:03:53
      and other properties in the Rugby Road University Circle Venable Neighborhood ADC and that the BAR approves the application with the following conditions or modifications.
    • 01:04:06
      Anybody want to join in?
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 01:04:10
      The applicant will submit a substitute fixture for the yard security lights.
    • SPEAKER_16
    • 01:04:20
      I'll accept that.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 01:04:21
      That will include
    • 01:04:22
      Shrouds and motion detectors.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 01:04:25
      Shrouds and motion detectors.
    • 01:04:28
      And also keying to Eric is maybe blindingly obvious, but 3000 Kelvin and a better CRI.
    • 01:04:37
      We're trying to be consistent about that.
    • SPEAKER_05
    • 01:04:39
      Those are in the guideline requirements already.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 01:04:41
      Yeah.
    • Carl Schwarz
    • 01:04:45
      And Jeff put those as suggested amendments to the motion.
    • 01:04:48
      So all lamping for exterior lights will be dimmable, have a color temperature not exceeding 3000 K, and a CRI of not less than 80, preferably not less than 90.
    • 01:04:57
      Jeff has also recommended that we say that the cementitious siding trim and materials will be smooth with no faux wood grain.
    • Jeff Werner
    • 01:05:07
      And that the porch bark is omitted, correct?
    • SPEAKER_17
    • 01:05:14
      And I'll say that
    • 01:05:15
      within this motion and that this does not address any approval of the porch.
    • 01:05:22
      How about the front shrubs?
    • 01:05:24
      Does somebody want to address just however that was going to be worded?
    • Carl Schwarz
    • 01:05:30
      That we recommend seeking a smaller species that is more suitable for a sidewalk adjacent shrub.
    • 01:05:43
      and that they be maintained, that they are required to be maintained at a height of four feet or less.
    • Jeff Werner
    • 01:05:53
      Not to exceed a height of four feet.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 01:05:58
      And I'd like to say, even though it's in the staff piece, because it wasn't in the submitted materials, that the retaining wall would be to be fieldstone or a fieldstone clad wall.
    • SPEAKER_17
    • 01:06:12
      OK.
    • 01:06:13
      I'm done with my motion, yeah.
    • Carl Schwarz
    • 01:06:15
      Wait, wait, wait, wait.
    • 01:06:17
      Sorry, I'm going to.
    • 01:06:19
      I'm going to screw things up a little bit because we had that shutter discussion and I just want to make sure we're OK.
    • 01:06:24
      They're putting the old shutters back on.
    • 01:06:27
      OK, just making sure that's what's there.
    • SPEAKER_10
    • 01:06:31
      Second, second, second.
    • SPEAKER_02
    • 01:06:34
      Mr Bailey.
    • 01:06:35
      Yes, Miss Lewis I.
    • 01:06:43
      Mr. Schwartz.
    • 01:06:44
      Yes.
    • 01:06:46
      Mr. Leandro.
    • 01:06:47
      Aye.
    • 01:06:48
      Mr. Gastinger.
    • 01:06:49
      Aye.
    • 01:06:51
      Mr. Moore.
    • 01:06:52
      Aye.
    • 01:06:53
      Mr. Edwards.
    • SPEAKER_14
    • 01:06:55
      Aye.
    • SPEAKER_02
    • 01:06:56
      And Mr. Zehmer.
    • 01:06:57
      Aye.
    • 01:06:58
      The motion passes unanimously.
    • Jeff Werner
    • 01:07:00
      All right, Eric, you're set.
    • 01:07:04
      We'll catch up on the porch.
    • 01:07:05
      And I thank all of you for a collectively written motion.
    • 01:07:10
      It actually went very well.
    • 01:07:14
      Miles apart from one another.
    • SPEAKER_05
    • 01:07:16
      And thank you all for the constructive comments.
    • 01:07:19
      They're very well received and appreciate the feedback.
    • 01:07:21
      Thank you.
    • 01:07:22
      Have a good evening, all.
    • SPEAKER_13
    • 01:07:23
      Thank you, Eric.
    • 01:07:26
      Eric, as you're designing the porch, you might consider replicating the original balustrade on the center section.
    • 01:07:33
      That might help set it apart from the wings just as you're hashing things out.
    • SPEAKER_05
    • 01:07:40
      Good point.
    • 01:07:40
      Thanks, James.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 01:07:46
      All right, everyone.
    • 01:07:46
      We're about an hour in.
    • 01:07:48
      Do you want everybody good to keep going to 612 West Main?
    • 01:07:53
      All right.
    • Jeff Werner
    • 01:07:57
      Main event.
    • 01:08:02
      All right, while Robert's queuing us up there, again, thank you all on that prior one that was well said on the motion.
    • 01:08:11
      This is a C.O.A.
    • 01:08:12
      request for the formal address of 602 616 West Main and we refer to it as 612 West Main.
    • 01:08:22
      This is a property within the West Main Street ADC district.
    • 01:08:27
      There is an existing 1950s automotive service building there, which is non-contributing.
    • 01:08:33
      And as I've mentioned in previous discussions, this structure is not contributing.
    • 01:08:38
      It will be raised and that does not require a BAR review.
    • 01:08:44
      So that's not part of this discussion.
    • 01:08:47
      Just quickly about go back through back in 2019,
    • 01:08:52
      The BAR made a recommendation on a special use permit request and for this project those were incorporated into the approved special use permit specifically addressing the massing scale of the building and protective measures related to the Rufus Holsinger building which is located to the west
    • 01:09:17
      of this, and third, addressing pedestrian engagement and permeable facade at the street level.
    • 01:09:32
      The request is for a new four-story mixed-use building.
    • 01:09:37
      It will be accessed for the parking, will be via the project immediately to the east of it, so there will not be a new entrance to parking.
    • 01:09:47
      We'll go into the one driveway and continue underneath this new building.
    • 01:09:54
      There's you all have had a series of discussions about this.
    • 01:10:00
      Most recently and last month, the applicant provided an update on where they are on things.
    • 01:10:08
      No action has been taken.
    • 01:10:09
      It's been deferred.
    • 01:10:11
      However, this is a we're at the point where the BAR
    • 01:10:18
      would have to take action on this.
    • 01:10:21
      The applicant can request deferral, but the BAR is in a position of up or down on this project.
    • 01:10:31
      There's a lot going on with the drawings and I got those out to you yesterday.
    • 01:10:39
      So just also wanna make clear that in the staff report referring to a set of drawings stated November 30th,
    • 01:10:47
      The drawings that we'll be referring to tonight and using for the evaluation, it's a 62 page set and they are dated December 17, 2021.
    • 01:10:58
      So those are the drawings of record for when you're making a reference to what has been submitted.
    • 01:11:07
      I circulated to Ms.
    • 01:11:08
      Lewis and Mr. Gastinger just to
    • 01:11:13
      an amended motion that at least memorializes the correct set of drawings that you all are referring to.
    • 01:11:20
      I know there've been a lot of questions about this and I expect a lively discussion tonight.
    • 01:11:29
      So I don't wanna belabor it.
    • 01:11:31
      I don't know, is Whitney or I don't think Jeff's in town.
    • 01:11:34
      So Whitney may have it, but I'll hand it off to you, Mr. Kastner.
    • Jody Lahendro
    • 01:11:39
      And Brett, can I start with a statement?
    • 01:11:44
      Sure.
    • 01:11:46
      So in the interest of full disclosure, I have my office now in the Holsinger Building next door, First Baptist Church's building.
    • 01:11:59
      And while I have
    • 01:12:01
      A wonderful view of the construction that's going to start to happen next door.
    • 01:12:06
      I have no financial interest or connection at all to the project at 612 West Main Street and feel like that I can participate in this discussion without any partiality.
    • 01:12:21
      Thank you.
    • 01:12:21
      Thank you.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 01:12:22
      Thanks for putting that out there.
    • 01:12:23
      And so yes, we'll hand it over to Jeff or Whitney to make their presentation.
    • SPEAKER_09
    • 01:12:32
      Oh, there's Jeff.
    • Jeff Werner
    • 01:12:34
      There he is.
    • 01:12:35
      All right.
    • SPEAKER_20
    • 01:12:37
      Good evening, everybody.
    • 01:12:38
      I was muting myself out of caution for everything else.
    • 01:12:43
      Thanks for meeting with us yet again.
    • 01:12:46
      As Jeff said, we are looking for design approval of the project tonight.
    • 01:12:52
      We hope to begin construction in April.
    • 01:12:57
      of 2022.
    • 01:12:58
      I think we also have Anne Prey, our landscape architect, joining us.
    • 01:13:05
      Whitney is here, Whitney Hudson, who is the project architect, in case we have some technical questions as we get further into it, and I believe Kirk Webb also from our office is with us.
    • 01:13:17
      They know much more the details, but I'll try to give the overview.
    • 01:13:21
      But I will also respect the fact that you all have seen many of these slides previously.
    • 01:13:27
      We don't need to delve into them.
    • 01:13:30
      and what I will try to focus on this evening, though I'm open to anything and everything anyone else may wish to make sure we highlight.
    • 01:13:41
      Landscape and hardscape, that has evolved a bit, a little bit since last meeting.
    • 01:13:47
      We have a lighting concept that we would like to review with you all, exterior lighting that is.
    • 01:13:53
      I'd like to touch upon the brick for the exterior.
    • 01:13:58
      And at the last meeting, there was a request for a number of technical details, which are now in the package that you all have, specifically relating to thin brick and how it will be attached to the building, and also detail questions such as railings, which are now also in the packet that you all have.
    • 01:14:19
      But we can touch upon those.
    • 01:14:23
      I don't think we need to review these historic map overlay precedent issues as we've talked them through before in the massing and scale of the building.
    • 01:14:35
      What you see here is a plan of the ground floor of both 600 West Main Street and 612 West Main, the new project.
    • 01:14:45
      This is here in the event that we start talking a bit about the facade on the east side of the building.
    • 01:14:51
      It will be exposed in the courtyard of 600 West Main, but it also gives you an idea that the two buildings will be connected via that existing courtyard.
    • 01:15:03
      We have yet to work out the details of how the paving might change within the courtyard, but that will happen so that we have access into the new building.
    • 01:15:12
      If we move along,
    • 01:15:15
      You start to see some of the exterior details.
    • 01:15:19
      We do have to close the space you can see here on the far left.
    • 01:15:24
      The new building and then on the right side of that 600 West Main Street in the light gray.
    • 01:15:31
      there will be, there are some mechanical units actually right there, but that will remain between the two buildings.
    • 01:15:38
      And so there will be a small fence that will hide those from view from both sides.
    • 01:15:46
      One of the things I'll point out here is that you'll see that the window surrounds the windows
    • 01:15:54
      railings and this fence, for instance, all shown as being a light bronze.
    • 01:16:02
      Now, unfortunately,
    • 01:16:04
      This is coming across as way too gold throughout the presentation.
    • 01:16:09
      So try to imagine it more as a bronze, more brown than yellow.
    • 01:16:15
      And we're happy to come back with physical samples of all of those items for a final review.
    • 01:16:25
      But for representation purposes, this is how it's showing right now.
    • 01:16:29
      So if we keep going,
    • 01:16:35
      Building elevations, I don't believe there's anything new in general.
    • 01:16:41
      We still have the majority of the facade that comes toward West Main Street broken into the two masses that come forward with what we call hyphens between them in the middle and to the right.
    • 01:16:54
      And then stepping back further, the fourth floor, and even further than that, the entrance to the residential component of the project.
    • 01:17:03
      As we get further into the details I can talk now a little bit about the BRIC.
    • 01:17:08
      At the last BAR meeting,
    • 01:17:11
      We had some images of our first pass at the brick and concern was expressed that what we were showing was too institutional, a little bit too much like school, cafeteria, almost a glazed brick, a ground face brick is really what it appeared as.
    • 01:17:29
      And also the color was not able, was
    • 01:17:34
      a bit more like concrete.
    • 01:17:37
      So since that time, we've identified another brick that we like very much.
    • 01:17:42
      It's a much cleaner brick.
    • 01:17:44
      There are some images, we'll get further back into that.
    • 01:17:47
      Unfortunately, because of the supply chain, we are probably three weeks out yet, three to four weeks out before we'll have a sample panel done for final review and approval.
    • 01:18:01
      We are working as hard as we can to get that completed.
    • 01:18:05
      And that sample panel will have a number of conditions in them representing what we're talking about tonight.
    • 01:18:14
      We will be showing, well, let me back up a bit.
    • 01:18:17
      On these drawings, you'll see that we identify five different types of brick.
    • 01:18:22
      One is, brick number one is called monarch brick.
    • 01:18:25
      It's actually twice the length of a standard brick.
    • 01:18:29
      It's as thin as a standard brick, it's just twice as long.
    • 01:18:34
      And for our purposes, let me see if I can, I'm not sure that I can annotate on these drawings.
    • 01:18:42
      Don't know if that's an opportunity.
    • SPEAKER_02
    • 01:18:45
      Okay.
    • 01:18:45
      Do you need me to zoom in somewhere, Jeff?
    • SPEAKER_20
    • 01:18:48
      Yeah, well, I guess, Robert, the two elements that come forward, those two will be what is called the monarch brick.
    • 01:19:00
      Very long, very thin.
    • 01:19:02
      The joints will be standard concave joints.
    • 01:19:06
      What we're looking to do here, a very quiet, relatively smooth surface.
    • 01:19:14
      Another one of those bricks is a thin version of the Monarch brick.
    • 01:19:17
      That's actually brick number five.
    • 01:19:19
      So it's just the same brick visually.
    • 01:19:23
      Technically, it's a different thickness.
    • 01:19:27
      That brick number five, the thin Monarch brick, will be used above and around the windows in that portion of the building that comes forward, those two portions.
    • 01:19:40
      Hyphens will be a standard modular brick, same size as we all know brick to be, but it will have a raked joint, so we're looking to emphasize the horizontals.
    • 01:19:55
      We'll also have angled bricks within that, and that you'll be able to see when we get further into the presentation.
    • 01:20:04
      The
    • 01:20:06
      pattern that we're anticipating.
    • 01:20:08
      And that is so that those panels recede.
    • 01:20:11
      It'll also be used on the residential entry as you look further back.
    • 01:20:21
      The other thing I'll state that there at the residential entry is going to be a plaster wall.
    • 01:20:26
      So it will be the one material that's smoother than anything else on the facade leading you in.
    • 01:20:33
      The textured brick, I'll call it, will be used on the hyphens, the residential component in the back, and also on the left-hand side, the east elevation of that residential block as it faces 600 West Main's Courtyard.
    • 01:20:51
      The rest of the building will be standard modular brick with concave joints, whether thin or thick.
    • 01:20:58
      Those are the various brick types.
    • 01:21:01
      I think the elevations, or I'm sorry, the 3D representations may be the easier place to look at all of that when we get further into them.
    • 01:21:10
      But knowing that brick is such a crucial component of this, we are, the samples, the mock-ups that we're having made will be done to represent all of the various conditions, including the surrounds, the brick surrounds that we're showing around each of the windows so that we'll understand it.
    • 01:21:29
      in its entirety.
    • 01:21:31
      Again, I apologize that we don't have them, but the turnaround time for getting BRIC these days, getting mock-ups, it's going to be tight prior to the next meeting.
    • 01:21:43
      Not sure we'll even have it for that.
    • 01:21:46
      If we'll keep going,
    • 01:21:49
      This is the elevation facing the courtyard of 600, all textured brick, modular brick for this facade.
    • 01:21:59
      We can keep going.
    • 01:22:02
      The other thing I will say while I'm thinking about it is for glass, we are specifying that the glass on the entire North facade will be 70% VLT per the guidelines.
    • 01:22:16
      And that'll be both in the retail and in the residential components.
    • 01:22:20
      All of their facades are going to be lesser for energy efficiency.
    • 01:22:24
      This is what we did at 600 West Main Street.
    • 01:22:26
      Since the elevations are never seen side by side, nobody's ever noticed a difference.
    • 01:22:32
      This is the south facade facing the railroad tracks that you can see.
    • 01:22:36
      As we've discussed before, brick wraps the ends, the type of bookends, and then we have IFAS exterior insulation finish system, essentially looks like stucco on the rear facade.
    • 01:22:51
      It will be a color that will come close to matching the brick.
    • 01:22:55
      We're not looking for contrast here.
    • 01:22:57
      Again, the railings will be the light bronze.
    • 01:23:04
      This is the elevation that Jody might be looking at from his new offices facing the alley between us and the Holzinger building to the west.
    • 01:23:19
      You can see for just a moment, you can see how the hyphen on the far left
    • 01:23:25
      the textured brick on that will die into the standard modular brick for the remainder of the building.
    • 01:23:32
      There is a setback between those two elevations.
    • 01:23:36
      So it's not as though we're just changing the surface texture right there.
    • 01:23:41
      Thanks, Robert, if we keep going.
    • 01:23:45
      Close up of on the far right, the retail lower level and the upper level of the residential
    • 01:23:54
      These are the first three floors and you can see here the monarch.
    • 01:24:00
      Let's see, I just want to make sure I'm speaking correctly.
    • 01:24:02
      Yes.
    • 01:24:04
      Monarch Brick, the surround on the retail on the inset will be metal, again the same light bronze and you'll see that more in the three-dimensional representations.
    • 01:24:18
      The railings, it was a question that was raised, the railings will be a horizontal bar on top
    • 01:24:25
      We're not going to be seeing attachments on the sides, be very simple.
    • 01:24:29
      The railings themselves are half inch round rods, and they will be irregularly spaced for a little bit of variety here.
    • 01:24:38
      The elevation is so highly regulated, this was an opportunity, we thought, for just a little bit of playfulness.
    • 01:24:46
      If we keep going,
    • 01:24:50
      I'm happy to have one of our teams speak to the technical details here, but I did mean what we wanted to show here.
    • 01:24:58
      And there are a number of details in here about how the thin brick will be attached to the building as much as the standard brick.
    • 01:25:07
      The brick that we will be proposing comes with corner sections so that
    • 01:25:16
      When thin brick turns the corner, there are sections that are fabricated so that the brick looks like a standard brick thickness from the side.
    • 01:25:29
      It won't appear to be wallpaper.
    • 01:25:33
      This is simply a section through the north facade showing retail, residential, and then the step back for the upper terrace on the fourth floor.
    • 01:25:49
      This is a detail through the residential entrance with a sloped ceiling with thin brick on the ceiling of that, sloping down to the glass entry of the residential lobby.
    • 01:26:05
      I'm happy to talk through details here.
    • 01:26:11
      One thing that has changed, I will say this, from this section, even since we submitted this, we just learned that we need to place, we will have a green roof on a portion of this building.
    • 01:26:26
      And we were anticipating that it was on the south elevation, as you can see there on the far right.
    • 01:26:33
      The terraces just above the ground floor level would have a green roof off of the terrace themselves.
    • 01:26:40
      Unfortunately, we were just informed that we need to move it to the rooftop, the rooftop, for purposes that are more technical than even I can get into.
    • 01:26:53
      So there will still be a green roof here.
    • 01:26:56
      We hope in the future to have a rooftop terrace.
    • 01:26:59
      There is not a plan at the moment to provide access to the public, but the green roof will be up there and is being planned so that we don't preclude rooftop terrace in the future.
    • 01:27:17
      Some of the details, probably more than anything else, showing thin brick where we intend to use it and also calling out some of the details of the brick surrounds the protrusions around some of the windows.
    • SPEAKER_02
    • 01:27:33
      Jeff, I'll keep scrolling through the details unless you want me to stop on anything.
    • SPEAKER_20
    • 01:27:36
      No, that's fine.
    • 01:27:37
      This is probably a good one right here.
    • 01:27:39
      Thanks, Robert.
    • 01:27:40
      So list of details don't need to bore you with the left, but on this page, you do start to see what we are proposing.
    • 01:27:50
      This is a photograph of the brick that we are anticipating using.
    • 01:27:57
      and you can see on the second image from below that is the pattern that we're going to be proposing for the hyphens and for the residential block that sits back from the street.
    • 01:28:10
      The one good point of reference for the brick that we are talking about is that it is not as light as the brick that was used on the quark.
    • 01:28:20
      So this is is a little bit darker.
    • 01:28:24
      And we'd have a sample of that and we can show that to you all.
    • 01:28:28
      Once the samples are up, and you can look at that for comparison but we're not looking to go as white.
    • 01:28:34
      We're looking for more of a cream.
    • 01:28:38
      yeah, a cream color that has a bit of gray in it.
    • 01:28:43
      And then as you can see down below the plaster for the wall to the residential entry and then a not so great photograph of a light bronze.
    • 01:28:58
      Glass information, we've already touched upon this performance data.
    • 01:29:03
      Then as we get further into
    • 01:29:06
      the package where this is talking about signage for both the residential component, but also the retail components.
    • 01:29:17
      And our proposal is that for the residential, the signage would be slightly offset of the wall, 6-12, very simple, very clean.
    • 01:29:28
      And then above the four, I'm sorry, the five retail,
    • 01:29:35
      entries would be the signage for the individual retailers themselves.
    • 01:29:41
      We'll talk about lighting that signage.
    • 01:29:43
      That would be someone's own logo, and it would be applied to the metal panels.
    • 01:29:50
      They will not be backlit.
    • 01:29:52
      In the lighting concept, we'll talk about how the signage for the retail would be lit.
    • 01:29:59
      And we are well under the city's maximum allowed signage.
    • 01:30:07
      Mechanical units, a plan of the mechanical units will not be seen from the street from any angle.
    • 01:30:13
      They're set well into the middle of the building.
    • 01:30:17
      You can see here where the rooftop terrace may be going in the future.
    • 01:30:24
      But at this point, there does not appear to be any need for screening of these units.
    • 01:30:29
      They're very low and won't be seen from anywhere along the street.
    • 01:30:40
      Again, these are more about mechanical units.
    • 01:30:44
      We're highlighting those in orange and red so they can be seen and you can see from all the various vantage points not visible.
    • 01:30:54
      Anne, I don't know if Anne, are you on the line?
    • SPEAKER_02
    • 01:30:58
      I do see Anne.
    • 01:31:01
      Anne, I'm going to allow you to talk and you should unmute yourself.
    • SPEAKER_20
    • 01:31:05
      Yeah.
    • 01:31:07
      Let Anne give an overview of the landscape hardscape plan.
    • SPEAKER_01
    • 01:31:12
      Hi, guys.
    • 01:31:13
      Thanks, Jeff.
    • 01:31:16
      So, yeah, I just want to run through a few of the changes we've made here in plan that are just kind of some subtle shifts.
    • 01:31:23
      I think the plan for the most part should look pretty familiar to everyone at this point.
    • 01:31:28
      We have gone ahead, though, in the residential entry area and
    • 01:31:33
      really kind of straightened out the garden plan there to allow for the curve of the residential entry to really read as something more special and unique to the whole surrounding.
    • 01:31:44
      And so that that that garden plan kind of has gone from those more sort of sinuous forms to the more straight lines coming into the building.
    • 01:31:53
      I think you'll also see here on the plan that we are
    • 01:31:56
      Now calling out the street trees specifically.
    • 01:31:59
      I think there were some questions about that last time.
    • 01:32:01
      And so you can see that we are calling out those trees.
    • 01:32:05
      We also have gone ahead and added in two handrails at the end of the plan.
    • 01:32:11
      To the far left, you can see those.
    • 01:32:15
      And in general, I think actually in general, in general, we have more specific call outs for materials here where you can see we are calling out the plain gray concrete surface along the front of the building and the concrete pavers in the residential entry area.
    • 01:32:34
      Some of this I can get a little bit more into when we look at the precedent page at the end, which starts to show some of those material samples.
    • 01:32:42
      But just knowing we have a lot to go through tonight I think for the most part the plan should read as pretty familiar and so I just kind of thought we could, you know, go through it that way.
    • 01:32:50
      Yeah, so in our last discussion last month there were some questions just about the existing conditions.
    • 01:32:56
      One question was about, you know, what type of trees are there now and
    • 01:33:01
      the trees there, they are zelkovas.
    • 01:33:04
      You can see in the plan the one with the green center is going to stay and that is just beyond our property boundary there and closer to the retail store.
    • 01:33:17
      And then we have essentially these five zelkovas along the frontage that will all go.
    • 01:33:25
      If you want to go to the next slide.
    • 01:33:27
      Yep.
    • 01:33:27
      And so here you can see in the elevation, just a couple of the changes, I think, you know, again, sort of subtle in the elevation, but obviously the four trees as required, the shifts in the garden plan at the front, allowing for the curve to read a little bit more clearly at the residential entry, the handrails at the end.
    • 01:33:47
      I would say the metal planter on the far right
    • 01:33:51
      Did grow slightly, so we have a little bit more planting area in that planter.
    • 01:33:58
      And then, you know, obviously just starting to get a little bit more at some call outs for the materials.
    • 01:34:05
      Yep, and so here really just again trying to identify and get more clear about the intent with all of the subtle elements that are making up this landscape.
    • 01:34:18
      The bike rack, the handrail, obviously one of our planters has a bench on it and so obviously we're looking at a wood product to use for that.
    • 01:34:29
      Concord pavers here.
    • 01:34:33
      We are going with a pressed natural in a Tudor finish which actually reads really nicely with the brick.
    • 01:34:40
      My dogs really like it too.
    • 01:34:42
      The planter color will match the windows and the rails.
    • 01:34:54
      And then just a little bit more specifically about the street canopy tree being the
    • 01:35:01
      and then a little bit about
    • 01:35:08
      a little bit about the planting in the courtyard, which we are really looking to make that planting just be very much about greens and textures and not a lot of color there.
    • 01:35:18
      We're really looking to use the planters to get a little bit more vibrant color kind of going along the street itself, but trying to at the residential entry, really just project that kind of calm presence with the plantings.
    • 01:35:32
      And again, just playing off the greens and the textures there.
    • SPEAKER_20
    • 01:35:42
      I'll jump in on lighting.
    • 01:35:45
      So there are probably far too many slides here because we've tried to break it down just in case we needed to discuss any one particular element.
    • 01:35:54
      But the lighting concept here is to allow those two elements, the two blocks closest to West Main Street to move forward by,
    • 01:36:09
      Not emphasizing them, allowing their lighting, the interior lighting of those blocks to move closer to the street.
    • 01:36:16
      They'll be part of the BARs.
    • 01:36:20
      Guidelines are to bring as much life as we can to the street and our concern about heavily lighting those two blocks that move forward would be we might be obliterating the actual activity and lighting coming from the residential units.
    • 01:36:34
      So you'll see that we have a multi-layered lighting scheme to try to
    • 01:36:40
      allow the vitality activity of what's going on within to actually liven up that part that's closest to West Main Street.
    • 01:36:49
      So we can get into probably this first slide is the best.
    • 01:36:55
      It is the overview.
    • 01:36:56
      The following slides you'll see really just sort of address each of the individual components.
    • 01:37:02
      Now,
    • 01:37:03
      I need to say that we are not in any way suggesting that this light will be yellow.
    • 01:37:10
      These were just part of the lighting concept presentation to us about how and where we would be putting light.
    • 01:37:19
      So we've got further in the package, I believe we've got 3000K as the light sources, and this is just to represent where it will be.
    • 01:37:33
      I'll also say that each of these individual components will be able to be individually dimmed so that while right now I would suggest that those two columns far, far right on the hyphen and even there beside the residential entry to me or even reading a little too hot, we will be able to dim those down individually.
    • 01:37:58
      But the overall scheme here is to
    • 01:38:03
      Light the residential entry, the sign for the residential entry back from the street.
    • 01:38:07
      You can see a sort of lozenge-shaped piece of a bit of light there on the address, 612.
    • 01:38:15
      Other than that, there will be a little bit of downlight in that vestibule, but the rest of the light will be coming from within the building at that location.
    • 01:38:24
      You then see that the hyphens and the residential entry block itself would have light coming from the ground.
    • 01:38:33
      Part of the reason for that too is to graze the textured.
    • 01:38:37
      All three of those two hyphens and the residential component are going to have the textured brick, the heavily textured brick.
    • 01:38:44
      So the point there is to really emphasize that as we graze it with light from below.
    • 01:38:52
      The fourth floor terraces will not have lights on the building.
    • 01:38:57
      You can see a little bit of glow up on the fourth floor.
    • 01:39:01
      That's actually going to be light reflected off of the paving on those terraces.
    • 01:39:07
      There will be some lighting
    • 01:39:09
      In the railing, the cornice, that solid cornice that we see on the backside of it, we'll be putting a little bit of light on the ground surface.
    • 01:39:18
      So what you're actually seeing is reflected light from the ground surface.
    • 01:39:21
      There won't be any lights on the building itself there.
    • 01:39:25
      And then finally, the lighting that you see, well, two more bits of light, sorry, not finally, but on the building, the remaining element would be lighting of the retail signs in each of the bays, so that that's
    • 01:39:41
      That's the only light within those, the larger elements that come forward so that we're really highlighting retailers, retailers signage at night as it's seen from West Main Street, no competition with lighting there.
    • 01:39:56
      And then the final element is there will be some lighting in the sides and within the planters themselves to throw just a little bit of ambient lighting on the sidewalk.
    • 01:40:07
      So I think we can probably
    • 01:40:12
      go through a number of these and when we get to some of the details then we'll
    • 01:40:18
      Here we go.
    • 01:40:20
      So some of the types of lights that we're looking at, the linear light, you can see the red dashed, I'm sorry, purple dashed line up at the cornice.
    • 01:40:31
      That is on the residence side of the cornice, lighting down so that it's throwing light on the walking surface.
    • 01:40:38
      That's that linear light on the top right.
    • 01:40:41
      The next light is the light that we would be using for the
    • 01:40:48
      Let's see here.
    • 01:40:49
      We've got that round adjustable light would be within, in fact, the retail headers.
    • 01:40:57
      So lighting the signage and also over at the residential component, throwing light down on the walking surface.
    • 01:41:03
      They're tiny.
    • 01:41:05
      They're very small.
    • 01:41:06
      Then the sides you see there would be within that fixture to the right or facing right would be in the sides of the planters.
    • 01:41:16
      and then the light you see there at the bottom would be in ground throwing light up onto the hyphen in this instance, the two hyphens and over at the residential component.
    • 01:41:35
      Just examples of
    • 01:41:38
      The light patterning probably on the top right would be for the retailers, how the light would be seen on the retail facades, and then bottom right, way too bright, way too light, but how we would be grazing, an example of how we would be grazing the textured brick in the hyphens.
    • 01:42:02
      We have here a little bit more lighting.
    • 01:42:05
      Again, you can see in the residential component, those down lights we'd be using.
    • 01:42:11
      The light for the 612 sign itself would be probably a ground-mounted light nearby, just putting light right on that part of the wall.
    • 01:42:23
      That's a lozenge-shaped light, so it's not splayed everywhere.
    • 01:42:27
      And then you can see some ground lights putting a little bit of light.
    • 01:42:30
      I believe those are in the edge of the planting bed, throwing a little bit of light on the path toward the residential entry.
    • 01:42:37
      And then again, you see the light there, lighting the textured wall from below.
    • 01:42:47
      More examples of that.
    • SPEAKER_02
    • 01:42:48
      Oh, yeah, sorry.
    • SPEAKER_20
    • 01:42:50
      No, that's fine.
    • 01:42:51
      That's fine.
    • 01:42:52
      We can keep going.
    • 01:42:55
      The other thing we wanted to note here was that part of the reason that we've designed the building the way we have is to not cover up the mural that's on the side of 600 West Main done by, I don't know if all of the members of the BAR were present, I don't think actually when this was approved, done by a world known
    • 01:43:18
      muralist.
    • 01:43:19
      And so we want to keep that.
    • 01:43:23
      We also want it to be an element of experience walking down West Main Street, not just for the residents here.
    • 01:43:31
      And so the lighting of that will be very soft and intended to give it a glow so that it does have a presence at night but not overpowering.
    • 01:43:44
      I think that probably the views speak well for themselves.
    • 01:43:49
      We tried very hard to model textured brick in the locations that it will be.
    • 01:43:55
      It's hard for that to come across in some of these renderings, but I believe that the massing of the building reads clearly what our intentions are in terms of where we will have color, how we'll have color, and overall massing and street presence.
    • 01:44:18
      So with that, I'll open it up to any questions or anything that we can.
    • 01:44:25
      I guess what I would like to say, however, before turning it over is
    • 01:44:32
      It's been a long road for all of us.
    • 01:44:34
      And I, while we do not have a final BRIC selection and probably more than anything else this evening, you saw the first lighting, the first presentation of a lighting concept.
    • 01:44:46
      We would like to ask for approval conditioned on final approval of BRIC
    • 01:44:52
      color and pattern.
    • 01:44:54
      And if there are issues or concerns we need to come back with regarding lighting, we're happy to do that.
    • 01:45:02
      But with two members of the BAR going off after this meeting, we feel that the continuity would be, we'd hate to lose the continuity.
    • 01:45:14
      And with
    • 01:45:16
      with an attempt to get under construction in early spring, we really don't have time to lose.
    • 01:45:21
      So that's the point of our request for approval this evening.
    • 01:45:25
      So thank you all.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 01:45:28
      Excellent.
    • 01:45:28
      Thank you.
    • 01:45:29
      Thank you, Jeff.
    • 01:45:29
      And thanks to the whole team.
    • 01:45:32
      Do we have any questions from the public?
    • SPEAKER_02
    • 01:45:39
      Mr. Chair, I'm looking at the list and I don't see any raised hands.
    • SPEAKER_09
    • 01:45:42
      Okay.
    • 01:45:44
      Questions from the board?
    • SPEAKER_10
    • 01:45:51
      I will, oh, go ahead, Cheri, go.
    • SPEAKER_17
    • 01:45:53
      I think mine's pretty easy.
    • 01:45:56
      Just a question for Jeff and maybe Robert.
    • 01:45:58
      Is there some way, Jeff, you could share your screen to show us a sample of the bronze color that you have?
    • 01:46:06
      Do you have sort of an electronic version of that?
    • 01:46:11
      I mean, I see.
    • SPEAKER_02
    • 01:46:13
      Yeah, Jeff.
    • 01:46:14
      Yeah.
    • 01:46:15
      Jeff, if you'd like, you can attempt to share your screen.
    • SPEAKER_20
    • 01:46:18
      Well, I'm not sure that I have the best example of that.
    • 01:46:23
      Whitney Hudson is with us.
    • 01:46:25
      I don't know if Whitney can pull something up or I do believe that the sheet that Anne Prey's materials were on probably the best example as we were looking at it.
    • 01:46:39
      And Whitney is saying she doesn't have a good photograph to share.
    • 01:46:43
      But I think Anne's
    • 01:46:47
      There was a, let's see, something's taking a few minutes.
    • SPEAKER_17
    • 01:46:53
      Yeah, I saw that.
    • 01:46:54
      And I saw.
    • SPEAKER_01
    • 01:46:55
      Actually, I got that picture from Whitney too.
    • 01:46:58
      So it's directly from the architects.
    • 01:47:00
      I just might be reading better on my packet.
    • 01:47:03
      But just so you know, it is actually the sample they gave me, the picture they gave me to use.
    • 01:47:07
      So it is.
    • SPEAKER_20
    • 01:47:09
      And Whitney says that is the best example we have.
    • 01:47:12
      Let me see, Robert, I can give you the page number.
    • 01:47:14
      Give me just.
    • 01:47:14
      OK, thanks.
    • 01:47:18
      And it is an interesting question I'd like to ask.
    • 01:47:21
      How does the BAR deal with color and sample approvals these days when being present?
    • 01:47:29
      Here we go, Robert, on page 33.
    • 01:47:31
      There we go.
    • 01:47:37
      That's probably the best example we have, Cheri.
    • SPEAKER_17
    • 01:47:41
      Yeah, I saw that.
    • 01:47:45
      and we can- There's a variation and you have one on page 22 also of your- Yeah, that's probably no better.
    • 01:47:53
      It shows this gradation and I'm just wondering where along that spectrum, and I understand that bronze is a organic material that changes- Yeah, but I guess the question is where on that spectrum from lighter to darker might
    • SPEAKER_20
    • 01:48:15
      might it be, and I'm going to, let's see, Whitney is saying it's on the lighter side of it, not the darker.
    • 01:48:25
      So as we look at that.
    • SPEAKER_17
    • 01:48:27
      So it would be more of a golden.
    • SPEAKER_20
    • 01:48:30
      Yes, yes.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 01:48:32
      Just a quick question.
    • 01:48:33
      I mean, is there like a website, like for instance, I just pulled out the Lucubon Light Bronze Anodize, which is kind of a, for instance, is there a website?
    • 01:48:41
      image that you could tell us all to point to and just look on our own screens that way?
    • SPEAKER_20
    • 01:48:45
      Yeah, give us a sec.
    • 01:48:46
      And I think Whitney's probably checking that out right now and will send us.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 01:48:52
      You could send it to Robert, maybe.
    • 01:48:56
      This does lead to my question for you, Jeff.
    • 01:49:01
      Color, you mentioned color.
    • 01:49:03
      I'm not seeing a lot of color.
    • 01:49:05
      I mean, I'm seeing
    • 01:49:07
      I mean it's a lighter tones than the building next door but you know right now the only color I relief I'm seeing right now truly is the bronze whatever color that is in the planting am I correct about that?
    • SPEAKER_20
    • 01:49:24
      That is correct.
    • 01:49:25
      Okay, that is correct.
    • 01:49:26
      And we have had this discussion.
    • 01:49:29
      We've all had this discussion before.
    • 01:49:31
      And our hope is that we will also get it with planter boxes on the railings.
    • 01:49:35
      But as I've said, that is not entirely within the owner's control because of maintenance issues.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 01:49:42
      Right.
    • 01:49:46
      Yeah, that's the comment section.
    • 01:49:48
      So okay.
    • 01:49:49
      I mean, I won't get into comments.
    • 01:49:51
      I'm getting disciplined in my old age.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 01:49:55
      I've got another material question while we're speaking about that.
    • 01:50:01
      I know, Jeff, you said that the brick panels will be forthcoming.
    • 01:50:06
      In the meantime, though, is the strategy with the way the textured pattern
    • 01:50:18
      is to be created with one edge of the brick tilting out.
    • 01:50:22
      Is that still operative?
    • SPEAKER_20
    • 01:50:24
      Yes.
    • 01:50:25
      Yes, that is still the plan.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 01:50:28
      And do you know how, I'm just curious how much relief you're thinking about getting or hoping to get with that and how is that treated?
    • 01:50:36
      Is that being then filled with mortar on the backside?
    • SPEAKER_20
    • 01:50:40
      Yes, I mean, in terms of when it's late, it'll be filled with mortar in the back so that the rear of the backside of the wall is a continuous surface.
    • 01:50:49
      We don't want water sitting back there.
    • 01:50:53
      In terms of the depth of, call it the furthest brick or the furthest out corner of the brick, Whitney, my recollection, well, in the sample panel was
    • 01:51:07
      I'm going to say it's an inch and a half.
    • 01:51:10
      I don't know the two inches.
    • 01:51:12
      I'm not sure if we can, again, it'll be represented on the panels.
    • 01:51:17
      We've done some panels, Breck, and they're sitting at Allied, but until we get the right brick, we really did not want to send anybody there because it would be a bit of a futile effort.
    • 01:51:28
      So it'll be represented in those.
    • 01:51:31
      I suspect it's going to be about an inch and a half.
    • 01:51:34
      Two inches might be a little bit of a stretch.
    • 01:51:36
      I'm not quite certain about that.
    • Jody Lahendro
    • 01:51:39
      So can I follow up?
    • 01:51:42
      Does that mean then the headjoint is going to be wider there or is the brick going to be cut so that the headjoint is consistently the same width?
    • SPEAKER_20
    • 01:51:55
      The headjoint will be consistently the same width, Jody.
    • 01:51:58
      Okay, thank you.
    • SPEAKER_06
    • 01:52:06
      Other questions from the board?
    • Jody Lahendro
    • 01:52:11
      Forgive me if this has come up before and my old memory is not helping me.
    • 01:52:19
      The number of street trees, how are four decided upon?
    • SPEAKER_01
    • 01:52:26
      Four is based on the city requirement for canopy coverage and street frontage.
    • 01:52:36
      I believe there were more trees there now because they were fronting a parking lot.
    • 01:52:42
      I don't know if that's what you're thinking about.
    • Jody Lahendro
    • 01:52:45
      But could, I mean, is that the minimum could more be added?
    • SPEAKER_01
    • 01:52:53
      So we meet the requirement for the number of trees and we exceed the canopy coverage by almost four times the amount or a little over three times the amount based on just that site plan calculation.
    • 01:53:11
      I believe if we were to look at adding another tree, it would likely happen on the far right-hand side of the building as we look at that elevation that I included in the packet.
    • 01:53:23
      The team has always talked about the trees as far as also looking forward to the West Main Street project, and they show four trees in that area.
    • 01:53:34
      So we also kind of worked back and forth with that number as well.
    • Jody Lahendro
    • 01:53:41
      Well, it looked to me like they were paired, that there was a large gap between the pairs on both sides.
    • 01:53:51
      I thought maybe that had something to do with the architecture of the two prominent bays.
    • 01:53:59
      Is that not the case?
    • SPEAKER_01
    • 01:54:01
      The layout is in part, you know, to work with the architecture for sure.
    • Jody Lahendro
    • 01:54:08
      So a tree could not be added in that gap between the two pairs?
    • SPEAKER_01
    • 01:54:13
      I do not believe so.
    • 01:54:14
      I think if there was really a discussion to be had there, you could discuss shifting that second group of trees on the right hand side one bay over and adding a third maybe to the right.
    • 01:54:32
      But again, I think we're
    • 01:54:36
      trying to kind of just create the continuity down and really address obviously that space in the middle and leave it open as really a nice sort of gap between the two buildings, between the building with the two pieces.
    • SPEAKER_20
    • 01:54:52
      Okay, page 30 of the presentation.
    • SPEAKER_01
    • 01:54:59
      It's definitely easier to look at the visual.
    • 01:55:01
      So if you, in looking at the right hand side here, if those two trees were to shift one section over, you could potentially get a third tree in on that right hand.
    • 01:55:15
      And the issue becomes, of course, as well, that
    • 01:55:18
      That door on the end is an e-grass door and I think we're really looking to make sure that that stays pretty clear.
    • 01:55:26
      I mean, obviously we realize the trees are outboard of that, but just the idea that it's really not going to be
    • 01:55:34
      you know, broken up by anything.
    • 01:55:36
      And so, yeah, this, this layout worked well with the building you know, and met all the requirements.
    • Jody Lahendro
    • 01:55:44
      I was just imagining five trees evenly spaced along that
    • 01:55:54
      those two prominent sections just evenly spaced there and thinking about the pedestrian experience of going down the street and having continuous canopy coverage.
    • 01:56:10
      Right.
    • SPEAKER_01
    • 01:56:12
      And I think, to your point, especially as a discussion, how the trees relate to the building
    • 01:56:22
      the spacing on them does allow for really a tree to almost go right in the middle there and create that equal spacing that you're talking about in that sort of gap tooth space there.
    • 01:56:37
      So I do think it could create another level of experience for the pedestrian and I think
    • 01:56:45
      We would be open to discussing that.
    • 01:56:48
      That's something that people are thinking about more now, too, as we look at the whole evolution of the building.
    • Jody Lahendro
    • 01:56:56
      I appreciate the architectural connection.
    • 01:57:01
      I just
    • 01:57:04
      think that it probably would not be picked up by the average pedestrian and they'd be more appreciative of having the continuous canopy coverage.
    • 01:57:16
      Just my opinion.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 01:57:21
      That does bring up a quick question that sort of made me think of also talking about pedestrian experience.
    • 01:57:28
      And I realize this has a lot to do with the West Main evolution or lack thereof, but
    • 01:57:34
      One thing your lighting plan doesn't really address is actually how the sidewalk gets lit, right?
    • SPEAKER_20
    • 01:57:42
      Well, there will be street lights.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 01:57:45
      And do you have any idea what the distribution of those is likely to be or not really?
    • SPEAKER_20
    • 01:57:52
      Ann, do we, are those, I forget if they've, I think, in fact, they're probably located on a civil plan that we have
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 01:58:03
      I was just wondering how they relate to your tree locations and that sort of thing.
    • SPEAKER_01
    • 01:58:11
      So I think the team is actively working on that layout because I know that Whitney actually had a call with the civil engineer last week and I believe they actually discussed some of that because
    • 01:58:25
      At one point, we weren't really sure what the jurisdiction was going to be on, who got to sort of decide how that was going to work.
    • 01:58:34
      So I don't know if Whitney can chime in right now and maybe tell us where she is with that.
    • 01:58:39
      But I do know that we're sort of actively trying to figure out who gets to sort of make that call or how that's going to work.
    • SPEAKER_20
    • 01:58:48
      I'm checking with her to see if we have a civil plan.
    • 01:58:52
      Okay, she's saying that we we can propose the location of the lights.
    • SPEAKER_01
    • 01:58:56
      So yeah, so obviously, we would look to make that work out with the trees as well, for sure.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 01:59:06
      I have a related question to the trees.
    • 01:59:08
      And I think it's it's as much of it's probably even more important maybe to the pedestrian experiences that how
    • 01:59:17
      I'm not sure what the division of labor is between what you guys do and what this city will be in charge of, but how are those tree pits going to be constructed?
    • 01:59:26
      What's the current thinking?
    • 01:59:28
      And will they receive more than this looks like about four foot by four foot tree pit that they're shown in plan?
    • SPEAKER_01
    • 01:59:41
      So Breck, that's a great question.
    • 01:59:43
      I don't really have enough detail right now to provide a good answer, but I can tell you just based on my own path, I would really push to get the best possible tree detail going here.
    • 02:00:05
      which I realize is not necessarily the best answer right now but we are looking to you know really make sure these trees are going to thrive and be planted in a way that they like won't be doing what the zelkovas are doing right now which look like they basically were planted with you know thongs around their trunks I mean it's terrible we're totally choked out in these little curved sections and it's just it's almost painful walking by them looking at them
    • 02:00:33
      So, you know, we want this to become really an environment and not just a sort of facade.
    • 02:00:41
      We want it to be active and alive as much as we can make it.
    • 02:00:44
      And so I think, you know, there is a condition here with the space of the sidewalk, of course, and the curb.
    • 02:00:52
      But the real benefit can come in both the depth of the pit and what happens actually underneath the sidewalk and the edges as well.
    • 02:01:01
      So I will really be pushing to make that detail a good one.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 02:01:07
      I'll come back to some more of that when we get to comments.
    • 02:01:12
      Any other questions?
    • Carl Schwarz
    • 02:01:17
      Similar or on the same theme.
    • 02:01:21
      Does your site plan work?
    • 02:01:22
      Do you guys know where the power poles are going?
    • SPEAKER_20
    • 02:01:29
      At present, the power poles are
    • 02:01:32
      not scheduled to be relocated.
    • 02:01:36
      We will temporarily relocate the power across the street as we did at 600 West Main.
    • 02:01:43
      But right now Dominion has control over all of that.
    • 02:01:47
      And there isn't any plan to redo those.
    • 02:01:51
      They're not in our purview.
    • Carl Schwarz
    • 02:01:54
      So I guess, do you guys have a drawing that shows where they currently exist?
    • SPEAKER_20
    • 02:02:02
      Our existing civil plan and perhaps, Whitney, we can pull from the civil plan that drawing the current, well, the site plan that is
    • 02:02:17
      at the city for review.
    • 02:02:18
      Maybe you can email that to me.
    • 02:02:20
      I can pull that up.
    • SPEAKER_01
    • 02:02:23
      If you go down to the page that I showed the Zilko was on, can you see them on that plan?
    • 02:02:28
      I realize it's kind of crowded.
    • Carl Schwarz
    • 02:02:30
      I see the line that says OHP, but I don't see polls.
    • SPEAKER_01
    • 02:02:34
      Yeah.
    • Carl Schwarz
    • 02:02:36
      Unless I'm missing something.
    • SPEAKER_01
    • 02:02:38
      I mean, this was directly from the civil plan, so.
    • 02:02:48
      I think they're right in front of that.
    • 02:02:50
      I think there's one right in front of that third tree down right there.
    • 02:02:55
      See, OHP, they connect right there.
    • 02:02:56
      And there's a little, and then the other line goes back out.
    • 02:02:59
      I think there's one right there.
    • SPEAKER_19
    • 02:03:01
      Yeah.
    • 02:03:03
      Okay.
    • SPEAKER_01
    • 02:03:03
      You've got, you can kind of see them in the picture too, if you go down to the picture.
    • 02:03:08
      So there's one there.
    • 02:03:09
      Oh, go back up.
    • 02:03:11
      So there's one right there.
    • 02:03:12
      And then there's another one just down from it.
    • 02:03:14
      The black street light.
    • 02:03:17
      And then there's another poll just past that.
    • 02:03:23
      That's a poll in the middle.
    • 02:03:25
      I mean, that's a black street light in the middle and two polls on either end with the OHPs going to either side.
    • Carl Schwarz
    • 02:03:29
      I guess I'm just, your trees will, they currently work around those.
    • 02:03:36
      Is that safe to assume?
    • SPEAKER_01
    • 02:03:41
      Yes.
    • Carl Schwarz
    • 02:03:42
      OK.
    • 02:03:43
      Sorry.
    • 02:03:44
      Kind of round about there.
    • SPEAKER_01
    • 02:03:45
      No, that's OK.
    • 02:03:46
      I mean, we've been talking about, obviously, things being buried as well.
    • 02:03:49
      And there's a little bit of back and forth on that part, too.
    • 02:03:52
      And I do apologize.
    • 02:03:54
      I actually was not able to make the civil call last week with the team.
    • 02:03:57
      So I know some of these things were discussed.
    • 02:03:58
      And that's why I rely on Whitney to chime in here if there's anything we're not getting at that we're spending too much time on.
    • Carl Schwarz
    • 02:04:07
      and continuing this theme.
    • 02:04:10
      So when the power lines were supplemented for the adjacent property and moved around, a lot of the trees on this property got a bit of a haircut.
    • 02:04:23
      One of the healthiest zelkova on all of West Main Street is directly across the street in front of the Albemarle Hotel.
    • 02:04:32
      Does that face a similar fate?
    • 02:04:35
      Is that going to be pruned back severely to allow power lines to be played around with?
    • SPEAKER_20
    • 02:04:42
      I don't think any of us can answer that one, Carl, at all.
    • 02:04:47
      I'm sorry.
    • 02:04:50
      Can't speak for what whatever the power company is going to do.
    • 02:04:54
      OK.
    • SPEAKER_01
    • 02:04:55
      Yeah, I mean, I would love to say that on some level,
    • 02:05:00
      I could put something in my plan to dictate all of these things, but it falls into so many different purviews of Dominion or West Main Street scape or City of Charlottesville's street trees or, you know, different things.
    • 02:05:13
      I mean, it's just hard to be able to, you know, because I really want trees along Main Street as well, and I want them to live and
    • 02:05:22
      be beautiful and go on for decades.
    • 02:05:25
      So I appreciate what you're getting at, Carl, because I do like the trees there as well.
    • Carl Schwarz
    • 02:05:32
      I'm sorry.
    • 02:05:33
      I know it's a I've asked you guys about the power poles before, but I mean, the tree kind of.
    • 02:05:39
      Yeah, it's become obvious recently, probably in the line of fire.
    • 02:05:46
      OK, thank you.
    • SPEAKER_06
    • 02:05:51
      Any other questions for Jeff or the rest of the team?
    • 02:05:55
      Okay, any comments from the public?
    • SPEAKER_02
    • 02:06:06
      I don't see any raised hands.
    • 02:06:07
      Okay, any comments from the board?
    • SPEAKER_13
    • 02:06:15
      Just had one quick one.
    • 02:06:18
      You showed us the lighting plan of the facade, the street facade.
    • 02:06:23
      I believe I saw this correctly, that the light that you're putting on the railing to shine down on the terrace will not continue across the gap.
    • SPEAKER_20
    • 02:06:34
      That is correct.
    • 02:06:36
      Yes, sorry.
    • 02:06:36
      Thanks, James.
    • 02:06:37
      That is correct.
    • 02:06:38
      It would only be on that portion of the upper balcony that is solid.
    • SPEAKER_13
    • 02:06:45
      OK, I like that, and I'd just like to emphasize the importance of that detail to keep that gap.
    • 02:06:52
      So thank you.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 02:06:54
      I also have a comment.
    • 02:06:56
      I'm just thinking, you know, you're talking about enlivening the facade with the residential use, but it would also seem that there ought to be some sort of lighting strategy for backlighting all of the commercial glass along the street level so that
    • 02:07:14
      during at nighttime, it maintains its life on the street, which obviously will also help with the street lighting to some degree.
    • 02:07:21
      But it seems to me that that's pretty critical, at least sort of during the active hours of the street.
    • SPEAKER_20
    • 02:07:29
      Just so that I'm clear on what you're suggesting, Tim, that is that there be some sort of requirement for lighting that the retailers light their store from within at night, even when they're closed.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 02:07:41
      at least directly behind the glass, whether there's a display or something that dissolves the glass and gives it some sparkle.
    • 02:07:50
      And then that was one thing.
    • 02:07:53
      And then another thing, and I don't know if anybody else feels like this, but it seems to me like the scale of the entrance, I mean, I think the curving wall and all that is very intriguing, but it feels to me like it ought to at least, even if the actual punch is
    • 02:08:11
      you know, basically that one story plate, but that it ought to read more like maybe a two story move because it feels too much like when I first saw it, you know, my first reaction was too much of a scale of a garage opening.
    • 02:08:28
      And then it didn't really kind of emphasize that kind of entry condition.
    • 02:08:31
      And I don't think it's a matter of programming.
    • 02:08:33
      I think it's really more a matter of how you handle the sort of the verticality of that.
    • 02:08:38
      It just feels
    • 02:08:39
      because it almost implies like a Corbusian kind of volume underneath, but that would be a building where, you know, read more horizontally for that to work.
    • 02:08:49
      I don't know.
    • 02:08:49
      It just seems to me like that those, the upper two, the lower two floors ought to read as of a piece with that and, you know, how you handle that, I'm not sure, but because I know you have a program issue there and I, but I just think the scale of it reads a little funny to me.
    • 02:09:07
      as it currently exists, particularly that, just because I don't think it's bold enough.
    • 02:09:14
      I am, again, concerned about color.
    • 02:09:17
      I mean, I think signage and things like that in the windows will certainly help.
    • 02:09:22
      And then the only other thing I was just going to say is I thought that, to my mind, the best image in terms of describing the building, I'm just saying this is on page 63,
    • 02:09:35
      where you really get a read of the sense of the frame and how the window outlines work.
    • 02:09:43
      It's sort of very like Torani-like really.
    • 02:09:46
      Anyway, to my mind that describes the sort of the sense of the facade's best of all the images.
    • 02:09:55
      But I'm just concerned about, I think the front entrance needs to be bolder and a vertical sense of the word.
    • SPEAKER_09
    • 02:10:01
      That's my two cents.
    • Carl Schwarz
    • 02:10:10
      I'm gonna go ahead and jump in.
    • 02:10:13
      I think, you know, with the big building on West Main Street, there's always reservations.
    • 02:10:18
      There's always going to be things that I think we want to see that are improved and better.
    • 02:10:23
      And we could continue this, you know, iteration over and over and over again.
    • 02:10:29
      But I do think, I mean, Jeff, this facade has a lot of depth to it.
    • 02:10:33
      I think that's actually, it's great.
    • 02:10:36
      I don't think I've seen a project yet come before the BAR.
    • 02:10:39
      that has this much depth and detail in it.
    • 02:10:43
      I mean, the amount of brickwork and it's, I think you've, as far as I'm concerned, I think you've done a very good job with the building.
    • 02:10:55
      I know I picked on you a lot for color on the neighboring building, but that was kind of graphite on graphite.
    • 02:11:02
      I think with this lighter color scheme,
    • 02:11:06
      You know, it's that doesn't bother me as much.
    • 02:11:08
      I think it's it does seem more in keeping with with Main Street.
    • 02:11:17
      So really, my only concerns are, you know, it's the trees and I don't know where to fall on that because it's I think we're just going to be stuck with what we're stuck with.
    • 02:11:24
      And unfortunately, city council didn't want to give us a, you know, revised West Main Street with, you know, they have lots of good reasons for that.
    • 02:11:33
      And we can only spend so much money on
    • 02:11:36
      on things in the city.
    • 02:11:39
      So schools won out.
    • 02:11:45
      So maybe it's just something we have to live with.
    • 02:11:48
      So I think it would be great to, I don't know how we're going to handle your brick samples and color samples.
    • 02:11:59
      We'll have to figure that out because we really can't partially approve something.
    • 02:12:06
      I think I would be ready to vote on approval for this building, maybe with some additional conditions.
    • 02:12:14
      I'm going to ask for a condition for the trees that they, I can bring that up later.
    • 02:12:21
      Yeah, that would be the main one.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 02:12:25
      Can I speak to that issue too, Carl?
    • 02:12:28
      Both my comments are related.
    • 02:12:31
      I'm sorry.
    • 02:12:33
      I think getting these trees to be successful is really critical to the city and to the success of this building.
    • 02:12:41
      For me, this is a species that should do well and should be, if they're healthy and happy, will get considerably larger than they're shown in the renderings, which is a good thing.
    • 02:12:56
      So Jody, for this building on the north side of the street,
    • 02:13:01
      I would rather have four really good healthy trees than five kind of miserable ones.
    • 02:13:08
      Not that that's the option that we have before us.
    • 02:13:11
      I say that to really encourage every method possible to give as much soil volume or even connected soil volume to those trees along Main Street so that they do thrive.
    • 02:13:23
      I think if they did, that they will come very close to creating that continuous canopy even at the spacing that they're shown.
    • Jody Lahendro
    • 02:13:31
      I defer to you, Breck.
    • 02:13:34
      I'm just reacting to what the renderings show and so I defer to you.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 02:13:41
      Related to the the the brick that I think is going to be it's well it's the main it's the main material of this entire building it's going to be what makes it and
    • 02:13:54
      Well, you know, I'm with Carl, I'm supportive of this project.
    • 02:13:59
      I think it's come, you know, in a great distance and is going to be a really great contribution to the city.
    • 02:14:08
      But getting that brick is, as we all know, is so important.
    • 02:14:12
      And I do feel uncomfortable having such an important piece be so kind of unproven.
    • 02:14:22
      So I guess the
    • 02:14:23
      The question that I put maybe first to the board and to Jeff Warner and then to Jeff Dreyfus is what could that review really mean?
    • 02:14:40
      I mean, we've been put in situations before where we've reviewed samples after approval,
    • 02:14:50
      The brick order's already been placed or there's no time in the construction sequence.
    • 02:14:56
      What real capacity would we have together with the architecture team when reviewing those samples and what's appropriate within the way our ordinance is written and the way we can review items after a certificate of appropriateness has been given?
    • SPEAKER_20
    • 02:15:15
      Well, I'll only speak for myself in that no brick order has been placed and no brick order will be placed until we get a vote from the BAR that this brick is acceptable.
    • 02:15:30
      We're not going to play that game and we don't intend to.
    • 02:15:35
      Approval of the design contingent upon final approval of the brick to me seems
    • 02:15:43
      reasonable.
    • 02:15:43
      I don't know if that's possible within the guidelines or the rules, but we are working hard to get samples done and it would be our intention to set up a variety of times when the members of the board can come and we would meet at the allied brickyard and look at them together, leave you to
    • 02:16:13
      your own thoughts if you want, but we are ready and willing as soon as they're there to meet with you all one-on-one or however best works as soon as we can to discuss them and review them.
    • 02:16:30
      That's the way, that's how I would appreciate being able to proceed if that's even possible.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 02:16:42
      I'll also just like to add that we're kind of in extraordinary times right now in regards to delivery of anything.
    • 02:16:49
      And I think we have to, I mean, to my mind, we have to grant some degree of flexibility here for that very reason.
    • 02:16:59
      I mean, just building materials right now are so ridiculously difficult to comprehend.
    • 02:17:05
      I mean, some Marvin windows, I mean, Marvin's a major window manufacturer.
    • 02:17:09
      Some of their windows are running six months behind on some jobs, I know.
    • 02:17:12
      which is ridiculous.
    • 02:17:13
      I mean, that's what it used to be for, you know, a super custom, you know, Zelacher or Tischler window or something like that that was, you know, 10 times more expensive.
    • 02:17:23
      And right now it just can't even collapse.
    • 02:17:25
      So I just think we need to bake in some flexibility on that level.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 02:17:36
      Related to the mock-up, one thing that occurs to me, Jeff Dreyfus is that,
    • 02:17:43
      If there's a way to also mimic or study the uplighting, I really like the lighting strategy of emphasizing the hyphens and that texture.
    • 02:18:00
      And I think it could be really, it could be absolutely incredible or jarring, depending on, you know, the angle, just thinking of sharp angles, uplift, you know, it could be a little bit much, but I think that you'll find that pretty quickly when the mock-up is made.
    • 02:18:17
      And I would, I hope that what you're imagining happens happens.
    • SPEAKER_20
    • 02:18:23
      I think that's a very good point, Breck.
    • 02:18:25
      We can use the mock-up to then test a number of options there, regardless of all of the programs that we and our lighting consultant can use.
    • 02:18:33
      It would be much better to test it before it goes in the ground and get that angle right.
    • SPEAKER_09
    • 02:18:43
      Other comments from the board?
    • SPEAKER_13
    • 02:18:49
      Sorry.
    • 02:18:50
      Just real quick, on the break,
    • 02:18:52
      Did you mention the mortar color?
    • SPEAKER_20
    • 02:18:55
      The mortar, James, is going to be as close a match to the brick itself as we can get.
    • 02:19:01
      For the portion that comes forward, we really want that to be very quiet, and so we're not looking for contrasting mortar, and we'll be raking that same color mortar in the hyphens.
    • SPEAKER_13
    • 02:19:17
      That was my takeaway from the material sample palette slide guide.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 02:19:22
      The other thing I was just going to say, as far as the lighting is concerned, is given that you're dealing with a very specific color and a very specific objective in terms of how you're going to shadow it, it seems to me that we might want to grant you some flexibility there in terms of exactly what the color range is for that light.
    • 02:19:44
      And the same goes for the plaster.
    • 02:19:46
      I mean, I don't know whether that's going to have any kind of multivalent
    • SPEAKER_20
    • 02:19:50
      That wasn't the intention at this point, a relatively flat, very, very simple surface there in contrast to the brick, because this is sitting within the textured brick wall.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 02:20:13
      Right.
    • 02:20:13
      Right.
    • 02:20:14
      OK.
    • 02:20:17
      I could see since you only have three locations you're lighting like that, you maybe have some sort of DMX controller or something in there so you really can fine tune the color as well.
    • SPEAKER_09
    • 02:20:27
      That would be my hope.
    • 02:20:28
      Yep.
    • Jody Lahendro
    • 02:20:34
      Tim, what are we going to do, the board's going to do without our lighting guru?
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 02:20:42
      I noticed that last night.
    • Jeff Werner
    • 02:20:50
      I was like, you know, either Tim just doesn't want, you know, trick or treaters to come or he's not around.
    • 02:20:57
      So I know the question was raised.
    • 02:21:02
      to circle through the BAR and then ask me what I thought.
    • 02:21:07
      So if you don't mind, I can just throw in my two cents.
    • 02:21:10
      And I will say, given the situation with the sample panel at Nextdoor, and it was unfortunately a steep learning curve for me on that one.
    • 02:21:27
      And I think it's what led to some of the questions that direction we've gotten from
    • 02:21:32
      City Attorney's Office on how to handle these things.
    • 02:21:35
      So, you know, I understand this is an iterative process and I understand that the collaboration is necessary, but when it comes to how should you all make a decision
    • 02:21:53
      and I'm hoping the attorney on the committee can chime in whenever necessary.
    • 02:22:00
      But the answer I would get from the city attorney would be, if it's not something that you can approve, then don't approve it.
    • 02:22:10
      If there's something you want to see in order to approve it, then request that.
    • 02:22:16
      So as far as direction from the city, I can't,
    • 02:22:22
      Yes or no, zero or one, black or white answer.
    • 02:22:29
      and I think this is one of the challenges we have with, we have a set of design guidelines and now we're really talking details and there's that push and pull of is a conceptual drawing, is a rendering of more value than a detailed drawing.
    • 02:22:47
      James, you asked about the mortar joints.
    • 02:22:48
      We have projects where we don't even ask about anything about the brick or the mortar.
    • 02:22:54
      So there's, I think,
    • 02:22:57
      The challenge for you all is this building conceptually
    • 02:23:04
      what you all are looking for.
    • 02:23:07
      Second, I would say you have a list of things that come from your recommendations to counsel for special use permit.
    • 02:23:14
      Those are what you identified as really critical.
    • 02:23:19
      They were broad, well, but they can be applied in detail that I think use that list that's in the staff report.
    • 02:23:27
      As far as,
    • 02:23:31
      Looking at a sample panel, I would be clear on what it is that you're hoping to see or not see or what is too far, what is not far enough.
    • 02:23:47
      And so that the sample panel is expressing what you all are interested in looking in first.
    • 02:23:56
      Second, when that sample panel is ready,
    • 02:24:01
      what actions are you all looking to make?
    • 02:24:04
      Are you looking to possibly say, gee, that's not what we thought start over?
    • 02:24:09
      Or are you looking to make collaborative adjustments to that what's presented?
    • 02:24:20
      So that's where my advice.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 02:24:23
      Can I try this out on you?
    • 02:24:27
      In this case, we're not trying to evaluate options
    • 02:24:32
      I think Jeff and his team have been over backwards to try to show what this building will look like.
    • 02:24:37
      I don't think anybody's really confused about that.
    • 02:24:40
      We just have everything except for the actual material.
    • 02:24:44
      So in my mind, we could vote on the material that has been presented with the stipulation that a review of a panel confirms that it reflects what was presented tonight.
    • 02:25:02
      I think that's what Jeff and his team are asking us to do.
    • 02:25:08
      And maybe that framing limits the concern about having some kind of contingent.
    • 02:25:17
      So it is an approval, but if the board felt upon visiting the sample panel that it didn't reflect what was presented tonight, then we'd ask that it be submitted as a change to
    • 02:25:29
      as a modification to the approval.
    • SPEAKER_15
    • 02:25:39
      Would that be a formal vote subsequent in the next month then on the, once we look at the material or how would that work?
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 02:25:49
      Only if there was just, if there was a change.
    • 02:25:56
      If we felt it was not what we were presented.
    • Carl Schwarz
    • 02:26:02
      I mean, in the past, we've said, you know, Jeff will review something to see if it conforms to what we've what's been described to us.
    • 02:26:11
      So in a sense, we're kind of doing that again.
    • 02:26:13
      It's just Jeff is going to have all of us, all of you guys take a look at it.
    • SPEAKER_20
    • 02:26:23
      And to that point, there is a material that is shown and called out in the documents that you have.
    • 02:26:32
      And so if you're approving it based on that and contingent upon, and if we need to come back with something else and it's not what you expected, then we would have to come back and request a change.
    • Carl Schwarz
    • 02:26:46
      Is it fair to say that it's also just the texture that everyone is concerned with, or is it the material itself you want to be confirmed?
    • Jeff Werner
    • 02:27:00
      I'm asking all that, that if there's, and I appreciate what Brett just said.
    • 02:27:04
      So, you know, you approve things all the time with conditions and what happens is if that condition isn't met and when I review the construction drawings, I will not sign off on the building permit.
    • 02:27:18
      So we have that check.
    • 02:27:21
      The point is that it's a,
    • 02:27:27
      that you all are very, very clear in what Brecht said.
    • 02:27:34
      The panel reflects what is presented tonight.
    • 02:27:37
      What is it specifically that when we look at it, I look at it, that
    • 02:27:45
      what am I comparing it against specifically?
    • 02:27:48
      That's where we got, and I know I'm trying to belabor this but it is helpful to have the discussion.
    • 02:27:54
      And I don't wanna go through what went through with the panels next door and I don't wanna run a foul of the process.
    • 02:28:07
      So may I suggest just,
    • 02:28:13
      Five minute break.
    • 02:28:15
      Clear our heads.
    • 02:28:17
      Give us some thought.
    • 02:28:18
      I know my, my heads elsewhere for a moment.
    • 02:28:25
      and come back and frame this in a way that says, you know, that improving this, if that's where the BAR is heading, under the condition that the following is presented and will be reviewed for consistency with however you wish to characterize it.
    • 02:28:43
      And that if, you know, then, you know,
    • 02:28:52
      because it can't be a vote.
    • 02:28:54
      It has to be something we can make a decision on.
    • 02:28:56
      And then the process by which if something in that wall is different or changes, then it would have to come back as a... I don't think it has to be that tricky.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 02:29:16
      I think we're looking for color and texture is consistent with what's been presented tonight.
    • 02:29:21
      And the other one for me is that the texture of the textured panel is sufficient to create the distinction between the hyphens and the masses in the way that the project has been presented.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 02:29:34
      Yeah, we're just trying to confirm that what is in front of us now matches what the physical versions are.
    • Jeff Werner
    • 02:29:45
      I understand, and I'm not trying to make your lives complicated or more difficult.
    • 02:29:49
      I just want to make sure that when you go out there and we look at it, and if there is any, um, question on that, then the, the default to Jeff and his team is that they must do the following so that there's no, I mean, you know, at the same time, in fairness to them, it has to be, I don't know if egregious is the right word, but like,
    • SPEAKER_13
    • 02:30:15
      Beyond reason, right?
    • 02:30:17
      Like if it is reasonably in accordance with what they're submitted tonight, they're good to go.
    • 02:30:23
      Like it has to be very different.
    • 02:30:27
      You know, we can't, we can't nitpick a simple panel that is the materials they're proposing tonight and the color and the texture they're proposing tonight.
    • 02:30:38
      You know, it'd have to be a glazed brick in a Flemish bond and, you know, red.
    • 02:30:42
      And then we say, wait a minute, this isn't what we saw.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 02:30:46
      And I would not be expecting Jeff to be advocating a really sloppy contribution either, just for the record, right?
    • 02:30:54
      So I think it's really, you know, we're going into much greater detail with this than we do with, you know, a lot of projects, right?
    • 02:31:03
      That's also because we trust what Jeff is saying.
    • 02:31:05
      And, you know, I think basically there's some professional courtesy here that we believe what he's attempting to do will work, but he has to, he just has to confirm it.
    • 02:31:18
      Right.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 02:31:21
      Well, I appreciate Jeff's suggestion for a break, but I feel like we could be really close to a motion here if others feel the same.
    • 02:31:35
      Anybody want to take a stab?
    • SPEAKER_16
    • 02:31:36
      I think Carl does.
    • Carl Schwarz
    • 02:31:43
      All right.
    • 02:31:44
      I actually do have it pulled up, don't I?
    • 02:31:48
      Okay.
    • 02:31:50
      Having considered the standards set forth within city code, including the ADC district design guidelines, I move to find that the proposed new mixed use building at 612 West Main Street satisfies the BAR's criteria as compatible with this property and other properties in the West Main Street ADC district.
    • 02:32:05
      That the BAR approves the application as submitted with the condition that
    • 02:32:15
      The BAR needs to see a sample panel for the brick to confirm the color, texture, and sufficient differentiation between the hyphen areas and the projected portions of the building.
    • 02:32:31
      Also, with the condition that the street trees are a necessary component of this project certificate of appropriateness, and that the certificate of appropriateness for the entire project is not valid without them.
    • 02:32:42
      Should at any time the trees need to be removed or the species changed, the applicant will be required to return to the BAR for a new certificate of appropriateness.
    • 02:32:50
      So I know it's harsh, but that's, you know, you guys need to control the city somehow.
    • 02:32:59
      Yeah, for what that's worth, however that's possible.
    • 02:33:03
      Tim, sorry.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 02:33:05
      Do you want to, addressing Brett's question about the lighting of the textured brick?
    • 02:33:11
      Do you want to include that as a part of the sample discussion?
    • Carl Schwarz
    • 02:33:15
      I think that's going to be hard for us to review.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 02:33:17
      OK, that makes sense.
    • Carl Schwarz
    • 02:33:19
      Brett, do you want to add that amendment?
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 02:33:22
      No, I think they'll need to study that on their own.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 02:33:26
      And really, on the building, frankly.
    • 02:33:29
      So to see in there is something about backlighting the first four windows.
    • Carl Schwarz
    • 02:33:37
      Oh.
    • 02:33:39
      Yeah, that we recommend that you consider backlighting the retail windows to provide additional lighting at night.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 02:33:50
      And just to make the street work correctly at night.
    • 02:33:54
      Second.
    • 02:33:56
      My last meeting and you don't even give me a second.
    • 02:33:59
      I'm sorry.
    • 02:33:59
      Seconded, Jesus Christ.
    • SPEAKER_13
    • 02:34:00
      I'm sorry.
    • 02:34:03
      I retract, I retract my second.
    • SPEAKER_17
    • 02:34:06
      It's the Carl and Tim show for the rest of the night.
    • Carl Schwarz
    • 02:34:09
      So now in the building, if something goes wrong, you can blame the two VAR members.
    • SPEAKER_17
    • 02:34:16
      That staff had suggested that we specify when we say as submitted that we say per the drawings that were submitted on December 17th.
    • Jeff Werner
    • 02:34:27
      Because drawings dated December 17th.
    • SPEAKER_17
    • 02:34:29
      I'm sorry, dated September 17th, yeah.
    • Jeff Werner
    • 02:34:32
      And included in the BAR packet.
    • SPEAKER_17
    • 02:34:35
      As opposed to the ones that were earlier for this meeting submission.
    • Carl Schwarz
    • 02:34:40
      Thank you, Cheri.
    • 02:34:41
      I accept that amendment.
    • 02:34:42
      Thank you.
    • 02:34:43
      Tim, do you accept that amendment?
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 02:34:45
      Yeah.
    • 02:34:46
      Well, actually, I would say printed at 4.10 p.m.
    • 02:34:49
      on December 17th.
    • SPEAKER_01
    • 02:34:56
      Can I ask a quick question actually about your piece about the trees, Carl?
    • 02:35:01
      If they need to change location for any reason, is it just in number and in species that is what you're asking for?
    • 02:35:10
      If for some reason I have to move something because something's going to be underground or something's happening, that's okay, but it's just the species and the number?
    • Carl Schwarz
    • 02:35:22
      I am mostly concerned with the species and the number.
    • 02:35:24
      So yeah, we got to figure out how to... I mean, shoot, I just dig a hole.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 02:35:33
      Well, there are changes to sometimes that are required to be made, but that doesn't mean that the certificate of appropriateness is invalid.
    • SPEAKER_01
    • 02:35:43
      Yeah, just because he sort of used some of that verbiage and so I just wasn't sure exactly how far that would extend.
    • Carl Schwarz
    • 02:35:49
      I did use that verbiage and I may need to utilize that verbiage, but the concern is that it needs to come back to the BAR for us to, can we amend the COA, call it that, or what's the... Well, what you're saying is, and the risk is that
    • Jeff Werner
    • 02:36:10
      And what Anne's referring to is when the site plan goes through its process and suddenly, because of what's underground or overhead or whatever, something gets moved.
    • 02:36:23
      So I think there is the question what you, I would phrase it as if it's unrelated to requirements of the site plan review.
    • 02:36:34
      So.
    • 02:36:35
      But that's what I'm worried about is I know and I delete the tree.
    • Carl Schwarz
    • 02:36:41
      Is there a way that it comes back to us for, maybe it's not a complete COA, but I mean it is, we need to amend the COA.
    • Jeff Werner
    • 02:36:49
      Well generally if it doesn't, something comes through in the site plan and they start changing things, I say well then I've got to bring it back to you.
    • 02:36:57
      I mean it hasn't happened
    • 02:37:00
      much recently.
    • 02:37:02
      Yeah, I mean, in my tenure, yeah, it has occurred, but it's something that I've sort of learned to understand a little bit, but I think that it's, I don't know.
    • 02:37:15
      The correct answer is I don't know, but I was trying to get at what you were saying, whether it was a sort of a decision to move something, but if it's something that the city says must move and then Jeff and Ann say, well, God, now we've got to go back to the VAR.
    • SPEAKER_20
    • 02:37:35
      I think, Carl, your note says should at any time the trees need to be removed or the feces changed, then we have to go back to you.
    • 02:37:44
      We still need four trees.
    • 02:37:45
      That's part of the site plan.
    • 02:37:49
      They may shift a little bit.
    • 02:37:51
      You're not saying if they get moved.
    • 02:37:54
      You're saying if they get removed.
    • Carl Schwarz
    • 02:37:56
      That's correct.
    • 02:37:57
      That's how I phrased that, yes.
    • 02:38:00
      and maybe that does.
    • SPEAKER_01
    • 02:38:02
      And that's fine.
    • 02:38:02
      I just, that's exactly what I want to clarify because I know in real time, as much as I want them to relate to the building, you know, I even just last week was talking about the gas line with the civil engineer and there might be subtle changes to locations.
    • 02:38:18
      So I just want to know what the flexibility within that is.
    • 02:38:22
      You know, the only other thing that comes up sometimes, although I doubt it would with such
    • 02:38:26
      sort of small trees going in but sometimes it's just availability of tree species or really finding good healthy ones and you know the Valley Forge I think should be pretty consistent at this point but you know there's sometimes issues where you do have to change but then even then I'd have to go back through the city too so really we try and pick these things and avoid having to go back and do amendments on anything so it's really more about the location and the flexibility within being able to work it around if I need to.
    • Carl Schwarz
    • 02:38:54
      I think Jeff Dreyfus, thank you for catching that because the language did say removed or species changed.
    • 02:39:01
      Personally, I don't I don't know a whole I mean, I'm familiar with tree species, but I'm not I'm personally not wed to these elm trees.
    • 02:39:12
      But I don't know how the rest of the board feels if we leave that language like that or change it to.
    • 02:39:21
      Changed from a
    • 02:39:23
      Large shade tree or, I mean, what's the, is an elm, it is classified as a large shade tree, correct?
    • 02:39:30
      Or is it a medium one on the tree list?
    • SPEAKER_01
    • 02:39:33
      No, it's a canopy.
    • 02:39:34
      It's a canopy, large canopy.
    • 02:39:38
      Yeah.
    • Jeff Werner
    • 02:39:38
      I think we need to leave overhead as well.
    • 02:39:40
      So I don't know, there are different tree species that, you know, if they underground the utilities at a later date, does that change what you refer to in the tree list?
    • 02:39:50
      I just don't know.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 02:39:52
      I think if this species changes, we need to know about that.
    • 02:39:56
      I believe it the way that it was given.
    • Jeff Werner
    • 02:39:59
      Okay.
    • 02:40:02
      So the way it is now, even without your condition, Carl, if something changed in the site plan, I would come back to you all to discuss it.
    • 02:40:14
      As a function of it being a
    • 02:40:18
      a recent middle, I don't know how to phrase that or word that, but if something changes from the site plan, it would come to you.
    • 02:40:26
      And given our, you know, what's going on in West Main and what's not going on in West Main, paying particular attention to this.
    • 02:40:34
      Just so you all know, talking with Jeff about 218 West Market Street,
    • 02:40:40
      A conversation was had, I don't know, maybe it was a month or so ago where the fire marks were raising questions about the trees at that project.
    • 02:40:47
      So there's a lot going on in the site plan review that I hopefully they've gone far enough along there at least have some idea where things can and can't go.
    • 02:40:56
      But this is exactly, Carl, what you were talking about at the beginning of the meeting.
    • Carl Schwarz
    • 02:41:01
      Yeah, and I doubt anybody reads the, you know, when Robert issues the, our BAR actions to a whole host of people at NDS, I'm guessing nobody reads that, but supposing someone does, it just kind of, I was hoping there was something that they could see this, or if, you know, when this building is complete and the trees aren't there for whatever reason, it's easier to, there's at least something to point and say, look guys, this was here
    • 02:41:31
      city engineer, whoever's doing the site plan review.
    • 02:41:36
      Why are you still doing this?
    • 02:41:38
      Why is this still happening?
    • SPEAKER_20
    • 02:41:41
      May I jump in with one friendly suggestion?
    • 02:41:45
      I realize I'm out of order here, but the word new certificate of appropriateness scares me a little bit.
    • 02:41:51
      Is it possible to change that to an amended certificate of appropriateness?
    • 02:41:59
      You all have been incredibly patient and helpful as we've gone through this process.
    • 02:42:04
      And I'd like it to be clear that if that happens, they're removed or the species changed, we need to return to amend the certificate of appropriateness to reflect those changes.
    • 02:42:19
      I'll stop there.
    • Carl Schwarz
    • 02:42:22
      I'm fine with that, if that makes sense.
    • 02:42:26
      The whole difference between the amended and new, I'm not... I think it's closer to the reality.
    • 02:42:31
      I think amended is a better term as well.
    • 02:42:36
      I'm fine with that.
    • SPEAKER_00
    • 02:42:38
      Thank you.
    • Carl Schwarz
    • 02:42:40
      Whoever's capturing this, is that being... Yes.
    • 02:42:45
      And what you're saying
    • Jeff Werner
    • 02:42:49
      I can reread it if you like.
    • 02:42:51
      Well, what you're saying, and Jeff, I agree, is that any changes should be reported to the Board of Architectural Review and properly reported to the archive for the BAR records.
    • 02:43:13
      But I'm not in a position to
    • 02:43:19
      to say that you all can, I mean, I believe an applicant can come back and have a discussion with you all like we did with the project down on William Taylor Plaza, where they came in, we had a conversation and we solved the problem and it became part of the record.
    • 02:43:35
      Didn't call it a new COA or didn't call it anything, we just called it a solution to a problem.
    • 02:43:41
      So I think that there's gotta be a level of trust here that
    • 02:43:47
      and we've got one more project with Jeff Knopf from West Market Street where maybe we'll have this down.
    • 02:43:52
      But I don't have, I can't give you an answer that I can't give you.
    • 02:43:57
      The council would say, if you're not ready to approve it, don't.
    • 02:44:00
      If they wanna change something later, then it comes back as a, just like with the gate at the code building.
    • 02:44:07
      And there are some reasonable things which you all know we have addressed in the line of construction.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 02:44:14
      Which we, yeah, which we vote upon.
    • 02:44:16
      Yeah, that's an amended.
    • 02:44:17
      We vote upon that amendment.
    • 02:44:18
      It's not just for the record.
    • SPEAKER_15
    • 02:44:21
      We voted on the code gate change.
    • Jeff Werner
    • 02:44:24
      It was a separate C.O.A.
    • 02:44:25
      request.
    • Jody Lahendro
    • 02:44:26
      Chair, can I call the question?
    • 02:44:29
      Yes, please.
    • 02:44:29
      Move on.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 02:44:33
      I agree.
    • 02:44:33
      I think we're we I think as I follow the conversation, I think we're still in the same we've still got the same proposed language.
    • 02:44:43
      from Carl with the one change of saying as an amendment to the COA if there are any substantive changes to either the removal or a change of species for the trees.
    • 02:45:00
      And we have a second.
    • 02:45:01
      Is there any further discussion?
    • 02:45:03
      Second.
    • 02:45:05
      Okay.
    • SPEAKER_02
    • 02:45:08
      I will call a vote.
    • 02:45:09
      Mr. Bailey?
    • 02:45:11
      Yes.
    • 02:45:12
      Ms.
    • 02:45:12
      Lewis?
    • SPEAKER_16
    • 02:45:13
      Hi.
    • SPEAKER_02
    • 02:45:14
      Mr. Zehmer.
    • 02:45:15
      Hi.
    • 02:45:17
      Mr. Moore.
    • 02:45:17
      Hi.
    • 02:45:19
      Mr. Schwartz.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 02:45:21
      Yes.
    • SPEAKER_02
    • 02:45:22
      Mr. Leandro.
    • 02:45:23
      Hi.
    • 02:45:25
      Mr. Edwards.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 02:45:26
      Yes.
    • SPEAKER_02
    • 02:45:27
      Mr. Gastinger.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 02:45:28
      Hi.
    • SPEAKER_02
    • 02:45:29
      Thank you.
    • 02:45:30
      The motion passes unanimously.
    • SPEAKER_20
    • 02:45:35
      Thank you all.
    • 02:45:35
      Thank you.
    • SPEAKER_13
    • 02:45:36
      This was Jeff.
    • SPEAKER_20
    • 02:45:40
      Thank you for all of your time and all of your input.
    • 02:45:44
      We're looking forward to getting this built.
    • 02:45:46
      Thanks so much.
    • SPEAKER_09
    • 02:45:47
      Thanks, guys.
    • 02:45:49
      And we'll see you.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 02:45:51
      And thanks.
    • 02:45:51
      I know there was the promise of a little break in there.
    • 02:45:55
      I thought we were so close.
    • 02:45:57
      We were not as close as I thought.
    • 02:45:58
      But now we can get to a break.
    • 02:46:01
      All right.
    • 02:46:02
      More for me.
    • 02:46:02
      5, 10 minutes.
    • 02:46:03
      What do you guys think?
    • 02:46:04
      5?
    • SPEAKER_09
    • 02:46:06
      OK.
    • 02:46:13
      Hm.
    • SPEAKER_09
    • 02:49:26
      Hey, Robert.
    • SPEAKER_02
    • 02:49:28
      How are you?
    • 02:49:28
      Are you looking forward to the holidays this week?
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 02:49:31
      Oh yeah, I'm going.
    • SPEAKER_02
    • 02:49:33
      That's good.
    • 02:49:36
      I've been taking some grad school classes and I have, I had finals last week and that's a relief to be done one, but I stopped to work on my thesis.
    • 02:49:44
      So it's not that much of a holiday yet.
    • SPEAKER_10
    • 02:49:50
      We'll be around.
    • SPEAKER_02
    • 02:49:52
      Yeah, I'm going down.
    • 02:49:54
      Well, I'm going to my parents' house tomorrow.
    • 02:49:56
      They live in Charlotte County, so just an hour and a half away.
    • 02:49:59
      So I'll be back.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 02:50:01
      Excellent.
    • 02:50:02
      Well, thank you for your following our circuitous motions.
    • SPEAKER_02
    • 02:50:07
      Yeah.
    • 02:50:08
      Well, somebody has to do it.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 02:50:15
      Tim, we've got to get together and test your... Yeah, we do.
    • SPEAKER_10
    • 02:50:22
      I think it's been close to 11 years.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 02:50:28
      I had more hair then.
    • 02:50:29
      So Jeff, what's the bow tie?
    • 02:50:34
      You like that?
    • Jeff Werner
    • 02:50:36
      Yeah.
    • 02:50:39
      Guys, I think I know the answers.
    • 02:50:43
      I guess I should probably dress the part, you know.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 02:50:47
      But he's wearing boxers, just boxers.
    • Jeff Werner
    • 02:50:50
      Yeah, I did change into real pants.
    • 02:50:54
      I took the sweats off.
    • 02:50:55
      I said, I can't wear a coat and bow tie with a sweats, but I do have Crocs on.
    • 02:51:05
      Hey, I appreciate that situation.
    • 02:51:08
      And I mean, fortunately, we know Jeff and we've worked with Jeff and it was an approval, but it's,
    • 02:51:18
      I just sent, you guys, I just sent Breck and Carl a note and said, we're going to have to give Carl a special BAR commission as a board member emeritus and make him stay on to help us solve all these questions about the site plans and things.
    • Carl Schwarz
    • 02:51:35
      I feel like you guys are going to be overjoyed because in January your meeting is going to take half as long.
    • 02:51:42
      Please, please.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 02:51:43
      Carl, we can always call in suggestions.
    • Carl Schwarz
    • 02:51:49
      Yeah, I can be a member of the public now.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 02:51:51
      Really annoying.
    • 02:51:52
      Yeah, you know, there's never public questions or public comments.
    • 02:51:57
      Well, you know, that could change.
    • Jeff Werner
    • 02:52:00
      I was very much going to suggest that after the meeting, we go to Tim's darkened house for a traditional BAOR celebration, but I can't.
    • 02:52:12
      I was, that wedding, my niece's wedding last,
    • 02:52:18
      weekend.
    • 02:52:20
      And over the course of the past several days, it sounds like one by one people are reporting COVID.
    • 02:52:28
      But my brother, his wife, my niece, Katie thought she was ill from working at the
    • 02:52:40
      that treatment facility she works at, but they had a lot of patients got it, but she is not, she does not have it.
    • 02:52:47
      We don't have any symptoms.
    • 02:52:48
      So, but we sort of have an abundance of caution have been quarantining.
    • 02:52:52
      So, but him, we will, we will arrange something once.
    • 02:52:59
      I don't know what Greek letter, the alphabet we'll have to get to, but at some point, yeah, we will all get together.
    • 02:53:09
      and complete the celebration and the BAR, your BAR stint as we should.
    • 02:53:21
      Just close all my windows here that I was going through and stuff.
    • 02:53:26
      So if we're ready to jump back in,
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 02:53:31
      I'm missing James and there's Jerry.
    • Jeff Werner
    • 02:53:39
      So, and while they're sitting we do have two with.
    • 02:53:44
      Well two new.
    • 02:53:47
      I'm sorry, three new BAR members.
    • 02:53:48
      Cheri was reappointed and it was good.
    • 02:53:53
      I helped her put up, you know, vote for Cheri signs off in the hall during study hall.
    • 02:53:59
      So they worked.
    • 02:54:05
      David Timmerman, who most of you know, Carlton, I think it's Carlton,
    • 02:54:14
      Clayton Strange, who's an architect and a currently a professor at the university was appointed.
    • 02:54:24
      So those are the two architects.
    • 02:54:25
      And then Hunter Smith, who most of us know as the champion beer guy was appointed as a business donor.
    • 02:54:35
      He has businesses on actually within the downtown ADC district.
    • 02:54:41
      So that was his,
    • 02:54:43
      because champion is not within.
    • 02:54:46
      District.
    • 02:54:46
      So we'll be reaching out to them and getting them tied in.
    • 02:54:50
      Just so you all remember, the January meetings and the February meeting are on Wednesday nights because of the Monday holiday.
    • 02:55:01
      Brett and Cheri, I'll be talking to you about the city council appeal.
    • 02:55:05
      I need to wrap that up this week, at least get it drafted.
    • 02:55:11
      So and I see
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 02:55:14
      I think we've got critical mass.
    • 02:55:18
      We might have lost James.
    • 02:55:21
      He had said he was going to.
    • 02:55:24
      Well, it might not last, but anyway, I think we ought to move on to the next item.
    • Jeff Werner
    • 02:55:29
      He was getting mauled by small children.
    • 02:55:33
      I missed those days, you know, Will came home the other night and he's like two or three inches taller than me so no more goofy little kids.
    • 02:55:43
      Alright, this is a preliminary discussion.
    • 02:55:52
      because of the cost involved, but also there are some questions that I believe Danielle is, I think this is hers, or no, Ashley, this is Ashley's project.
    • 02:56:06
      But just very quickly, this is 540 Park Street within the North Downtown ADC District.
    • 02:56:15
      This is a house that had the copper roofing put on a couple years ago.
    • 02:56:22
      The question is about, for some reason the city designated the pool house as a contributing structure.
    • 02:56:35
      I don't know why I laid this out in the staff report.
    • 02:56:40
      I see no reason to,
    • 02:56:43
      It was constructed, it appears, sometime after 2000.
    • 02:56:46
      So I don't think, unless you all know of something I don't know, there's no reason to say this can't be demolished.
    • 02:56:56
      However, because of the ordinance, we still have to treat it as demolition of a contributing structure.
    • 02:57:02
      But I don't see any issues with
    • 02:57:07
      with the approval of that, again, unless you all saw something with it.
    • 02:57:13
      So there's the question of an addition on the rear of the house, there's the construction of a new pool house, and then there's some landscaping and I believe some screening on the front porch.
    • 02:57:29
      So I'm gonna let, you know, is Ashley on?
    • 02:57:36
      Robert?
    • SPEAKER_00
    • 02:57:36
      Yes, I'm here.
    • Jeff Werner
    • 02:57:38
      Okay, good.
    • 02:57:39
      And I think, so the goal is not to get into every detail here, it really is actually what questions do you have that you would like some feedback on the BAR on and you all on the BAR realizing we are gonna have some new members, but sort of the idea here being if anything you see, any suggestions you have that
    • 02:58:03
      Help Ashley prepare this for an approvable request in the next few months.
    • SPEAKER_02
    • 02:58:11
      So I'm going to hand it off to Ashley and I'll scroll through Ashley and just let me know if you need me to go to a different page.
    • SPEAKER_00
    • 02:58:21
      Before I dive in, we do have Mary Wolf on the call and I believe she's dialed in as an attendee.
    • 02:58:29
      I just want to make sure, is she going to be able to turn her mic on?
    • SPEAKER_02
    • 02:58:32
      I just promoted her so she should be able to know.
    • SPEAKER_00
    • 02:58:36
      Awesome.
    • 02:58:36
      Thank you so much.
    • 02:58:38
      Zoom Logistics.
    • Jeff Werner
    • 02:58:44
      They came up in the last discussion, but the reason Robert and I can't let people have the screen for whatever decision was made that we can't allow that.
    • SPEAKER_02
    • 02:58:58
      It's just the communications policy.
    • Jeff Werner
    • 02:59:01
      So another thing to tinker with in the coming months, but just so we're not being rude.
    • SPEAKER_00
    • 02:59:07
      Of course.
    • 02:59:08
      Yeah, I just want to make sure she'll be able to chime in here.
    • 02:59:12
      Okay, so the first couple of pages, we're looking at sort of the architectural piece.
    • 02:59:18
      You know, we're highlighting in red there the existing pool house footprint, our proposed demolition of that structure, along with an existing exterior stair that was
    • 02:59:32
      added in 2005 when this porch on the east side was altered and enclosed.
    • 02:59:43
      So I think part of that east addition predated the 2005 alteration to it, but that exterior stair was added in 2005.
    • 02:59:56
      just to make sure we're all oriented on this drawing to the south.
    • 03:00:02
      South is down on the sheet, and that is Ferris Street running across the bottom edge there.
    • 03:00:08
      And we're not showing the full site, but up the left side, the west, is Park Street.
    • 03:00:15
      So we're talking about the east, rear-facing portion of the site for our architectural interventions here.
    • 03:00:24
      And you can see the existing pool
    • 03:00:27
      and storage building there on the corner of Farish.
    • 03:00:31
      And as Jeff mentioned, both of the small outbuildings are identified as contributing the existing pool house and the storage building.
    • 03:00:42
      The storage building appears to be much older, referred to as a garage also, I think.
    • 03:00:48
      And then the pool house, we think,
    • 03:00:50
      Belt sometime between 2000 and 2002.
    • 03:00:54
      So yes, sorry if you want to go to the next page there.
    • 03:00:58
      You can see our proposed new pool house overlaid there with the footprint of the existing.
    • 03:01:09
      And we've hatched in the east addition.
    • 03:01:13
      because we are proposing some shell alterations to that addition.
    • 03:01:18
      We're keeping the same footprint, but enclosing more of the shell.
    • 03:01:25
      And you'll kind of see in the elevations a little more information about what we're planning there.
    • 03:01:30
      So if you want to go to the next sheet and turn it over to Mary, and she can talk about the landscape plan.
    • SPEAKER_12
    • 03:01:38
      Hi, everyone.
    • 03:01:41
      I'm Mary Wolf with Wolf-Josie Landscape Architects.
    • 03:01:44
      Just to zoom out a little bit and look at the full site in context, we're proposing with the landscape to essentially renovate and maybe upgrade some of the existing hardscape on the site.
    • 03:02:03
      In front of the house along Park Street, we're proposing to rework some existing paths that lead from Park Street to the front of the house, basically with repaving and realignment.
    • 03:02:22
      So currently there are two entrances into the front lawn from Park Street.
    • 03:02:29
      We're proposing to remove one of those and
    • 03:02:33
      changed the material of the paths, which are currently crushed stone, which is starting to wash quite a bit.
    • 03:02:43
      The front lawn slopes at about a 10% grade from Park Street to the front of the house.
    • 03:02:49
      So we're proposing upgrading and realigning the paths, creating
    • 03:02:58
      Landing in the front of the house.
    • 03:03:00
      Currently, there's a crushed stone landing, which is also being washed away by drainage.
    • 03:03:10
      So we'll create a hardscape in front of the front porch, which will require us to raise the grade slightly in that area.
    • 03:03:22
      Along Ferris Street, we're proposing
    • 03:03:25
      similar hardscape renovations and upgrades just to improve the circulation from the parking along Ferris Street to the various entries into the house.
    • 03:03:44
      At the new addition off the back, we're proposing to keep the existing pool
    • 03:03:51
      Try to work with keeping the existing paving and then adding paving to accommodate the changes with the pool house.
    • 03:04:05
      If you want to go to the next slide, you can see some of the existing alignments in the front of the house.
    • 03:04:13
      The paths curve down towards the front door and we're pressing to straighten the paths out.
    • 03:04:21
      and then, again, sort of upgrade and improve the path circulation along the Fair Street side of the house, along the south side of the house.
    • 03:04:34
      These are some existing photos of the crushed stone paths that currently exist, some of the stepping stones around the house,
    • 03:04:47
      So these are the main hardscapes we're proposing to replace.
    • SPEAKER_00
    • 03:04:57
      All right, so dipping back into the architectural, we have these elevations of the existing house.
    • 03:05:08
      And we've highlighted, bracketed out the footprint of the existing addition.
    • 03:05:14
      And we're working within that footprint.
    • 03:05:19
      And you can see the character of that 2005 addition
    • 03:05:26
      on the existing 1900s house.
    • 03:05:29
      We can flip to the next sheet.
    • 03:05:34
      So we are keeping the lower level of that addition with some fenestration opening changes, but the structure we're keeping.
    • 03:05:46
      And then we are altering the shell up above
    • 03:05:50
      expanding the square footage on the second level.
    • 03:05:55
      So essentially, the whole footprint will be sort of extruded, lower level, first floor, second floor.
    • 03:06:03
      And the character will be more modern for this edition.
    • 03:06:11
      We are planning to use a smooth finish stucco and picking up on the same material palette
    • 03:06:18
      from the existing house.
    • 03:06:20
      So paint colors and copper roof continuing the same paint for sort of the lower level, darker contrast, picking up the darker color for the shutters.
    • 03:06:39
      We're proposing a clad window and door in a darker color.
    • 03:06:47
      And then we've also highlighted here proposed removable screen panels on the west side of the house.
    • 03:06:56
      So realizing that we would want something that could be easily removed, we would be pretty cautious about how we interact with the existing porch columns.
    • 03:07:10
      And we're talking about using a copper screening there.
    • 03:07:14
      So if you want to go ahead to the next sheet.
    • 03:07:16
      So we're looking, this is the east view of that addition.
    • 03:07:22
      And we're, as you can see, we're kind of returning to a window wall ratio that's actually a little more similar to the existing house and keeping the vertical proportions
    • 03:07:33
      I loved in the one page historic description of this house some of the wording.
    • 03:07:41
      It was talking about the vertical massing of the original house and described it as being noble and serene, which I thought was really lovely.
    • 03:07:51
      And it mentioned the bucolic landscape.
    • 03:07:54
      So I think we're kind of jumping off of that a little bit.
    • 03:07:59
      We're trying to keep that sort of vertical proportion and serene
    • 03:08:04
      A serene effect, despite going a little more modern with this addition.
    • 03:08:11
      We're feeling like it's going to be pretty complimentary to the existing house.
    • 03:08:15
      If you go on to the next page.
    • 03:08:19
      So here are a couple elevations of the proposed new pool house.
    • 03:08:25
      South side would be facing the pool, the long edge.
    • 03:08:29
      And we are really trying to get a dialogue going between the language of the revised edition and this pool house.
    • 03:08:39
      It will be much lower profile compared to the existing pool house.
    • 03:08:45
      And we've been talking with Mary about how this building is kind of more of a landscape element than the existing structure, which reads more as sort of a folly.
    • 03:08:58
      And in the plan, you could see earlier we are adjusting the kink that exists between the existing pool house and the house.
    • 03:09:09
      We're kind of squaring off and really making this rear courtyard unified.
    • 03:09:19
      Here are some reference photos of the existing house.
    • 03:09:27
      And this is the existing pool house that we're proposing demolition.
    • 03:09:32
      You can also see the exterior stair in the top left corner there.
    • 03:09:39
      And it's a very vertical, as you can see, it's small footprint, pretty vertical structure.
    • 03:09:46
      And if you scroll back up to the previous page again for me, Robert, the south elevation from Ferris Street.
    • 03:09:56
      Actually, if you could zoom in on that, that would be That's a key photo right there.
    • 03:10:01
      You can see the existing pool house peeking up over the edge of the fence.
    • 03:10:07
      It's pretty visible.
    • 03:10:10
      And we're feeling like our proposed new pool house is going to be much lower profile and more linear, not as much of like an object and more speaking to the to the landscape and that little courtyard in the rear.
    • 03:10:26
      I think we can go to the last page.
    • 03:10:33
      So here are some
    • 03:10:36
      Nearby Properties for reference.
    • 03:10:41
      Pretty diverse stylistically.
    • 03:10:43
      One we left off, which is pretty helpful, actually, is 614 Park Street, sitting pretty far back from the road.
    • 03:10:53
      But it's, I believe, Kevin and Carrie Burke's residence.
    • 03:10:57
      Definitely more contemporary in style and partially visible
    • 03:11:06
      from this rear courtyard that we're talking about.
    • 03:11:08
      So kind of interesting to think about putting something a little more modern next to one of the more modern structures that's already existing in this area of Park Street.
    • 03:11:21
      So I think to prompt some discussion, we'd love any feedback on what you guys would want to see more of from us in a formal submission.
    • 03:11:34
      I heard a bit earlier the discussion of how to handle material samples in the time of COVID.
    • 03:11:42
      So any thoughts you have on things you would like to see and how we might be able to
    • 03:11:47
      to share those with you.
    • 03:11:49
      And just kind of more logistically, what kind of application do you see this being?
    • 03:12:00
      Should we submit a separate application for the demolition, a separate application for the new building, and even a third for the addition, or
    • 03:12:13
      How do you see this project fitting into the application format?
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 03:12:23
      Thanks, Ashley.
    • 03:12:24
      Some of those application questions, they probably are best worked through with Jeff.
    • 03:12:29
      I don't know that we're going to need to spend our time tonight with that.
    • 03:12:36
      Thank you for the presentation.
    • 03:12:38
      Anyone have any initial questions or comments?
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 03:12:47
      So we're not doing the formal routine, right?
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 03:12:51
      Right.
    • 03:12:51
      This is just a preliminary review.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 03:12:53
      So it was more likely Carl and I would do it if we left the organ devices.
    • 03:13:01
      Well, two things.
    • 03:13:03
      I think getting rid of the pool house, go for it.
    • 03:13:07
      Number two, I know you're following the rules.
    • 03:13:11
      I'm looking at the east elevation of where you've
    • 03:13:17
      brought the edition up looking back toward Park Street, yes.
    • 03:13:21
      And I know you're following the rules by not.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 03:13:28
      Oh no, lost him.
    • 03:13:29
      Oh no.
    • 03:13:30
      That's what we're just talking about.
    • SPEAKER_17
    • 03:13:33
      He's resting with his mouth open.
    • Jeff Werner
    • 03:13:34
      Yeah, he does that in person too.
    • 03:13:37
      It's kind of strange.
    • 03:13:41
      I got to screen capture that to save it for posterity.
    • SPEAKER_17
    • 03:13:45
      Can you do that?
    • SPEAKER_19
    • 03:13:47
      I did it.
    • 03:13:47
      It was awful when that happens to you.
    • 03:13:50
      He probably is still talking.
    • SPEAKER_00
    • 03:13:52
      He's probably saying something really good right now.
    • SPEAKER_17
    • 03:13:55
      I'll jump in really quickly because my sort of concern is, hopefully,
    • 03:14:02
      not long to describe.
    • 03:14:04
      I'd just like to see a lot of detail on the removable screens that you intend for the porch.
    • 03:14:12
      And looks like he's jumped off and is getting back.
    • 03:14:17
      And just to make sure that it doesn't destroy the existing structure, how it's done.
    • 03:14:22
      I know other
    • 03:14:29
      Owners in the neighborhood have, several of them have similar conditions.
    • 03:14:34
      It just gets way too hot on those porches, especially in the late afternoon in the summer when it faces south and west.
    • 03:14:41
      And be just really curious what your solution.
    • 03:14:45
      Just have sort of bamboo-like, rolled-down shades.
    • 03:14:50
      So if you're really looking at something that's going to be completely covering up the historic structure and its elements, give us a lot of detail on that, please.
    • SPEAKER_00
    • 03:15:03
      Absolutely, yes.
    • 03:15:04
      Thank you.
    • 03:15:05
      Yeah, I think, you know, just from a preliminary response, the intention is to create sort of an insect-proof screened dining area.
    • 03:15:16
      So we haven't really gotten into the sun shading aspect, but that is something good to consider as well.
    • 03:15:23
      And our goal would be to set the screens back
    • 03:15:27
      so that the columns would still be expressed on the exterior and still get some depth to all that detail.
    • 03:15:35
      But yes, absolutely, we could provide some more information.
    • SPEAKER_15
    • 03:15:41
      I'll weigh in just briefly.
    • 03:15:42
      I think remove the old pool house should go.
    • 03:15:46
      It won't be missed.
    • 03:15:48
      And I also want to say that I do like the garden hardscape plan.
    • 03:15:53
      I think it's lovely and creates a nice oasis that would be an addition to Park Street.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 03:16:03
      I'll chime in there.
    • 03:16:03
      I have a couple of comments about the landscape.
    • 03:16:06
      I agree.
    • 03:16:08
      Refreshing to see this property get some attention.
    • 03:16:12
      It has been at times that hedge at the front has gotten really big and tall.
    • 03:16:19
      And this is really pretty beautiful house that is really hard to see from the street.
    • 03:16:26
      And so I guess I would look to this plan for a couple of things.
    • 03:16:31
      One, I think it could set a better precedent of how you could balance the need for privacy without
    • 03:16:39
      Walling off the public right of way, which a lot of properties have done over time.
    • 03:16:46
      And secondly, there used to be some really massive trees in this yard and its contribution to the city, the urban canopy has gone down significantly.
    • 03:16:57
      and I didn't see any proposed trees in the plan, but I think that would be a benefit to both the property and to the city.
    • SPEAKER_12
    • 03:17:10
      Yeah, I failed to mention it's one of a large black walnut along Park Street we're proposing to take out.
    • 03:17:22
      This is the only tree removal where
    • 03:17:27
      that we're talking about at the moment.
    • 03:17:29
      The one that's leaning, or it looks like it's- It's in pretty bad shape, hanging right over the street and the power lines.
    • 03:17:40
      The property is pretty surrounded by large trees on all sides.
    • 03:17:53
      several ash trees, which the owners are treating for emerald ash borer.
    • 03:18:00
      But we definitely will consider tree additions as we can.
    • 03:18:09
      Most of the property in the back, as you can see, is hardscape and pool, and the owners would like to keep as much lawn area as possible in the front.
    • 03:18:22
      So that was one of the focuses for us was to make that front lawn a little bit more functional.
    • 03:18:33
      Working with grading it to some degree, just to sort of, there's a little bit of a hump in the lawn that will smooth down and try to bring it down to about a 5% grade.
    • 03:18:45
      But definitely will
    • 03:18:52
      be looking at tree additions around the perimeter of the front yard, knowing that the ash trees won't be there forever.
    • 03:19:01
      And there are a couple of other trees that are not in great shape, but we're not proposing to remove at this time.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 03:19:09
      Sorry, Tim, we lost you mid-sentence.
    • 03:19:15
      We don't know how far along you were.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 03:19:16
      My daughters decided to reboot the router.
    • 03:19:23
      So, you know, I miss all of Mary's wisdom, and obviously you guys only got a third of mine.
    • 03:19:33
      I don't know how far it went, but all I was just saying is I think you could extend the roof down in the center if you wanted to without harming the design guidelines in terms of alignment.
    • 03:19:42
      And the reason I say that is just because that one stretch of chorus isn't kind of a vulnerable spot.
    • 03:19:47
      You know, that's all.
    • 03:19:49
      It was just a technical observation.
    • 03:19:54
      But since I'm on, I think it's me and really does a good job of cleaning up a really messy condition at the back of the house as well as that really strange bird housey, whatever that thing is.
    • 03:20:16
      So that's my ten cents.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 03:20:23
      Other comments from the board?
    • SPEAKER_15
    • 03:20:28
      I also, my first impression of the addition of the back, I quite like it as well.
    • 03:20:32
      It's nice and clean and I think it does refer to what's there now.
    • 03:20:36
      I think it would be a pretty nice addition.
    • Jeff Werner
    • 03:20:39
      To say actually that, so from where I sit that we have
    • 03:20:49
      We have reviewed demolition of outbuildings with part of the entire submittal.
    • 03:20:57
      And I think under the circumstances with this one, it could be one request.
    • 03:21:03
      I don't think there's any argument there.
    • 03:21:06
      As far as materials and the conversation about 540 West Main, a little bit different with a commercial structure, I've yet to really,
    • 03:21:20
      have the BAR require a lot of physical examples, or if any, for something residentially, I guess, images of good cut sheets of the doors and windows, maybe
    • 03:21:39
      something just so that we know what type of stone and you're thinking.
    • 03:21:44
      I think I don't think we need a sample of the stucco, maybe a spec on what you're planning to put in.
    • 03:21:55
      So I don't see anything here that I think BAR would ask for specific.
    • 03:21:59
      physical samples of.
    • 03:22:01
      I do agree with what Cheri is saying is we do see, I have the same situation in my house trying to figure out how to clean the old back porch.
    • 03:22:09
      And, but you do see these products where you can glue something on, stick something on, Velcro it on, whatever.
    • 03:22:15
      So that I think that we'd want to see whatever the product is or however it's done that it is, it could easily be attached to the historic material, but it doesn't
    • 03:22:25
      You know, alter it, it doesn't become something permanent that's stuck onto it, so.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 03:22:31
      Are you referring to the screen, the screens, Jeff?
    • 03:22:34
      On the front porch, yeah.
    • Jeff Werner
    • 03:22:36
      So, I'm just, so from where I sit, I think if that helps you answer your question about what the submittal would be and what sort of materials, I think images will do just fine, catalog cuts will do fine, unless you all think otherwise.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 03:22:57
      In addition, any exterior lighting should be included in the submittal.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 03:23:06
      What did Tim say?
    • 03:23:14
      I don't like the driveway lights at Hart-Bargain.
    • 03:23:16
      You can see the light source all the time.
    • SPEAKER_16
    • 03:23:25
      Are you coming back next year?
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 03:23:31
      No, no, it's New Year next year.
    • 03:23:36
      Personally, I'd say you're just about there with your presentation.
    • 03:23:39
      I don't really see you need to go much further than this.
    • 03:23:41
      And, you know, as Jeff said, confirm how you're going to detail the screen attachment on the whole house.
    • SPEAKER_10
    • 03:23:50
      you know, the kind of sheets for the windows and I think you're there.
    • Jeff Werner
    • 03:23:58
      If the only detailed question sort of anticipating what Carl might ask would be where your plaster and the siding come together, what you're using a corner, what's that detail?
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 03:24:14
      But Carl's not going to be on the board next month.
    • Jeff Werner
    • 03:24:16
      I know, but neither will you two.
    • 03:24:17
      He's influenced me.
    • 03:24:18
      I know.
    • 03:24:18
      So what do they think?
    • SPEAKER_17
    • 03:24:20
      That's why Jeff is going to ask the question.
    • Jeff Werner
    • 03:24:22
      Right.
    • 03:24:23
      He's mentored me.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 03:24:26
      Any other questions you have for us, Ashley or Mary?
    • SPEAKER_12
    • 03:24:30
      I can't think of anything.
    • SPEAKER_00
    • 03:24:38
      No, I think that's.
    • SPEAKER_17
    • 03:24:41
      Thank you.
    • 03:24:44
      Just a comment that's not particular to this discussion, but just because Ashley kind of asked us, I think it is quite possible for us to coordinate looking at materials during this time.
    • 03:24:55
      And I was just going to suggest, I'm sure maybe other people, City Hall is effectively closed, not they're not completely closed.
    • 03:25:05
      But anyway,
    • 03:25:06
      We're not sure if that's an option, but my office is downtown on High Street and I wouldn't mind, you know, if materials wanted to be dropped off, any member of the BAR could stop by.
    • 03:25:17
      I think I'm in a pretty central location and we're open during regular business hours.
    • 03:25:22
      So just to offer that up, not, and I'm saying this to other members of the BAR, just as a possibility, because I think, I think it would have been good to have seen, and I'm sorry you had to sit through it, but to have seen some materials for the last
    • 03:25:37
      project consideration that was pretty major.
    • 03:25:41
      So not a pool house that's tucked behind a private home on Park Street, but it's a pretty significant project.
    • 03:25:48
      So anyway, that's an option if we can figure out how to share those, I think.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 03:25:52
      I mean, also for that matter, they could just be on site, like in the pull-off area for parking or something like that, too.
    • SPEAKER_17
    • 03:25:59
      Oh, you mean they can have a pool party for us in the spring?
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 03:26:02
      I mean, not now, but maybe it could be an ice skating party.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 03:26:10
      That's optimistic too.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 03:26:11
      I don't know.
    • 03:26:13
      It's actually freezing in New York.
    • 03:26:15
      I think I'm going to be able to play pot hockey if they're saying so.
    • 03:26:20
      Thank you.
    • 03:26:22
      Thank you.
    • SPEAKER_09
    • 03:26:24
      Thank you.
    • Jeff Werner
    • 03:26:25
      All good.
    • 03:26:25
      Ashley, thank you.
    • SPEAKER_00
    • 03:26:28
      Ew.
    • 03:26:30
      It looks like there was one question in the chat about the dead walnut tree.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 03:26:36
      Yes, it typically would be.
    • 03:26:38
      that would be included in the landscape plan.
    • SPEAKER_13
    • 03:26:42
      Yes, my question was really, if it's dead and dangerous, can't they go ahead and take it down?
    • 03:26:49
      It's leaning.
    • Jeff Werner
    • 03:26:50
      I mean, I even asked Mike Ronane about it.
    • 03:26:53
      We're talking about the one at the corner, Park and Farish, right, Ashley?
    • SPEAKER_12
    • 03:27:03
      When they showed you the picture.
    • 03:27:04
      It's a ride along Park Street.
    • SPEAKER_13
    • 03:27:07
      How big is that?
    • 03:27:09
      They had a picture of it.
    • 03:27:10
      I don't know.
    • 03:27:11
      I'm not trying to prolong the conversation.
    • 03:27:12
      I'm just trying to cut some red tape.
    • SPEAKER_12
    • 03:27:19
      It would be great if we could go ahead and remove the tree.
    • SPEAKER_13
    • 03:27:24
      In the picture they showed, it looked like the other trees have leaves on them and that one looks like a buzzard tree.
    • SPEAKER_12
    • 03:27:30
      You could really see the decline.
    • 03:27:31
      And it lost a huge limb, I think, this summer.
    • 03:27:41
      The bulk of the tree right now is overhanging the street and you know the sidewalk and power line so it's a hazard.
    • SPEAKER_15
    • 03:27:58
      Well just out of curiosity if it's a hazard currently wouldn't you go to the arborist and just ask them if it's okay to remove it and just forget about us?
    • Jeff Werner
    • 03:28:07
      Well, the city arbors doesn't address private property trees, and we don't have a city arbors.
    • SPEAKER_15
    • 03:28:16
      Good point.
    • Jeff Werner
    • 03:28:17
      Yeah, my only reason I had asked was the tree that's overhanging, bearish, literally looks like the branches are laying on the power lines, but the tree hasn't moved.
    • 03:28:25
      I'm not sure exactly what's going on with that one, but I would say actually trimming up a tree,
    • 03:28:36
      that's not something that we review.
    • 03:28:38
      It's when you start chopping them down and that the BAR, particularly when it comes to streets in a prominent location like this, we've had a lot of conversations about kind of trying to have a standard response, you know, but typically if you would need a letter from an arborist explaining why that's what they would wanna see or the BAR.
    • 03:29:02
      So, but no, the city arborist doesn't,
    • 03:29:06
      resolve issues on private property.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 03:29:10
      Are you asking for us to okay it now?
    • 03:29:12
      No, I was just beginning to okay it tonight, but I do think that for a property that has a history of not coming to the BAR for things that have happened, big things that have happened on the property, it would be good to change that trajectory and include it in the project.
    • 03:29:33
      And for anyone that's interested, you should go back and look at that tulip poplar that was in that front yard at one point.
    • 03:29:40
      It's pretty incredible.
    • 03:29:42
      So suffice it to say that I think there's ample reason to remove potentially that tree.
    • 03:29:48
      I think just keeping in mind and setting Park Street up for the next 50 to 100 years would be a good contribution of this project.
    • 03:30:03
      All right, let's keep going.
    • 03:30:04
      Thank you so much, Ashley and Mary.
    • SPEAKER_00
    • 03:30:06
      Thank you.
    • 03:30:07
      Thank you all.
    • Jeff Werner
    • 03:30:08
      All right, Robert, if you would pull up those images I have for Water Street, and we can
    • SPEAKER_09
    • 03:30:28
      So that's good there.
    • Jeff Werner
    • 03:30:29
      So just, you know, orient you all, this is the old Mona Loco.
    • 03:30:33
      It then became Moe's Barbecue.
    • 03:30:37
      It's now been repainted gray.
    • 03:30:40
      I'm fine with addicts.
    • 03:30:41
      You know, it is an awful lot of paint layers that are going on in this old building.
    • 03:30:46
      It's an old 19, I think, 30s art deco gas station.
    • 03:30:53
      The,
    • 03:30:55
      Wall is obviously new, the tent out front is new, well not new, I mean in the sense of non-historic.
    • 03:31:00
      And go ahead and scroll down, Robert.
    • 03:31:02
      So what they're being asked to do, and so this is from looking at it, sort of looking west from the corner of Second Street on the left and Water Street on your right.
    • 03:31:13
      So the
    • 03:31:17
      Most of the stuff that's in here is not a question.
    • 03:31:19
      The question revolves around that new wall that I kind of dotted in there, and then there's a new entrance gate.
    • 03:31:28
      I just added some notes on top of their handwritten notes.
    • 03:31:31
      So the idea is to bring the existing stucco wall to the corner, then turn, and then have an entrance gate into a patio area.
    • 03:31:41
      um again not that complicated however go ahead and scroll down Robert and um so the idea is um and there are other images in here but this these are uh images from uh Ron at um sorry I'm blanking uh the architect that's working on this so they're they're the idea the the owner would like to do a um a Korean themed Korean style restaurant and
    • 03:32:09
      and to add to that a wall and a gate that follow that architecture.
    • 03:32:19
      I think I summarized it in the staff memo.
    • 03:32:22
      It's not as far as what used to be on this site used to be a gas station and you can hardly tell that anymore.
    • 03:32:30
      So the context of the site itself, it's somewhat of a,
    • 03:32:35
      opportunity for something new.
    • 03:32:37
      However, in the context of the downtown ADC district, the guidelines kind of box us into looking at what's to not introduce new elements to look to existing examples.
    • 03:32:52
      So it's a
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 03:32:57
      This is a difficult one because it's not it's actually not very difficult, Jeff.
    • 03:33:02
      Okay, good.
    • 03:33:02
      Any support for this in our guidelines whatsoever?
    • 03:33:05
      It's a kind of a faux historicism and really a sign for a restaurant.
    • 03:33:11
      I don't think it's pretty clear to me.
    • 03:33:12
      I don't know if anybody feels like this is somehow gray area.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 03:33:17
      Well, first of all, I think actually the building is still despite all the things that they've been the bastardized it is actually very distinctive.
    • 03:33:26
      Yeah.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 03:33:27
      as a gas station.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 03:33:29
      Yeah, yeah, so I mean it's, and actually Jeff, is that a wall or just a filled in fence with a stucco on it?
    • 03:33:36
      I didn't think that was like a wall.
    • Jeff Werner
    • 03:33:39
      Yeah.
    • 03:33:40
      It is a wall?
    • 03:33:42
      Oh yeah, it sits there, it's like a, I think it's a block wall that's been parched and it's been there as long as I've lived here.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 03:33:50
      For some reason I thought it was like a reconstructed fence, but maybe I'm wrong.
    • 03:33:59
      I mean, I think to my mind, this is a very cool structure and somebody could really do something with it.
    • 03:34:05
      So I think it's going in the wrong direction.
    • SPEAKER_13
    • 03:34:12
      Yeah, I agree.
    • 03:34:12
      I think it's still got Art Deco detailing on the building itself and adding a Korean gate out front doesn't make sense.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 03:34:22
      And this is a lot more character than any of this stuff along West Main, frankly.
    • 03:34:28
      Yeah.
    • 03:34:29
      Or even that, what was the diner down on the corner?
    • 03:34:34
      Joey, remember the one that had some sort of modern fifties detailing left in it, but not much?
    • Jody Lahendro
    • 03:34:42
      Right.
    • 03:34:43
      I mean, this is an Art Deco, streamlined modern gas station that is very distinctive and it'd be lovely to really emphasize.
    • 03:34:56
      and stopped hiding it with these other faux superficial things.
    • SPEAKER_17
    • 03:35:09
      I was on the BAR during all of the last applications in three and five, I believe, when this came before us.
    • 03:35:20
      Mary Joy was really fond of this building and I hadn't thought about it at the time, but it really does.
    • 03:35:26
      The architectural detail, the art deco, even though it's not of that era, but it's a pretty cool looking building.
    • 03:35:34
      And it really is too bad that that wall is there and that the, I guess the maples of, Japanese maples have gotten a little bit large to obscure it, but it's some, there's a building that's similar that sits in between East High Street and Meade, if you know where that is, it used to be a photography building and Alison and Chris Hayes have bought it.
    • 03:35:58
      And it has that same similar detail and then I believe there's one also that still is used for something next to W. Brown and across the street from Moss down in Belmont that's still used as a gas station or you know some, but I believe that that also has these
    • 03:36:17
      I think there are several other examples of these buildings.
    • Jeff Werner
    • 03:36:20
      Yeah, there's supposed to be four.
    • 03:36:22
      And I know this and the one that Chris and Allison bought.
    • 03:36:26
      I don't know the other two.
    • 03:36:27
      I've been meaning to drive my Google car, so I can.
    • 03:36:31
      But there's supposed to be four.
    • SPEAKER_17
    • 03:36:32
      Yeah, the one next to W. Brown and across the street from the market, across the street from Moss in Belmont, I'm pretty sure it's similar.
    • 03:36:43
      And there's another one as well.
    • Jody Lahendro
    • 03:36:45
      They're very unusual in Charlottesville, and we're losing them all the time.
    • 03:36:51
      We didn't have many to begin with, and we're losing more and more of them.
    • 03:36:56
      Yeah, this is an important building.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 03:36:58
      I mean, the one I always wait for somebody to try to tear down is, what's the W roof on West Main?
    • SPEAKER_09
    • 03:37:07
      Mills.
    • 03:37:08
      Mills?
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 03:37:09
      Mills, yeah.
    • 03:37:10
      That's such a cool building.
    • Jeff Werner
    • 03:37:14
      Yeah, it's coming.
    • 03:37:16
      And Allison, I will say Allison and Chris doing some alterations to the to the one on high but it's within the entrance corridor so it's somewhat of a different application of the design guidelines.
    • 03:37:32
      I agree with you all.
    • 03:37:33
      And I think the thing is that what I saw key in the guidelines was that if it's introducing for an outbuilding or another structure, if it's different, then it should be behind.
    • 03:37:43
      It should be subordinate to the structure.
    • 03:37:46
      And that's where you're saying when looking at it from the district in, I just don't think it fits.
    • 03:37:54
      But I, you know, again, wanted to hear what you all thought.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 03:37:59
      I think even if this was new construction, it wouldn't satisfy our guidelines.
    • 03:38:04
      It's a kind of a faux replication that is using false materials in a building tradition that's not found here.
    • 03:38:12
      It really is being used as a sign more than an actual construction.
    • 03:38:18
      Good point.
    • SPEAKER_17
    • 03:38:20
      And I think it would obscure the historic elements of this structure further.
    • 03:38:25
      Yeah.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 03:38:26
      Yes.
    • 03:38:30
      The best way for them to be successful is to have really good food and then everyone will go there.
    • Jeff Werner
    • 03:38:38
      Yeah, yeah.
    • 03:38:40
      I will pass that on.
    • 03:38:42
      They're certainly welcome to make an application, but I will pass that on as some helpful guidance.
    • 03:38:50
      Those were the only things that I had on, well, and I also, just a reminder, I sent out that note about we are preparing our annual report as a certified local government, and I have to summarize.
    • 03:39:04
      any sort of related continuing ed that you will all have done.
    • 03:39:09
      It really is only requirement is an hour of something related to the field.
    • 03:39:15
      With me, I'll send out another reminder, but when we get back in January, I need to dive into that.
    • 03:39:22
      I will be out Friday and through next weekend.
    • 03:39:25
      I am gonna check in.
    • 03:39:26
      I think Robert's checking in next week because we have our BAR deadline coming in.
    • 03:39:33
      But I'll be working the rest of this week if you have any questions.
    • 03:39:38
      And then but otherwise, thank you.
    • 03:39:40
      Those are the questions I had.
    • 03:39:41
      I know you had a discussion about the the other things.
    • 03:39:44
      So I'm handed off to you, Mr. Dastner.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 03:39:48
      Oh, well, I just while we had our break, I did I have been following the conversation related to the preservation of words and made it an amended slate for consideration.
    • 03:40:02
      I could read that in as a proposal or as a motion and then have it open for conversation.
    • 03:40:14
      Is that what you'd like me to do?
    • 03:40:17
      Yes.
    • 03:40:17
      Okay.
    • 03:40:18
      Then I'd move that the BAR grant the following awards to projects this year.
    • 03:40:30
      The best rehabilitation of a historic structure, 743 Park Street, special contribution to the cultural landscape of Charlottesville, and I used James' language there, to the memorial of enslaved laborers at the University of Virginia, the best new site construction in a historic district at 301 East Jefferson Street, the congregation of Beth Israel, outstanding individual achievement for 400 Robey Road Westminster Presbyterian Church,
    • 03:41:00
      important preservation of a significant neighborhood structure or building at 415 10th Street Northwest, and the Preston A. Koiner Preservation Award to Mary Joyce Kahle.
    • Jody Lahendro
    • 03:41:14
      If that's a motion, I'll second it.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 03:41:16
      I do want to say one thing.
    • 03:41:18
      This is just, and I don't mean to sound like obsessive, but I will say one thing about the memorial.
    • 03:41:25
      I think it's a really great
    • 03:41:27
      Sculpture, I think the lighting is absolutely horrific, but that's beside true.
    • Jody Lahendro
    • 03:41:33
      Have you seen it lately, Tim?
    • 03:41:35
      They changed it.
    • SPEAKER_10
    • 03:41:36
      Yeah, they revised it.
    • Jody Lahendro
    • 03:41:38
      Is it a lot better than it was?
    • 03:41:40
      Yes, because it was designed for there being a bunch of trees around it, and then there was a design change to not put the trees in, and all of a sudden the lights stood out like sore thumbs.
    • 03:41:53
      So it's been changed.
    • SPEAKER_13
    • 03:41:55
      Ah, okay.
    • 03:41:57
      They're less poles and they're pulled further back from the memorial.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 03:42:01
      All right, I'll check it out.
    • 03:42:03
      Anyway, that was my only, I mean, I have nothing against the sculpture, just the lighting.
    • 03:42:08
      It was on par with the court square.
    • SPEAKER_17
    • 03:42:14
      Can I be a nerd and read what I prepared on Mary Joy just by way of reminder?
    • 03:42:22
      Because, as it was pointed out to me by Jeff, it's kind of amazing.
    • 03:42:26
      I mean, how many people did work with her?
    • 03:42:29
      Tim, are you it?
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 03:42:31
      Yeah.
    • 03:42:31
      Oh, yeah.
    • SPEAKER_17
    • 03:42:33
      And Brack and Carl.
    • 03:42:34
      and we're about to lose two of those tonight.
    • 03:42:38
      So anyway, so I thought I knew everything about her but I had to do a little research.
    • 03:42:44
      So I said I wanted to nominate her and I'd like to nominate her for the Preston A. Koiner Preservationist Award which is an award we've given before and it's given to a non-architect.
    • 03:42:54
      She does have a master's in planning but she's not a licensed architect or a design professional for their contributions to preserve historic structures or resources in our city.
    • 03:43:04
      She was the Preservation and Design Planner for the City of Charlottesville for 15 years, from 2003 until 2018.
    • 03:43:11
      In that capacity, she staffed the Board of Architecture Review in all matters, the Historic Resources Committee, and also staffed the Planning Commission on Entrance Quarter Review Applications.
    • 03:43:23
      I realize Jeff does all of those things, but just as a refresher,
    • 03:43:27
      During her time in the city, the city experienced significant development and the docket of the BAR continued to pace, particularly after we did a complete overhaul of the zoning ordinance in 2005, which created a lot more potential for density.
    • 03:43:43
      She oversaw the historic survey process and nominations for adding the following ADC districts to the city.
    • 03:43:49
      The corner district in 2003,
    • 03:43:52
      Oakhurst Gildersleeve in 2005, Rugby University Venable in 2006, and then the expansion of North Downtown, which was the city's original district in 2006 also.
    • 03:44:04
      She also guided the city in the nomination of numerous individually protected properties.
    • 03:44:09
      I think those happened in 2007 and oversaw a complete upgrade and overhaul of the ADC guidelines in 2005.
    • 03:44:17
      And finally, she led the adoption of the Historic Conservation District guidelines in 2009 with the adding of Martha Jefferson District in 2007 and Rugby Road Historic District in 2014.
    • 03:44:34
      So just by way of reminder, she did a lot to move things along to preserve our historic research in the city in a time where there was a lot of development pressures and a lot of, you know, really for the first time, a lot of outside money coming into Charlottesville, which we had never seen before those years.
    • 03:44:54
      So I didn't always agree with her, but
    • 03:45:01
      but I loved that she toed the line that she did.
    • 03:45:03
      So I second that motion or third that motion.
    • SPEAKER_02
    • 03:45:12
      Okay.
    • 03:45:13
      I guess with, thank you very much, Cheri.
    • 03:45:15
      I'll just call a vote for the next question.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 03:45:17
      I'm sure there's any other discussion or anybody have any other questions on the motion on the floor?
    • 03:45:24
      Okay.
    • 03:45:25
      So whoever had a chance.
    • SPEAKER_02
    • 03:45:28
      Okay.
    • 03:45:29
      Thank you, Mr. Bailey.
    • 03:45:31
      Aye.
    • 03:45:32
      Mr. Gastinger.
    • 03:45:33
      Aye.
    • 03:45:34
      Mr. Moore.
    • 03:45:35
      Aye.
    • 03:45:36
      Mr. Zehmer.
    • 03:45:37
      Aye.
    • 03:45:39
      Mr. Edwards.
    • 03:45:41
      Aye.
    • 03:45:42
      Mr. Schwartz.
    • 03:45:43
      Yes.
    • 03:45:44
      Ms.
    • 03:45:44
      Lewis.
    • SPEAKER_16
    • 03:45:45
      Aye.
    • SPEAKER_02
    • 03:45:46
      And Mr. LaHentra.
    • 03:45:48
      Aye.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 03:45:50
      So I just have one thing that it seems to be somewhat more of them, but if somebody wants to be a representative for the BAR,
    • 03:46:01
      Place, if place actually resurfaces.
    • 03:46:04
      Something to think about.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 03:46:05
      What would that look like if they're not meeting?
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 03:46:10
      It may die.
    • 03:46:12
      It's a place, I don't know.
    • 03:46:15
      There's no there there.
    • 03:46:17
      You are so optimistic, Tim.
    • 03:46:19
      I know, but I'm just saying.
    • 03:46:23
      Seems to have died on the vine, from what I can tell, but anyway.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 03:46:29
      Well, I certainly have interest.
    • 03:46:30
      I certainly would invite others that might have interest, but I need some advice on what that looks like so we don't lose that thread.
    • 03:46:38
      Are you getting on an email chain or what?
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 03:46:41
      I think the key would be to, I think Andrew Bonshan right now is the chairman, so I would just get a hold of Andrew.
    • SPEAKER_19
    • 03:46:49
      Okay.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 03:46:49
      And you have his email address, so I can send that to
    • 03:46:52
      If you don't have it.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 03:46:53
      Please send it to the BAR and we can bring it up.
    • 03:46:56
      Who would like to do that?
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 03:46:58
      I'm still going to be involved with the, oddly enough, the lighting.
    • 03:47:01
      Because Andrew and I and Mark Schuyler and then Phil Ayano and some other people are all kind of trying to circle the wagons on that.
    • 03:47:11
      And we've been talking to Jeff about it as well.
    • 03:47:13
      So I don't think the lighting is more redundant.
    • 03:47:17
      And I also think that
    • 03:47:19
      At some point we really have to refire up the idea of a really live 3D model of the city that is keyed into GIS and also keyed into applications for these larger projects in particular.
    • 03:47:37
      So that got started and then basically we didn't have the money nor the manpower to continue.
    • Carl Schwarz
    • 03:47:46
      Tim wasn't with us.
    • 03:47:47
      Council I think has to approve
    • 03:47:49
      whoever from the BAR joins the place committee.
    • 03:47:53
      Yeah.
    • 03:47:54
      What was I sharing?
    • SPEAKER_17
    • 03:47:56
      I was just gonna if we're done talking about the place committee works like place committee.
    • 03:48:05
      Tim wasn't with us when we began our meeting.
    • 03:48:08
      So I just wanted to take this
    • 03:48:10
      opportunity to say that I really enjoyed working with Tim and Carl and we will definitely feel a void when they're not with us.
    • 03:48:20
      This is making me sad actually.
    • 03:48:22
      Thank you for everything that you guys have done to make me feel welcome since I got back on.
    • 03:48:27
      It's really a different BAR.
    • 03:48:29
      It's a different, I mean,
    • 03:48:30
      It's quite different.
    • 03:48:31
      I had a lot of kind of learning to do.
    • 03:48:33
      I still do.
    • 03:48:34
      So thank you for being great colleagues and having a sense of humor and treating applicants as kindly as you do.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 03:48:40
      Well, from my part, I can't believe it's been, I think it's been 11 years.
    • 03:48:48
      I mean, Fred kind of joined an emailing bill and kind of suckered me into it at Zocalo one night.
    • 03:48:56
      But
    • 03:48:59
      You know, in all honesty, I've really enjoyed it.
    • 03:49:02
      And, you know, like the one thing I really miss about my school days is, you know, not sort of having any sort of a teaching component to my life.
    • 03:49:11
      And there is that to this that, you know, talking with lay people and trying to figure out the best way to describe things and all that's a challenge.
    • 03:49:18
      And, you know, it's kind of fun, frankly.
    • 03:49:24
      And then talking to Jeff is obviously always fun.
    • 03:49:28
      That was fabulous.
    • 03:49:31
      And Jeff will be someday in our moments.
    • Jeff Werner
    • 03:49:34
      I'm getting there.
    • 03:49:37
      I turned 59 in two weeks, so I'm going to really be something different next year.
    • 03:49:42
      You know, Tim, Carl, I will say, I know last time when we had members step off the board, I did something special, but it doesn't seem the same over Zoom.
    • 03:49:54
      So I'm just saving that for, and we will get together when we get to theta.
    • 03:50:00
      or I don't know how many more letters were to go through.
    • 03:50:06
      We're all in uncharted territory, but I wanna just say Carl and Tim to you, it's certainly Jody and Frank, but Tim was at the party where I knew I probably had this job and someone was toasting Mary Joy.
    • 03:50:25
      saying, well, let me tell you the next person that takes this job and everyone was laughing and laughing.
    • 03:50:29
      And I'm like, well, that's probably going to be me.
    • 03:50:32
      So, but Tim, you and Carl kind of helped me along and Melissa just, just, just, you know, showing me the ropes.
    • 03:50:41
      And I appreciate that.
    • 03:50:42
      And you have been mentors, Carl, are you?
    • 03:50:45
      definitely in a lot of details and Tim certainly we're going to continue with this lighting thing and I'll just say we do have an opportunity with the new city management I'm very positive guys I feel I've gotten to know James is a forward-thinking person he has he wants to look over the horizon Sam Saunders and Ashley Marshall who are have come in as the assistant city managers are very committed and
    • 03:51:14
      And they're really great to work with.
    • 03:51:17
      And so I've been trying to talk to my colleagues in NDS and saying, we have an opportunity to to be part of this and, you know, and I want to encourage all of you and even
    • 03:51:32
      Tim and Carl not on the BAR to this opportunity with the zoning rewrite and how we implement the comprehensive plan is critical.
    • 03:51:42
      And I know that we have, because I've talked to the new leadership about
    • 03:51:48
      you know, a maintenance plan for the mall and a lighting plan for the entire city and things like that.
    • 03:51:52
      So we have opportunities to do it.
    • 03:51:55
      Just have to be persistent with it.
    • 03:51:57
      I, I, again, just, that's my, my thought of hope, but I just, Tim, Carl, thank you.
    • 03:52:01
      You guys have been fantastic.
    • 03:52:04
      I will thank you on another date in another way.
    • Carl Schwarz
    • 03:52:08
      I just want to say thank you guys for humoring me, putting up with me.
    • 03:52:12
      I know it could be a pain in the ass, but you guys have been great and I,
    • 03:52:16
      It's unfortunate that, you know, I miss the, you know, we'd go out and get beers after meetings in the past.
    • 03:52:22
      And, you know, I've seen all of you guys in person, but it's still just, yeah.
    • 03:52:29
      Hopefully you guys get to do that again.
    • 03:52:30
      Cause I think it makes it a lot better when the board can kind of hang out together and yeah.
    • 03:52:37
      But anyways, thank you.
    • 03:52:38
      And it's been great.
    • SPEAKER_07
    • 03:52:43
      Well, thanks to you guys.
    • 03:52:45
      We'll find time.
    • 03:52:46
      There's a lot to be said.
    • 03:52:47
      We'll find a moment to raise glass.
    • 03:52:51
      And thank you to everybody for all your contributions this year in Zoom world.
    • 03:52:56
      It's not insignificant.
    • 03:52:58
      And I think that the city is very, very lucky to have people that are giving this work this amount of time and consideration for
    • 03:53:09
      for very little pay and notoriety or fame or fortune.
    • 03:53:17
      Thank you.
    • 03:53:18
      And we'll meet again in the new year.
    • 03:53:22
      Last thing is that we will be welcoming three new folks in January.
    • 03:53:27
      So Robert, Jeff,
    • 03:53:29
      Cheri and everyone, let's think about making some time in the pre-meeting of our first meeting or otherwise to onboard those new members and for all of us to kind of collect ourselves as we set out into the new agenda in the next year.
    • Jeff Werner
    • 03:53:49
      We'll get that.
    • 03:53:50
      And I said, Melissa, I meant Melanie Miller, the other
    • 03:53:55
      person who was there at the meeting, the party with Tim.
    • 03:53:58
      But you're right, Breck, and we will do that.
    • 03:54:00
      I've already reached out to all three.
    • 03:54:02
      I encourage them to listen tonight.
    • 03:54:05
      Kind of worried that that might chase them away, but you do need to sit down with them or Zoom down with them and get to know them.
    • 03:54:11
      All right, y'all, thank you.
    • 03:54:13
      Have a safe holiday.
    • 03:54:15
      Wear your masks, get your booster, and happy holidays.
    • SPEAKER_11
    • 03:54:21
      Happy New Year.
    • SPEAKER_09
    • 03:54:24
      Bye, y'all.