Self-storage facility approved at former Mountain View ES site; Canton Road ‘blight’ case held

The Cobb Board of Commissioners voted 5-0 Tuesday to approve a request for a self-storage facility at the former Mountain View Elementary School site, despite opposition from some nearby residents.

The three-story building will be part of a mixed-use development on the 14-acre site on Sandy Plains Road that will include restaurants, shops and other retail businesses.

Some residents of the adjacent Cutters Gap subdivision complained that their privacy would be diminished, and there would be noise and other issues.

They also accused the developer of a “bait and switch” by not including the self-storage plans when the zoning for the full project was granted in October. However, the developer, Brooks Chadwick Capital, had to get a special land-use permit, which is required for self-storage facilities to be approved.

Kevin Moore, an attorney for Brooks Chadwick, reiterated that point, saying his clients still would have to have applied for the SLUP even if they had known at the time there was interest from a potential storage facility builder.

Additional stipulations proposed since the Cobb Planning Commission recommended approval earlier this month include a 42-foot height limit for the nearly 100,000-square-foot building, down from 45 feet.

Other restrictions include no overnight parking or vehicle idling, and limited hours for unloading, including none during overnight periods.

Brooks Chadwick also agreed to keep a 50-foot buffer between the development and nearby homes as part of the original zoning.

When some residents pointed out that there were more than a dozen storage facilities in the area, District 3 commissioner JoAnn Birrell said: “It’s free enterprise,” a subject that is “not what we’re here to consider” in a zoning matter.

The East Cobb Civic Association also spoke in favor of the SLUP, as it had for the redevelopment in general.

The commissioners agreed to hold another zoning case in Northeast Cobb, this one involving a proposal to improve a blighted property in the Canton Road corridor (previous East Cobb News coverage here) that has been delayed before.

Canton Road

PetroPlex ventures wants to rezone 0.87 acres at 2120 Canton Road, near the Canton Road connector, for a low-rise office building. It’s on the site of a gas station that closed in 2003 and has become increasingly deteriorated.

Tom Mitchell, an attorney for the applicant, presented revised plans for remodeling the building, including architectural and other changes recommended by the planning commission.

But Carol Brown of Canton Road Neighbors said the revised proposal doesn’t meet Cobb development standards and guidelines set forth in the Canton Road Corridor project.

Specifically, she objected that a canopy that was part of the gas station would remain, but the only proposed improvement to it would be a repainting.

The structure, she said, “needs more than a fresh coat of paint. . . . Please don’t ignore 13 years of community planning and investment” for improving what she called “one of the most blighted properties” on Canton Road.

Another contested East Cobb zoning case was withdrawn Tuesday. Robert Licata, a pediatrician, had proposed converting empty office space at Johnson Ferry Road and Lassiter Road for a restaurant, gym, medical offices and retail shops.

The planning commission recommended denial, saying that 37 proposed parking spaces wouldn’t be enough, and there was no rear loading space. Residents at the adjacent Lassiter Walk subdivision and the East Cobb Civic Association also were opposed.

 

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Redevelopment of blighted Canton Road property may be altered after zoning hearing

Canton Road

One of the ugliest blots along a Canton Road corridor that’s long been the subject of redevelopment efforts appears to be going away soon, but what will come in its place is uncertain.

The owner of an 0.87-acre parcel of land just north of the Canton Road Connector wants to convert a long-abandoned gas station into a kitchen and cabinet showroom, but after a Cobb Planning Commission meeting Tuesday, those plans might be in limbo.

Planning board member Judy Williams, who represents the Canton Road corridor, expressed frustration that the property owner hadn’t submitted detailed plans. Those include meeting design guidelines as part of the Canton Road Corridor Plan.

PetroPlex Joint Venture, the property owner, has not forwarded any renderings, and was to have included stipulations to remove the canopy and front signage from the old gas station.

PetroPlex had requested to rezone the land currently designated for general commercial (GC) to neighborhood retail commercial, or NRC (agenda item packet), since it had been vacant for so long.

Saying she “had high hopes” for the redevelopment of the property, Williams made a motion instead to recommend approval of a low-rise office category (LRO), and her motion passed 5-0.

The planning board’s vote is advisory. The Cobb Board of Commissioners will make a final decision on Dec. 19, but the case illustrates the challenges of cleaning up blighted properties along Canton Road.

Canton Road redevelopment
A former gas station at 2120 Canton Road (starred) is located within a Neighborhood Activity Center (NAC) future land use area.

The property at 2120 Canton Road has been vacant since 2003. Civic and business groups in the area didn’t like the rezoning request because of the lack of details.

While the former gas station has been “a true eyesore” in the community for years, Carol Brown of the Canton Road Neighbors civic association was troubled that no stipulation letters specified the canopy removal.

Her group drafted a letter including that request and asked for a prohibition against southbound turns onto Canton Road, limiting traffic to “a right in, right out” pattern.

Eric Hodge of PetroPlex said he has “spent a lot of money abating a nuisance,” telling the planning board he found out about the canopy removal request only on Tuesday. Fuel tanks from the old gas station were removed earlier this year, as the company acquired the land. Plans call for renovating and expanding the existing building for the showroom, which would be open from 8-5 Monday-Friday and employ 4-6 people.

He said keeping the canopy “is an integral part of the business,” and that he has been “trying to take a bad property and make it nice.”

Williams said she didn’t understand how leaving the canopy standing would have that effect. In her motion, she included language that it be removed, and that new signage fitting the design guidelines also be part of the site plan.

 

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