The developer of a proposed mixed-use project at the Sprayberry Crossing shopping center is asking for a delay in a rezoning request for another month.
Kevin Moore, an attorney for Atlantic Residential, sent a letter on Wednesday to the Cobb Zoning Office asking for a continuance from the September calendar to October. Moore wrote that the delay “will allow additional time to continue working through concerns and questions expressed by area residents and homeowner representatives and present proposed agreeable stipulations.”
Continuance requests are generally granted by staff as long as they come at least a week before public hearings. The Cobb Planning Commission was scheduled to hear the Sprayberry Crossing case on Sept. 1.
Atlantic Residential wants to build 61,500 square feet of office and retail space (30,000 for a major grocer), 178 apartments, 122 senior-living apartments and 50 townhomes on more than 17 acres.
The developer also wants to build an open-air entertainment and food hall and incorporate walking trails and greenspace around an existing family cemetery.
The proposal is seeking a rezoning category called redevelopment overlay district (ROD), for the first time since it became a category in 2006.
Earlier this month Cobb Commissioner JoAnn Birrell held a virtual town hall providing information about the zoning process and the Sprayberry Crossing details in particular.
She told East Cobb News on Thursday that “I’m receiving emails both for and against the proposal. Keeping a tally.”
Many residents have pushed for an overhaul of the long-blighted retail center that’s there now—the property has been on the county’s redevelopment list.
But others are concerned about apartments going up in a community of single-family homes and additional traffic in the Sandy Plains and Piedmont Road corridor.
The ROD designation would mean that any development contained within does not set a precedent for the area surrounding a property that may be zoned that way.
At least 10 percent of the housing units in an ROD must be set aside for residents making no more than 80 percent of an area’s average median income.
Related content
- Sprayberry Crossing rezoning case scheduled for September
- Sprayberry Crossing developer holds virtual town hall
- Wesley Chapel rezoning request continued to September
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Keep East Cobb neighborhood oriented. No high rise apartments with low income in the middle of our neighborhoods. Save our property values and keep crime low.
Agree.
No apartments even if not low income.
Oppose high rise low income apartments near your homes. Keep property values high. This is not wanted in East Cobb.