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Pressure Building in the Wilderness

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  • Pressure Building in the Wilderness

    FYI. It should be noted that the proposed development is not within the NPS boundaries of the Wilderness Battlefield. It is, however, less than a mile from NPS lands. For those familiar with the battlefield, this proposal of 850,000 sq. ft. of retail, and 500,0000 sq. ft. of office space, is located north of the intersection of Virginia Route 3 (Germanna Plank Road) and Virginia Route 20 (Orange Turnpike) -- behind the existing 7-11 store. This could result in tremendous traffic pressure on Route 20, as well as hasten the pace of sprawl in that part of Orange County. All of which could greatly affect the preserved portions of the Wilderness Battlefield.


    Huge retail center planned

    Orange supervisors support proposal for major business park off State Route 3

    BY ROBIN KNEPPER

    The Free Lance-Star [Fredericksburg, Va.]
    April 24, 2008

    Orange County supervisors got their first public look this week at a proposed 900-acre business park on State Route 3 that promises to bring major retailers and well-paying jobs.

    Most liked what they saw.

    Wilderness Crossing is proposed by Charles "Chip" King and his family, who own land on the north side of State Route 3 bordered by Wilderness Run, the dividing line between the northern tip of Orange and Spotsylvania counties.

    The concept plan calls for large retailers at the outer edge of the development; restaurants and small retailers in a modern, landscaped, village-center configuration; convenience retailers such as banks and gas stations; recreational amenities such as lakes, a YMCA and an amphitheater; and hundreds of thousands of square feet of private and government office space.

    The development would be built in phases over as many as 30 years. A hotel is envisioned as an early part of the project, as are a major retailer like Wal-Mart and a home-improvement store like Lowe's.

    Those behind the plan say no part of the project will be visible from Route 3. It would include a 200-foot green buffer and a limited-access road system that would keep traffic inside the complex.

    The project was presented to the supervisors by Orange County businessman Kenny Dotson and Zac Lette, a Williamsburg land planner hired by King to lay out the concept plan.

    The undeveloped property was purchased more than 40 years ago by the King family to be used for hunting. Over the years, King has unsuccessfully attempted to interest supervisors in a joint venture on the land.

    It now appears that the tide has turned, though.

    Supervisor Teri Pace, in whose district the land lies, was the only adamant opponent of the project. But if Tuesday night's meeting is any indication, her fellow supervisors are not interested in her idea that the land instead be used for a tourist hotel like the Homestead.

    "Nothing about this project is synonymous with rural," Pace said, who regularly opposes growth in the county. "This is what counties do when they want to urbanize."

    "That area was urbanized when Lake of the Woods and Wilderness Shores were built," countered board Chairman Mark Johnson. "There are 6,000 to 8,000 lots there. The people are already there. This project is just bringing services to them."

    Because the area along Route 3 has the highest population density in the county, supporters of the project think it will be a natural draw for businesses.

    "People will come from Culpeper and Spotsylvania to shop," said Johnson, "and the businesses will employ Orange County people and people who now travel out of the area for work."

    Supervisors Zack Burkett and Teel Goodwin were equally supportive of the concept.

    "The concept is a wonderful design," said Goodwin. "It's very green and well-contained off the highway."

    "Orange County needs a place for high-paid people to work," said Burkett. "I like the presentation and the concept."

    Assistant County Administrator Julie Jordan, who handles economic development for the county, also emphasized the jobs the project would bring.

    "Orange County citizens commute out of Orange County for work," she told the supervisors. "This is inconspicuous development that will reduce the out-migration for jobs."

    King sees the project as an answer to the longstanding but increasing problem of raising business-tax revenue to ease the dependence on real-estate and personal-property taxes.

    "The importance of this development is that it's the first major attempt to rectify the imbalance in the tax base in Orange County," he said. "This will allow the rest of the county to remain rural."

    "This is a project that will support our rural economy," Dotson, a local general contractor who lives in Locust Grove, told supervisors. "This is a long-range plan so we don't create a hodgepodge along Route 3."

    Most of the land is designated in the county's comprehensive plan for economic development. But it is zoned agricultural, so a rezoning would be required.

    The outer rim that borders Wilderness Run is designated agricultural conservation and is shown in the concept plan as a site for passive recreation.

    Dotson said rezonings would be sought as the phases are developed. He said he expects the first application for rezoning to come before the supervisors in the next six months.




    Eric
    Eric J. Mink
    Co. A, 4th Va Inf
    Stonewall Brigade

    Help Preserve the Slaughter Pen Farm - Fredericksburg, Va.

  • #2
    Re: Pressure Building in the Wilderness

    "Wilderness Crossing"

    I love the way developers name their alleged improvements after the predominant natural or historic feature that they intend to destroy...
    Just a private soldier trying to make a difference

    Patrick Peterson
    Old wore out Bugler

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Pressure Building in the Wilderness

      This is exactly like the proposed retail mall and associated space proposed for just outside the Manassas Battlefield (to the west) back in the early 90's. We beat that - perhaps we can beat this.

      Funny how nobody ever thinks about cars - as if the benign construction would simply sit behind the green belt and folks would magically appear and disappear.

      The key words in the article (thanks Eric) that will be used to mollify us is development "over 30 years." This reminds one of the boiled frog theory - turn the heat up quickly and the frog jumps out of the water. Turn it up slowly and the frog gets cooked before he realizes the water is hot.

      I am very happy to have the residential area within the Wilderness that is such an affront already remain a monument to poor planning and "get away from it all" thinking...and for those folks to continue to have to drive into Fredericksburg's Hwy 3 urban sprawl to get a cheeseburger or visit Wall Mart. And I seriously question whether any business currently there would want to go farther out based on this small but obnoxious residential footprint. The economics make no sense - more pie in the sky, "even out the tax base" folderol we have heard so many times before.

      CWPT and FOTWB are no doubt already working on puncturing this balloon. Lets get behind it.
      Soli Deo Gloria
      Doug Cooper

      "The past is never dead. It's not even past." William Faulkner

      Please support the CWT at www.civilwar.org

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Pressure Building in the Wilderness

        Big retailer may arrive before Orange is ready

        Developer files plan for major retail store in Orange, but proposed big-box ordinance could complicate matter

        BY ROBIN KNEPPER

        The Free Lance-Star [Fredericksburg, Va.]
        June 8, 2008

        It's a race in Orange County to see if a developer can get its plan for a large retail site approved before supervisors pass a big-box ordinance that would impose new standards on his project.

        JDC Ventures of Vienna submitted a site plan Wednesday for a 141,487-square-foot retail store. The proposed building would sit just off State Route 3, east of State Route 20. The plan does not identify the store, but county officials have been anticipating a Wal-Mart in that area.

        The store would occupy about 20 acres of a 50-acre site that stretches from Wilderness Run at the Spotsylvania County line toward Vaucluse Road. The property wraps around a 7-Eleven, a Wachovia bank and the Wilderness Center strip shopping mall.

        It is adjacent to the 900 acres proposed for the Wilderness Crossing business and retail development.

        "It's a very nice looking design," County Community Development Director David Grover said of the JDC Ventures' plan. "The building is very attractive."

        The site plan is close to being complete. The property is zoned commercial and only Grover's approval is needed to move the project forward.

        But there's a hitch.

        The Board of Supervisors, at its May 27 meeting, approved a draft amendment to the county's zoning ordinance that would require a special-use permit for any single retail building with a floor area of 60,000 square feet or more.

        The ordinance, drafted by Grover, contains standards for architecture, landscaping and screening, site lighting, signs, parking and circulation, pedestrian access and maintenance.

        "It will be good for Orange County to raise the bar and get a better quality of development," Grover said Friday.

        The board sent the draft ordinance to the Planning Commission, which met Thursday. At the urging of Supervisor Teri Pace, the commission substantially changed the draft ordinance--most notably reducing the minimum square footage requirement to 40,000--and sent it back to the supervisors.

        A public hearing on the draft ordinance originally requested by the supervisors is scheduled for Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. But if supervisors accept the Planning Commission's changes, they will have to advertise another public hearing.

        It doesn't look like that will happen, though, since four of the five supervisors wanted the larger minimum in the first place.

        Another change made by the Planning Commission includes applying the standards to multi-tenant buildings.

        County officials will not be meeting with JDC Ventures until June 11, the day after the supervisors are scheduled to vote on the proposed ordinance.

        That meeting is scheduled to discuss Virginia Department of Transportation requirements that just went into effect in Orange County this year. Some but not all of the requirements are addressed by the developer, but the project has not been scoped to VDOT's specifications, Grover said.

        "The traffic-impact analysis needs to meet the state's requirements," Gro-ver said.

        "If they don't have a complete application [to VDOT] by the time the ordinance is approved, they will need a special-use permit," he added.




        Eric
        Eric J. Mink
        Co. A, 4th Va Inf
        Stonewall Brigade

        Help Preserve the Slaughter Pen Farm - Fredericksburg, Va.

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Pressure Building in the Wilderness

          Orange rules on big-box retailers

          Orange supervisors pass big-box ordinance, with some details to be hashed out later

          BY ROBIN KNEPPER

          The Free Lance-Star [Fredericksburg, Va.]
          June 12, 2008

          Most Orange County supervisors showed little interest this week in discouraging big-box retailers with restrictive standards and requirements.

          The board members had different views on the proposed big-box ordinance they had originally sent to the Planning Commission for action. But even gutting the standards attached to it wasn't enough for Chairman Mark Johnson, who cast the only vote against it at Tuesday night's meeting.

          Supervisor Teri Pace wanted the restrictive ordinance that had been fashioned by the commission, but she realized it was opposed by her fellow supervisors.

          What the supervisors finally approved was a shadow of the original ordinance that had been put together hastily by Director of Community Development David Grover at the board's request.

          The approved ordinance will apply to any single-building retailer with more than 60,000 square feet of floor space. But the ordinance contains only two paragraphs, the first covering the building size and location and the second stating that a special-use permit and site plan are required to "generally meet the guidelines adopted by the Board of Supervisors."

          Those guidelines have not been proposed or adopted. However, Grover said he would transfer most of the standards he proposed originally for the ordinance into guidelines for the supervisors to consider at their June 24 meeting.

          The board's effort is seen as an attempt to control and set standards for large retailers looking to build in the northeastern corner of Orange County north of State Routes 3 and 20, just west of the Spotsylvania County border.

          Last week, JDC Ventures of Vienna submitted a site plan for a 141,487-square-foot retail store that many county officials assume to be a Wal-Mart.

          A rezoning request is expected from Charles "Chip" King for part of his proposed 900-acre Wilderness Crossing development by midsummer. The plan includes big-box retailers and office space, among other things.

          Neither development, however, has met the Virginia Department of Transportation's requirements for a traffic-impact analysis.

          The big-box ordinance went into effect on its adoption Tuesday night.

          Grover said yesterday that the site plan submitted last week met with most of the supervisors' desires for pleasing architecture, landscaping, signs and lighting. It does not provide buffering, however, an issue subject to great differences of opinion among supervisors that will be addressed at their next meeting.




          Eric
          Eric J. Mink
          Co. A, 4th Va Inf
          Stonewall Brigade

          Help Preserve the Slaughter Pen Farm - Fredericksburg, Va.

          Comment

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