Greenbelt Alliance home About Us What We Do Get Involved Resource Center Your Region Join Today!

Home > Resource Center > In the News Home > Greenbelt Alliance in the News

RESOURCE CENTER
· Introduction
· Press Room
· Reports
· Newsletters
· Links
   
RELATED LINKS
· Press Releases
· Greenbelt Alliance in Your Region
 

Sign up for the Greenbelt Newswire and Outings Calendar:




WWW SiteSearch

Greenbelt Alliance In the News

February 1, 2007

Officials seek input on growth

PITTSBURG: City leaders ask for public comment concerning rules that would shape future of development

Laurie Phillips


Pittsburg officials have released and are seeking public comment on 
two documents created to guide future decisions about growth in the 
southern hills, the city's last remaining area open for new development.

City officials crafted the proposed Hillside Development Ordinance and 
Hillside Design Guidelines after spending about a year studying 
regulations in more than two dozen communities in California, Colorado 
and Washington.

The ordinance outlines rules and restrictions on development above 500 
feet of elevation. The guidelines explain how grading should proceed 
and what buildings, fences and vegetation should look like, but they 
do not address the condition or stability of the soil in the region. 
The documents address density, ridge preservation and development 
standards for structures and neighborhoods.

"We did attempt to make the rules as clear and as workable as 
possible," said Bob Odland, a consultant who helped craft the 
documents and has studied hillside ordinances for 30 years. Other 
local cities with restrictions on hillside development include 
Lafayette and Orinda.

Odland said the purpose of Pittsburg's standards is to ensure new 
neighborhoods take shape appropriately, while keeping development as 
unobtrusive as possible and protecting the environment, to provide 
housing for the region's growing population.

No homes in Pittsburg are now built in the hills above 500 feet, 
although some in Discovery Builders' San Marco subdivision approach 
that mark. If the Contra Costa County Local Agency Formation 
Commission next year approves annexing close to 1,600 acres of land in 
that region into the city, development on the Montreux, Faria and 
Thomas Ranch properties would be subject to the restrictions. The 
acreage, owned by the Seeno and Thomas families, could collectively 
hold as many as 1,800 new homes.

Topics that generated a lot of discussion among those assembling the 
standards, Odland said, included preserving views, natural topography 
and environmental habitats; minimizing grading to maintain existing 
slopes; and integrating fire-resistant vegetation into the landscape.

The documents are of particular interest to Concord, whose officials 
have said that they want to make sure any development proposed on the 
Los Medanos Hills, those between that city and Pittsburg, "is 
sensitive to the natural topography and protects viewsheds from 
throughout Concord," Mayor Mark Peterson said in mid-January in a 
letter to officials in both cities.

"Our residents have some concerns about what that might look like as 
that area gets developed," Peterson said later of new homes in the 
hills.

Christina Wong of Greenbelt Alliance said the environmental group is 
glad to see the standards considered before the land to be affected by 
them is annexed into the city. But the group still doesn't think 
Pittsburg is ready, she added, to build higher in the hills.

"Maybe you won't see the houses, but I'm sure Pittsburg residents will 
feel the effects on their daily lives of this increased development," 
Wong said. "We just have a lot of concerns about whether this is going 
too fast, and we would like to see the process slow down to include 
more public input."

Contra Costa County planner Pat Roche reviewed Pittsburg's proposed 
ordinance and said it takes an approach similar to the county's 
longtime regulations.

"This establishes clear policy as to what is acceptable and what the 
parameters are," Roche said. "I think it provides pretty good guidance 
to city staff, the planners and developers."



FOR MORE INFORMATION

To obtain a copy of Pittsburg's proposed Hillside Development 
Ordinance and Hillside Design Guidelines, visit the city's Web site, 
www.ci.pittsburg.ca.us, and click on the "Public Reviews" section.

Comments on the documents will be accepted through Feb. 16, and should 
be sent to planner Kristin Vahl at kvahl@ci.pittsburg.ca.us; or 65 
Civic Ave., Pittsburg, CA, 94565. Her phone number is 925-252-6941.

People also can offer their thoughts March 19 at a public workshop 
with the Planning Commission and the City Council.

###

 

  Home | About Us | What We Do | Get Involved | Resource Center | Your Region | Join Today 

©1995-2006 Greenbelt Alliance, 631 Howard Street, Suite 510, San Francisco CA 94105, 415.543.6771, info@greenbelt.org