File #: O-350-20    Version: 1 Name:
Type: Ordinance Status: Second Reading
File created: 8/14/2020 In control: City Council
On agenda: 9/1/2020 Final action: 9/1/2020
Title: Granting a waiver of Toledo Municipal Code Section 1006.0100 Intensity and dimensional standards Table to allow a multi-dwelling project at 201 Knapp Street and 410-414 Wade Street, in the "RM36" Multi Dwelling Residential District, in the City of Toledo, Lucas County, Ohio; and declaring an emergency.
Attachments: 1. Audio: 8/25/2020 City Council Meeting
Label
Zoning & Planning Committee

Title
Granting a waiver of Toledo Municipal Code Section 1006.0100 Intensity and dimensional standards Table to allow a multi-dwelling project at 201 Knapp Street and 410-414 Wade Street, in the "RM36" Multi Dwelling Residential District, in the City of Toledo, Lucas County, Ohio; and declaring an emergency.

Body
SUMMARY & BACKGROUND:
The Park Hotel was constructed in 1909 and featured over one hundred (100) rooms, a bar, and a restaurant. It was built to serve passengers from the adjacent train station, as well as visitors of south Toledo. The hotel closed in 2001, with the bar and restaurant closing soon after. The site has changed owners several times since then, but has remained vacant since the early 2000s. The Park Hotel is located in the Middlegrounds Neighborhood, directly south of Downtown Toledo in between the Warehouse District and the Old South End. It is a neighborhood with several iconic features, including public art, popular restaurants, and historically significant structures. However, over the past few decades, it has also struggled with vacancies and blight.

LMHA is proposing to redevelop the site into forty (40) apartments catered to youth aging out of foster care. Per the Intensity and Dimensional Standards outlined in TMC?1106.0100, the maximum number of units permitted on the 0.5 acre site in RM36 Multi-Dwelling Residential is eighteen (18). RM36 Multi-Dwelling Residential is the Zoning District with the lowest square feet per unit allowed outside of Downtown. In order to meet density standards, a waiver must be obtained from City Council prior to redevelopment to allow the forty (40) units. Considering that the proposal will repurpose a 111 year old former hotel, that the Middlegrounds Neighborhood is an urban neighborhood, and that the Park Hotel once housed one hundred (100) rooms, redevelopment for high-density typically seen in the Downtown at the site would be in character with the neighborhood...

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