Agenda 02-22-24 CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH
PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT BOARD
MEETING AGENDA
DATE: Tuesday, February 22, 2022 TIME: 6:30 PM
PLACE: City Hall Commission Chambers, 100 E. Ocean Avenue
1. Pledge of Allegiance
2. Roll Call
3. Agenda Approval
4. Approval of Minutes
4.A. Approve board minutes from the 01/25/22 Planning & Development Board meeting.
5. Communications and Announcements: Report from Staff
6. Old Business
7. New Business
7.A. Approve request for a Community Design Appeal (CDPA 22-001) of Chapter 4, Article III,
Section 6.F.2.d "Integrated Garages", requiring habitable floor area to wrap all upper levels of the
parking structure where the structure has street frontage, in order to disguise the garage's facade
and maximize design compatibility for the Broadstone Boynton Beach project proposed for 212 S.
Federal Highway. Applicant: Steven Scaggs, DSS Properties L.C.
7.B. Approve request for Major Site Plan Modification (MSPM 22-001) to amend the previously
approved site plan with the proposed changes contained herein for the Broadstone Boynton
Beach project to allow construction of a mixed-use development consisting of an eight (8)-story
building with 274 dwelling units, 13,110 square feet of commercial space, associated recreational
amenities, and parking on a 2.76 acre site within the Downtown District. Applicant: Steven
Scaggs, DSS Properties L.C.
Approve request for Major Master Plan Modification (MPMD 22-002) for Broadstone Boynton
Beach to amend the previously approved master plan with the proposed revisions to the concurrent
Major Site Plan Modification Application, located at the northeast corner of SE 2nd Avenue and
Federal Highway, extending north to one block south of Ocean Avenue and Federal Highway,
extending south to SE 2nd Avenue and east to approximately SE 6th Street, in the Mixed-Use
Core (MU-C) zoning district. Applicant: Steven Scaggs, DSS Properties L.C.
7.C. Approve requests for Major Site Plan Modification (MSPM 21-001) and Conditional Use (COUS
21-001) approval for Raising Cane's Restaurant including a new 2,771-square foot building with
dual drive-through facilities and 68 seats (50 indoor, 18 outdoor) on a BJ's Wholesale
Club outparcel located at 1550 West Boynton Beach Boulevard within the Planned Commercial
Development (PCD) zoning district. Applicant: Kristina Belt, Kimley Horn &Associates.
8. Other
9. Comments by members
10. Adjournment
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The Board may only conduct public business after a quorum has been established. If
no quorum is established within fifteen minutes of the noticed start time of the meeting,
the City Clerk or her designee will so note the failure to establish a quorum and the
meeting shall be concluded. Board members may not participate further even when
purportedly acting in an informal capacity.
Notice
Any person who decides to appeal any decision of the planning and development board
with respect to any matter considered at this meeting will need a record of the proceedings
and for such purpose may need to ensure that a verbatim record of the proceeding is made,
which record includes the testimony, and evidence upon which the appeal is to be based. (f.
S. 286.0105) The city shall furnish appropriate auxiliary aids and services where necessary
to afford an individual with a disability an equal opportunity to participate in and enjoy the
benefits of a service, program, or activity conducted by the city. Please contact the City
Clerk's office, (561) 742-6060, at least forty-eight (48) hours prior to the program or activity in
order for the city to reasonably accommodate your request.
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4.4.A.
Approval of Minutes
2/22/2022
CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH
AGENDA ITEM REQUEST FORM
PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT MEETING DATE: 2/22/2022
REQUESTED ACTION BY PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT BOARD: Approve board minutes from
the 01/25/22 Planning & Development Board meeting.
EXPLANATION OF REQUEST:
HOW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES?
FISCAL IMPACT:
ALTERNATIVES:
STRATEGIC PLAN:
STRATEGIC PLAN APPLICATION:
CLIMATE ACTION APPLICATION:
Is this a grant?
Grant Amount:
ATTACHMENTS:
Type Description
D Minutes 01/25/22 Minutes
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MINUTES
PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT BOARD
' 100 E. OCEAN AVENUE, BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA
TUESDAY, JANUARY 25, 2022, 6:30 P.M.
PRESENT: STAFF:
Trevor Rosecrans, Chair Mike Rumpf, Planning & Zoning Administrator
Butch Buoni, Vice Chair Amanda Radigan, Principal Planner
Tim Litsch Andrew Meyer, Senior Planner
Darren Allen James Cherof, City Attorney
Thomas Ramiccio Leslie Harmon, Prototype-Inc.
Jay Sobel, Alternate
Chris Simon (arrived at 6:38 p.m.)
ABSENT:
Kevin Fischer
GUEST—None.
The meeting was called to order at 6:31 p.m.
1. Pledge of Allegiance
2. Roll Call
Roll was called and it was determined a quorum was present.
3. Agenda Approval
Motion made by Vice Chair Buoni, seconded by Mr. Litsch,to move Item 7C before Item 7A. In a voice
vote, the agenda was unanimously approved (7-0).
4. Approval of Minutes
4.A. Approve board minutes from the 11/23/2021 Planning & Development Board meeting.
Motion made by Mr. Allen, seconded by Vice Chair Buoni, to approve the November 23, 2021 meeting
minutes. In a voice vote, the minutes were unanimously approved. (7-0).
5. Communications and Announcements: Report from Staff
Mr. Rumpf, Planning and Development Administrator advised that he heard from Mr. Fischer via
telephone, who stated he would be absent. He reported two previous items were passed by the
Commission: Development of Land and the Ruskin Avenue Annexation.
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6. Old Business -None.
7. New Business
Note: Items 7A and 7B were combined and heard after Item 7C. Item 7B was discussed first.
7A. Approve request for 1320 S. Federal Highway Height Exception (HTEX 22-001) to allow
tower elements and architectural features to be constructed at 54'-10"in height,9'-10"above
the maximum allowable height of 45 feet in the MU-1 (Mixed Use-1) Zoning District.
Applicant: TY Eriks MJ Jackson Holdings, LLC.
Bradley Miller, with Urban Design Studio, was present on behalf of the applicant. He requested support
for the elevator shaft and stairwell to access the rooftop.
Motion was made by Mr. Sobel, and seconded by Mr. Litsch, to approve Item 7A, request for a height
extension. In a roll call vote, the motion failed. (2-5)
Ayes: Litsch, Allen
Nays: Buoni, Simon, Ramiccio, Sobel, Rosecrans
7B. Approve request for New Major Site Plan (NWSP 22-002) and Master Plan Modification
(MPMD 22-004) for 1320 S. Federal Highway to allow the construction of a 10,898-square-
foot structure and associated site improvements, on a 0.51-acre parcel, located at the
southeast corner of S. Federal Highway and Riviera Drive, in the MU-1 (Mixed Use-1)
Zoning District. Applicant: Ty Eriks, MJ Jackson Holdings, LLC.
Bradley Miller, with Urban Design Studio, was present on behalf of the applicant. He provided a brief
history of the site and noted that the previous owner of the property did not renew the Site Plan. The new
owner purchased the property in February unknowing that the Site Plan had expired. They are requesting
Site Plan approval for the approval granted in 2018 for the same 10,898-square-foot,three-story building,
and the height exception. In December, they submitted the same application package that was done in
2018 for approval, then staff reviewed it for Codes that might have changed since that time and might
alter the plan. There are 32 parking spaces on the site and 13 parallel spaces,which were approved along
Riviera Drive. The applicant is a dentist and who is taking the third floor and maybe some of the second
floor, depending on how his growth plan goes,but he can lease out the second floor and ground floor. In
reviewing the plan, the building needed to be shifted to the east by 2.5 feet due to a Code change. In
doing that, they had to shift some parking, so one Handicap parking space was moved to the south side.
It was noted the prior plan had some compact spaces and a motorcycle space,which are standard spaces,
plus two Handicap spaces. In doing the shift, one parking space was lost,but they are still one space over
the required 43;they have a total of 44 parking spaces. They also needed to enlarge some of the landscape
islands; the ones in the middle of the parking lot were eight feet and now they are ten feet, so that played
into the configuration as well. A four-foot sidewalk was approved, which would be constructed along
Riviera Drive and staff requested it be changed to five feet. Those changes were made and that is the Site
Plan before the Board. Additional updates were described, and a brief overview of the Site Plan was
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given. There was a meeting with neighbors and another meeting will be arranged with residents along
Riviera Drive and Snug Harbor. He highlighted key points from the meeting as follows:
• Location of the driveway.
• Requirement to put a sidewalk on both sides of Riviera Drive. The pavement is offset, and South
Harbor residents are concerned the sidewalk may come close to the entry wall or hedge. This will
be done through review by staff, but it is not something they are opposed to.
• Parking along Riviera Drive and on-street parking. There is a list of criteria that must be met for
on-street parking, one of which is design approval by the City Engineer.
• On-street parking is often used as a traffic calming factor.
• A use list was submitted prior to the packets going out, and uses they felt were not suitable were
removed. They will continue working with neighbors before going to the Commission.
The applicant is requesting the Board re-support approval of the major Site Plan for the 10,878-square-
foot, three-story building, uses that are not part of the Site Plan application, but are on the plan, and the
height exception to allow the elevator shaft and stairwells to allow roof access.
Chair Rosecrans opened discussion to the public.
Susan Hoyer, 140 SW 27th Way, is in favor of the plan; however, she had an issue with the height
exception. She mentioned environmental concerns,as well as landscape,electric car chargers,not enough
canopy trees, and the pavement. She requested the Board vote yes on Item B and no on Item A.
Harriet Snyder, 630 Riviera Drive, indicated that residents are concerned about the proposed
ingress/egress from Riviera Drive since it is primarily a residential street; they would like other options
to be considered. There is already a problem with the volume of traffic and speeding. She expressed
concern regarding parallel parking spaces, especially on the southbound side,traffic stacking on Riviera
Drive, the length of the turn lane on Federal Highway, and the amount of traffic once the condominium
is built. There are also concerns about the liquor store potential, the restaurant with evening hours, and a
drug and alcohol treatment counseling facility. They would like to see daytime hours only as well as "No
Parking"signage so there is no overnight parking. In addition to lights and cameras on the building,they
need to be in the parking lot. She mentioned potential flooding issues, transient people, trash, and
construction concerns regarding trucks, debris, hours, and where parking will be during that time. She
submitted a list to be incorporated into the public record,which was provided to the Planning and Zoning
Administrator.
Linda Warton,lives on Riviera Drive, and is the President of Colonial Center Condominium Association.
She spoke on behalf of the Condominium residents and noted there is a concern the new building will
block their sign on the street. They need assistance moving the sign or making it visible. They are also
concerned about overflow parking, the roof deck, parties and noise, the use of retail space, if there will
be a bus station, and encouraged outdoor activities.
Kathleen Henderson, 654 Riviera Drive, expressed concern regarding traffic obstruction and bike riding.
She does not think there is a need for street parking.
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Tom Ward, 650 Riviera Drive, asked City Attorney Cherof if this item could be postponed until they can
secure legal counsel and expert testimony to review the plans in more detail. He noticed a few things
that do not look to scale and expressed concern regarding traffic. He understands this is a residential
roadway and asked how to find the difference between a residential roadway and a local roadway.
City Attorney Cherof stated that he will provide an answer at the appropriate time, if the Board wants to
take up that kind of issue.
Mr. Simon acknowledged what happens at this meeting does not dictate what happens with the
Commission.
Chair Rosecrans advised this Board is advisory and members are volunteers with different levels of
expertise. Whether they vote yes or no, the journey of this agenda item continues.
Mr. Ward questioned if any of the Board members would be available to tour the site and several Board
members replied they are familiar with the area.
Candy Killian, 642 Riviera Drive,thanked the Board members for their service. She stated the objection
with this project is three-fold; there will be parallel parking on Riviera Drive, access to the project will
add a fourth point of ingress and egress to Riviera Drive, the access point is too close to the part of
Riviera Drive that goes to the single-family homes; Riviera Drive is a dead-end street that services three
communities, which is approximately 500 residents, and vehicles are already using Riviera Drive to get
to their homes or offices. They request parallel parking be eliminated from Riviera Drive,reduce the size
of the building by the square footage necessary to eliminate the 13 parallel parking spaces, and that the
site be self-contained with access to the commercial building be off Federal Highway and not a residential
street. She provided a picture of a building located at 709 South Federal Highway that has an entrance
through the building with parking in the back; that site would be a compromise that might work.
Bill Fritts, 652 Castillo Lane, seconded everything that has been said. This is a residential neighborhood,
and he is not trying to stand in the way of progress, but there are considerations. They are not opposed
to Commercial, they need it and like it, but it needs to be consistent with the preponderance of the
community, which is residential.
Jason Lazelle, 647 Riviera Drive, mentioned the fourth floor and noted that people will be looking down
and watching people in their pools. He thinks the height ratio needs to be lowered without adding an
upstairs area. If the elevator is an issue, maybe the stairs could be used.
Captain Jeffrey Hofberger, 643 Riviera Drive, commented that the roundabout, drainage, and speeding
need to be fixed and there needs to be an additional speed bump. He is not in favor of the height variance.
Keith Thompson,644 Riviera Drive,agreed with everything said.He expressed concern regarding traffic,
street parking, ingress and egress, and height.
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Ted Koson, 624 Snug Harbor Drive, agreed with everyone. He noted people are using Snug Harbor
parking and he believes a four-story building will be an eyesore.
Ernest Mignoli, 710 NE 7t' Street, commented that every time these developments are constructed it
destroys the neighborhoods east of Federal Highway.
Mr. Miller addressed parking concerns and stated this is not a residential road designation. The rooftop
bar is not part of the proposal; access to the roof was at most offered to employees. There was a
suggestion to eliminate elevator use and encourage use of the stairwell;the height exception is necessary
for both, and the access location is appropriate. They are working on a Conditional Use of businesses.
They will look at the residential community, but the community is behind a Commercial Zoning area,
and the Mixed-Use is following the CRA Code.
Harriet Snyder, resident, urged the Planning and Development Board postpone this decision so staff can
work to address the issues brought forth and incorporate resolution of the issues into a revised Site Plan
with a smaller building and parking spaces staying within their site.
Mr. Miller indicated one of the common discussion points was about parallel parking. The application
process is to comply with the Code, which staff has reviewed, and they consider the plan to be in
compliance. This is not a Conditional Use situation; parallel parking spaces are allowed and count
towards parking for a development. Regarding residential roads, he did not know if there is a residential
road classification; he used local road in the letter provided because it matches with the diagram in the
City's Code to match the cross section for the roadway and it complies. The rooftop bar is not part of the
proposal, access is to get to the rooftop, and originally the application was considering yoga classes. At
the most, employees would be allowed to go on the rooftop during restricted hours. There is a comment
about eliminating the elevator and using the stairwell; however, a height exception is needed for either
one. The stacking and access location is the same location as it was from IHOP and it is there for a reason.
From a Planning standpoint, it is a practice to try to separate the driveway from the main intersection; it
is a traffic and Planning design they look at when planning. There were a few things about the use of a
liquor store, restaurant, and counseling, but as mentioned, a list was provided and they have not had an
opportunity to get with them. They would be happy to work on that list and come up with a condition
that is agreeable to both sides. Regarding blocking the Colonial Center sign, they will look at that and if
something needs to be done, they will work with them. There is a residential community behind the
Commercial properties on Federal Highway. It had C-3 Zoning before, which allowed the not wanted
uses, and Mixed-Use is following the Code as to what the CRA Redevelopment Plan proposed in 2017,
which the Commission has followed. They believed everything submitted is a good plan, it meets the
Code, and complies with all the rules and regulations of the Code.
City Attorney Cherof asked if the Board wants his opinion regarding the authority to table. The Board
does not have the authority to table and the Code is clear that only the City Commission can table a
proposed Development Order. The process described that this Board is advisory and reports to the
Commission, which would be another Quasi-Judicial Hearing, where they have the opportunity to table
at that point.
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Mr. Ramiccio mentioned parking and questioned if it is customary for the City to allow the calculation
for parking on on-street parking. He asked if staff would encourage on-street parking.
Mr. Rumpf indicated it is a new section of Code to promote use of on-street parking. He noted there is
on-street parking where preexisting parking exists up against a new development. He would encourage
on-street parking; it is a local street. This project is planned for this type of use, and this is not the only
location on Federal Highway where there is a Commercial Use in between the highway and a single-
family neighborhood. The height is respectful of that, and they are sensitive to setbacks and separations.
Mr. Ramiccio asked if it is possible to remove the parapet wall to make it come into compliance with the
height restriction; he wants the City to comply with height and parking. He realized they were looking
at the CRA Plan from 2017, but it might be time to revisit that Plan.
Mr. Rumpf stated they might be able to get a cross section of the elevation.
Mr. Miller advised it is both the elevator shaft and the stairwell. The roof deck is below 45 feet, which
is how the height is measured. It is a flat roof except for the elevator shaft and stairwells. The portions
they are asking for a height exception are for the elevator shaft to be able to go up there and have access
as well as the stairwells.
Chair Rosecrans questioned the purpose of the stairwell going to the roof and if a roof hatch would
suffice.
Mr. Miller stated the elevator going to the roof is for access and he thought some was for the architectural
feature and symmetry.
Mr. Sobel questioned if they considered not having an elevator to the fourth floor and if the elevator was
needed if the roof was not being used for any type of interaction. He asked if the elevator and doors
would be ADA compliant and if this plan or a different plan with changes would be presented. He also
questioned the impact and what would happen to the project if parking could not be counted.
Mr. Miller stated they have not gotten to that level of design on the doors. They might revisit elevator
access to the fourth floor if it is not approved; there are options for continuation and access. Regarding
the elevator, the shaft needs to go a little above to be able to get to the third level stop, so the shaft is
designed to be able to provide roof access. The architect would have to develop a design for the elevator
and shaft to keep it from going to the fourth floor and they would have to look at how access to the fourth
floor would be achieved. He did not have an answer as to which plan would be developed. As far as
parking, square footage would be reduced to 2,600 square feet. He spoke to the applicant to see if they
would be aggregable to a condition to restrict hours to employees.
Mr. Sobel questioned if this plan would be presented to the City Commission or if they would also
provide a long list.
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Mr. Miller stated they have not talked about that. This plan is part of the application so it will move
forward. He did not know if they had an alternative plan for the height exception component.
Mr. Litsch questioned if there would be electric charging stations and if they could be charged
simultaneously or if it would be sequential. He noted there is an abandoned FP&L utility and asked what
that was earmarked for and if it is being allocated.
Mr. Miller advised both spaces are charged, and they are anticipating doing two more in addition to the
two on the plan. The FP&L utility is an above-ground powerline, which basically goes nowhere.
Mr. Simon discussed the City Code regarding on-street parking, height restriction,parapet, architectural
features, and rooftop equipment. This project can be great without the fourth floor. He thinks the
configuration of the building can be redesigned; it can be a staggered building offset. He is against the
position of the building. The building is blocking signage to the neighbor on the north and he does not
think it is fair. He noted that traffic calming causes more damage to vehicles. He asked about landscape
open space requirements and mentioned rental space under an overhang. He requested the applicant
reconsider the design.
Amanda Radigan, Principal Planner, advised this is where there is existing Zoning on the ground as well
as a Redevelopment Plan that is shifting the design. It still requires the site to be re-approved in a new
location, but they are putting some flexibility into the Codes recognizing there will be some shifting as
this area is implemented.
Mr. Simon questioned if they would have to apply for a new sign since the situation is blocking an existing
sign,which adds unforeseen costs to the property owner. He mentioned FDOT will not allow the curb cut
on the west side based on the proximity to Riviera Drive itself. He questioned the distance and asked if
they can push that towards the north end of the property and if it would give enough distance.
Ms. Radigan acknowledged shifting as the CRA Plan is implemented. The existing building would need
to apply for a new sign location.
Brian Kelly, Traffic Engineer for Simmons & White, explained the FDOT requirement is 245 feet. By
spacing 245 feet from Riviera Drive, he thinks the whole frontage is 100 feet maximum.
Mr. Simon questioned if setting the curb cut at the southwest portion of the property line is an option.
Mr. Kelly stated it would be a poor engineering and planning practice,typically driveways are as far away
from major arterial roadways as possible. The location shown to the far east is the best design,particularly
for any kind of stacking and maneuverability; from a design and safety perspective, this is the best
approach. In his experience, speed bumps cause damage to the vehicles that use it the most; roundabouts
might be a better traffic calming solution because it is flush. He mentioned the length of the required
landscape open space percentage on the site, and noted it is not shown on the plan.
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Ms. Radigan commented that the City Engineering Department has similar regulations as FDOT as to how
close the driveway could be.
The Landscape Architect did not have the exact calculations; his recollection was that there was no
minimum pervious and impervious; it comes down to a design standpoint.
Mr. Rumpf stated it is a factor of drainage requirements. The islands and green space are a factor of
numbered spaces and sizes of the trees required. The City has some green standards, but the Code only
requires landscape islands, buffers, and tree count based on the number of spaces.
Ms. Radigan indicated only the District requires small buffers and there is not an across-the-board
standard for all Districts.
Mr. Sobel stated for the record that he would vote against the height variance. He hopes when this is
presented to the City Commission that they at least consider an option without the fourth-floor elevator
and stairwell.
Vice Chair Buoni commended residents for their input and asked them to raise their hand if they attended
the 2018 Board meeting. He noted that the Board does listen to what is said.
Chair Rosecrans mentioned the Art Museum and thought as part of past approval, art is going to be
provided by the owner. He questioned if there is currently a source for the art.
Mr. Miller stated he has a several colored Site Plans. He did not think the applicant has an art collection,
but it is something they will work on to find a connection.
Chair Rosecrans commented that the stairwell and elevator seem to be the need. If they got rid of the
stairwell and put in a roof hatch, the parapet would be within Code and the equipment for the elevator
could be reduced.
Mr. Miller indicated the height exception would be a consistent line across the top parapet line without
the components going above it. He noted that 45 feet goes to the roof deck and then there is an extra five
feet for the parapet.
Chair Rosecrans mentioned the need for the stairwell and the elevator maintenance room and asked if
they would stop the height exception and move forward with the Site Plan. He asked if improvements
were done to Riviera Drive in the previous Site Plan and if there were any conditions.
Mr. Miller stated the section that runs along the frontage of the property would be modified to help with
drainage; it is exfiltration, and it all falls to the catch basis on Riviera Drive. The drainage issue is going
to the right place; there is currently no system on the property, so everything runs to that spot.
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Motion was made by Mr. Sobel, and seconded by Mr. Litsch, to approve Item 713, the Site Plan for
construction at 1320 South Federal Highway. In a roll call vote,the motion passed with Mr. Simon, Mr.
Allen, and Mr. Ramiccio in opposition. (4-3).
Ayes: Rosecrans, Buoni, Litsch, Sobel
Nays: Simon, Allen, Ramiccio
Chair Rosecrans asked that the Board entertain a condition of approval that the stairwell and elevator
equipment be removed, and the height be reduced.
City Attorney Cherof indicated a condition of approval was not necessary.
Note: There was a recess between Items 7A and 7B at 8:46 p.m. The meeting resumed at 8:53 p.m.
Note: Item 7C was heard prior to Items 7A and 7B.
7C. Approve WXEL request for Future Land Use Map Amendment (LUAR-22-001) from
Recreation (R) to Office Commercial (OC), and Rezoning from Recreation (REC) to Office
Professional (C-1), property located at 3401 South Congress Avenue. Applicant: Gene H.
Talley, South Florida PBS, Inc.
Bradley Miller, with Urban Design Studio, representing WXEL, spoke on behalf of the applicant. The
current Land Use and Zoning is Recreation instead of the Office Building and the application is to change
the Land Use and Zoning to an Office designation. At some part of this application,the proposed Site Plan
Amendment is staff approval, but they need the Land Use and Zoning change to clean up the Land Use
Map and Zoning Map to reflect the current present uses; the Map currently shows Recreational. The
change to the Land Use will be from Recreational to Office Commercial, which would bring the use that
has been there for 30 years to be consistent with the Land Use as mentioned. The same follows with the
Zoning Map, which they are requesting be changed from Recreation to Office Professional for the same
reason. He cannot show a Site Plan because they still have to go through that process, but they are adding
about a 7,000-square-foot addition to the front of the building,which will add additional space that could
be used by the community for different events. A 3-1) dome is shown, which they are putting inside to be
used for school field trips.
Chair Rosecrans opened the item for public comments.
Mr. Sobel mentioned the property currently has a restriction on the deed, which says it is used to be used
for Recreation and TV stations. He questioned if the future issue of the Cultural Arts Center is consistent
with the restriction on the deed.
Mr. Rumpf stated it is all still part of the bypassing station.
Mr. Sobel commented that while on the Zoning Board up north,they avoided spot zoning; they would not
spot zone a particular site to make it different than the north,south,or west side. The north is a recreational
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area, the south is a plain unit community, and the west is a plain unit community. He stated if the Zoning
is changed, the future property own.er would be allowed to build a Commercial four-story building
imposing on a plain community of one-story homes. He objects and does not understand why staff is
supporting this. If they grant the variance to build what they want,nothing will restrict them from anything
they want to do in compliance with the deed restriction, but they will never have to see a three-story
building. He asked the Board to vote no based on a variety of reasons; he thinks this would be a bad move
on the future of that area and there is nothing to gain by the residents or the current property owner.
Chair Rosecrans asked for a staff response.
Mr. Rumpf indicated the variance process in their regulations does not apply to uses, so someone cannot
get a variance to deviate from Zoning Districts. Under the current Zoning Use, even if there is an
underlying deed restriction, a clean switch will allow the expansion. The maximum height in C-I is 30
feet. Regarding spot zoning, in his professional opinion, it is a different Zoning District to those around it
and he referenced Case Law.
Mr. Sobel stated he drove around the property and noted there is a building in the back that looks to be a
few stories, which he assumed was 20 feet with no windows overlooking the residential homes. He did
not see the gain to the community and thinks neighboring sites would be offended by someone building a
30-foot building with windows overlooking their backyards, as their right to privacy is violated. He
suggested staff consider giving the TV Station what they want, let them build the Center as a valuable
addition,without exposing the community and residents to a possible undesirable scenario. He questioned
if the TV Station wants the change and if they requested the change.
Mr. Miller advised that the TV Station wants to follow the City's regulations, Land Use Plan,
Comprehensive Plan, and the Zoning Code. The variance is not the appropriate procedure according to
City regulations. To change the use would require another Public Hearing with a proposed plan and an
opportunity for the public to speak. This request is to take what is currently there and bring it into
compliance with the Comprehensive Plan and Zoning Plan.
Mr. Sobel reiterated he does not find anything about this applicable and he will vote no on this. He does
not think it is asking too much of the City to have them come back and let the public speak. Residents in
Plantation Isles are in favor of the building, but their biggest concern is what the future has in store for
them, which is unknown. By adopting the measure tonight, they are exposing the public to the vague
reason of the future. He does not think it is necessary and he believes they can accomplish everything they
want by giving them the variance and letting them do whatever they want with the building, and then there
will be no objection.
Mr. Miller asked City Attorney Cherof if there is a way to condition the Zoning. He also asked if a
variance application is a way to resolve nonconforming.
City Attorney Cherof advised that is not the issue before the Board, they have a specific agenda item in
front of them that does not contain that component. In his opinion, this is not the way to resolve
nonconforming.
Page 13 of 91
Meeting Minutes
Planning and Development Board
Page 11 January 25, 2022
Chair Rosecrans questioned how this affects the Deed restriction.
City Attorney Cherof replied it does not.
Chair Rosecrans mentioned they would still be restricted to non-profit.
City Attorney Cherof stated that is correct, the Deed restriction is only affected by the Board or
Commission's action on this agenda item.
Mr. Simon asked Mr. Miller if he was saying they could not change their desire by requesting a variance
to build a one-story building.
City Attorney Cherof replied he was not saying that at all;he said the item before the Board is appropriate
to dispose.
Mr. Simon questioned if they still had an option to come back or if their option was cut off from coming
back to request a variance to build a one-story building or a Cultural Center in the future.
City Attorney Cherof indicated in his opinion a variance would not be a suitable matter to become before
the Board for what they want to accomplish.
Mr. Simon commented that they do not know what the future Site Plan is, and he wanted to be clear that
they are not able to make any changes without changing Zoning. Based on current Zoning, they cannot
make changes without Site Plan approval. He questioned what the requirements would be for the Site
Plan to provide for safety and noise.
Mr. Miller advised they are not expanding parking anywhere to the north, parking is on the west side
closer to the lake immediately to the west. The addition is proposed on the front side of the building on
the east side, so there is no significant change to the northern side.
Mr. Litsch mentioned that the property was transferred by the City of Boynton Beach to South Florida
Public Television and the Deed Restriction was put in the Deed as a perpetual restriction that would go
to all subsequent Deeds. Even if the property were sold to someone who would not observe the Deed
Restriction, he asked if the City would have recourse against that party. He questioned why it has taken
from 1986 to 2019 to catch this.
Mr. Rumpf indicated staff can only put so much effort into cleaning up certain things. He noted there
was action on development in 2019.
Chair Rosecrans opened discussion to the public.
Ernest Mignoli, 710 NE 7t' Street, Boynton Beach, also known as Harbor Hall, commented that most of
what happens in Boynton Beach directly or indirectly affects where he lives. His experience is even if
this Board votes no, it goes back to the Mayor,the Commission, and the City Attorney, and they approve
it anyway.
Motion was made by Mr. Litsch, and seconded by Mr. Ramiccio,to approve Item 7C. In a roll call vote,
the motion passed with Mr. Sobel in opposition. (6-1)
Page 14 of 91
Meeting Minutes
Planning and Development Board
Page 12 January 25, 2022
Ayes: Rosecrans, Buoni, Simon, Litsch, Allen, Ramiccio
Nays: Sobel
7D. Approve modifications to Chapter 2, Article II, Section 2, Standard Applications to revise
review criteria for future Land Use Map and Zoning Amendments (CDRV 22-003).
Andrew Meyer, Senior Planner,presented the Future Land Use Map and Re-zoning Amendment Review
Criteria, which is an amendment to the Code to clean up Code language.
• Combining the existing Future Land Use Map Amendments and Rezoning Criteria into one set
of criteria as these applications are generally processed concurrently.
• Clarifying the review criteria sections to be more relevant in the assessment of the applications
and are requiring documents for Master Plan applications.
• Updating the threshold for Future Land Use Amendments, so the Code is in line with Florida
Statutes. There are multiple review criteria to reflect City Codes regarding Economic
Development and Mobility, consideration of trends, access to mobility options, and the CRA
Plan.
• Working on updating criteria titles to better reflect intent and introduce location, efficiency, and
heavy commercial.
Chair Rosecrans opened discussion to the public:
Ernest Mignoli, 710 NE 7t' Street, commented that the City Commission does not listen to this Board,
and this Board has no impact. The Board deceived the public with a bait and switch on Item 7B.
Chair Rosecrans reminded Mr. Mignoli to stay on topic and not obstruct the Board.
Mr. Litsch questioned if the proposed Amendments would affect the WXEL issue by combining
Rezoning and the Land Use Maps into one item.
Mr. Meyer replied no,the combination of review criteria would still have had the same level of intensity
as it would today. There would not be any impact on the review or determination of the previous item
had this implemented before.
Mr. Simon asked if there would be an increase in the documentation and if it provides more detailed
information on things that were not necessarily part of an application, but they are now.
Mr. Meyer stated the additional documentation for Master Planning applications refers to the request of
a bubble diagram. Often, Master Planning applications do not have a bubble diagram, they just have a
Site Plan. This document is clarifying when a bubble diagram would be needed versus a Site Plan.
Motion was made by Mr. Sobel, and seconded by Mr. Simon, to approve Item 7D. In a voice vote, the
motion passed unanimously. (7-0)
7E. Approve amendments to Chapter 1, Article II, Use Definitions, Chapter 3 Zoning, and
Chapter 4, Article V. Minimum off-street parking requirements addressing Medical Care
or Testing (In-patient), Beverage Manufacturing, Micro-Brewery, Brew Pub, Tap Room
Brewery, and Take Out Restaurant Uses (CDRV 22-002).
Page 15 of 91
Meeting Minutes
Planning and Development Board
Page 13 January 25, 2022
Andrew Meyer, Senior Planner, presented a brief overview of the Amendments to Chapter 1, Article II,
Use Definitions, Chapter 3 Zoning, and Chapter 4, Article V, which includes several subjects.
• Medical Care or Testing (In-patient)
• Micro-Brewery, Brew Pub, and Tap Room Brewery
• Take-out restaurants
Currently, Medical Offices are permitted in the C-1 Office Professional Zoning District, which is
compatible with Residential daytime operations. Other uses provide 24-hour client/care testing, and
currently this Conditional Use approval required in the C-1 Office Professional Zoning District, within
50 feet to the property line of any use of abutting Residential. When a use is proposed within 50 feet of
a Residential property line, it requires a Conditional Use. Locations of lesser intensity were looked at to
determine if they are compatible or more similar with Standard Medical Office Use; locations include
Medical Offices along collector streets. The proposed Amendment is lower intensive for in-patient
medical uses, providing services or testing commonly require less than 24 hours of in-patient stays, and
those that appear and function in conventional Office Uses that would not be any different than a Standard
Office Use.
Brewery usage includes Micro Distillery Micro-Brew, Brew Pub, and Tap Room Uses. Breweries
producing between 1,000 and 7,500 barrels per year represent the largest growth in the industry,provided
these are complimentary Commercial components. These types of breweries are not linked to large
distribution type breweries,they are a little smaller. Staff has received increasing inquiries regarding the
establishment of Micro-Brewery, Brew Pub, and Tap Room Uses on properties zoned Commercial or
Mixed-Use. Currently, any establishment that produces alcoholic drinks falls under Beverage
Manufacturing, which is restricted to C-4, General Commercial, Wine Industrial, and PID, which is the
Planning Industrial Development. This is the introduction of four uses. A Brewery is an Industrial Use,
similar to Beverage Manufacturing, which is how breweries are currently classified, and they produce
alcoholic beverages. There are no limits on production and a Commercial component is optional. No
food services are allowed; they create an additional parking demand and cannot be accommodated by
these types of Zoning Districts. This includes Winery and Distillery.
Micro-Brewery produces a maximum of 3,000 barrels per year and it combines manufacturing and
distribution of alcoholic beverages with on-site food service. It is more of a Commercial component and
is publicly accessible. A Commercial component is required as part of this.
The Tap Room and Brew Room Uses are similar, but they are both restricted to a maximum of 1,500
barrels per year. Anything produced on site is exclusively for on-site consumption, so there is no
distribution allowed; no trucks coming in and out; everything must be served on site. The Tap Room is
regulated like a bar use and a Brew Pub would be regulated like a Restaurant Use. Brew Pubs,which are
similar to restaurants, are permitted by right in all Non-Residential Zoning Districts, and they are also
allowed accessory, public use, and recreation. The rest are going to be permitted through a Conditional
Use. A brewery would be permitted in C-4 and a Micro-Brewery is a Commercial Use in all Commercial
Use and Mixed-Use Districts, except C-1 and C-2 where they are not permitted. A Tap Room would be
C-3 and C-4.
Page 16 of 91
Meeting Minutes
Planning and Development Board
Page 14 January 25, 2022
The last proposed Amendment is take-out restaurants. Staff has noticed growth in the take-out, delivery
industry in the popularity of third-parry delivery companies. There is a new type of take-out restaurant
emerging and these fulfill orders exclusively from third-parry delivery apps. These uses that only deliver
through third-parry apps differ from standard take-out restaurants because customer visits are brief,their
order is placed on the app ahead of time and there is no waiting on site, customers are only there to pick
up their order that is ready. It does not require high traffic exposure. Currently, take-out restaurants are
permitted in M-1 if they are along collective and arterial roadways and do not exceed 25,000 square feet.
They are proposing the take-out restaurants would be permitted within M-1 without roadway restrictions
and the same limits on multi-tenant developments and size; transactions must be tendered off site prior
to the customer arriving on site.
Chair Rosecrans opened discussion to the public.
Ernest Mignoli, 710 NE 7t' Street, mentioned medical and in-patient, and questioned if they are looking
to allow less than 24-hour service in more locations. He asked if the public would know if they were
trying to expand something and how it would affect them. Regarding breweries, he asked if there is an
effort in Boynton Beach to compete with places like Delray, where wine, alcohol, rooftops, etc.
Mr. Meyer indicated the question is if they are expanding uses within the City, and that is not the case.
This Amendment is proposing in-patient uses that fall under specific criteria; it is a waste of staff's time
and is a process to bring it through a Conditional Use if it meets specific criteria they are proposing as
part of these Amendments. It is already an approved Conditional Use in these locations; however, if uses
vary in terms of function and how they affect the neighborhood, the Planning and Development
Administrator has the option to waive the Conditional Use requirement for these uses.
Mr. Simon asked if they were trying to allow a doctor to perform surgeries or procedures in their home.
Mr. Meyer stated that would apply to the C-1 Office Professional Zoning District, which does not
currently permit Residential. No doctor is going to be allowed to perform a procedure in his house.
Regarding the proposed brewery uses, they are allowed under Beverage Manufacturer and as part of the
Amendments, they are changing the definition of Beverage Manufacturers and non-alcoholic beverages
and introducing the use of brewery to capture the uses. The introduction of Tap Rooms and Brew Pubs
are like bar and restaurant uses. The reason for the separate use is the manufacturing component on site
and there are restrictions as to distribution and things like that. It is accommodating the new types of uses
in the City, as there has been an increase in inquiries for them from the public. The Micro-Brewery is
kind of a mix between the fully Commercial and fully Industrial.
Mr. Litsch mentioned ghost kitchens, which is for places that work solely on applications.
Mr. Meyer advised those are standalone operations where ordering and payment is online, and someone
brings the food to you. This Amendment is intended for facilities that operate solely on apps. This allows
them to move into smaller Industrial spaces that does not require the height, street frontage, etc., but
parking standards are proposed; the required parking ratio will be one parking space per 350 square feet.
Page 17 of 91
Meeting Minutes
Planning and Development Board
Page 15 January 25, 2022
Mr. Simon requested clarification of restaurant criteria and mentioned the parking allotment. He asked
for clarification of food services at breweries and noted there were limitations that this Amendment
would be held to the industry.
Ms. Radigan clarified parking is a minimum of one per 350 square feet and the use is restricted to 2,500
square feet, so they are looking at about seven or eight spaces. The Code has a minimum of four spaces
required for any Commercial use.
Mr. Meyer stated the Micro-Brewery will include food service on-site. The intent of the Micro-Brewery
is to serve food on the premises. Breweries will still be allowed to have food trucks outside, but not
within the walls of the establishment.
Mr. Buoni mentioned medical and testing and noted that in a past situation it was said there cannot be
testing in the same place someone stays overnight. He asked if that is included or if anything will change.
Mr. Meyer indicated it is not because of leniency in regulations; it will be covered by the changes.
Mr. Buoni questioned if any input was received from breweries or any destinations regarding alcohol
issues listed.
Mr. Meyer stated they consulted with people involved in the industry to get an idea of the use, trends,
and sizes, and that is how they came to those conclusions.
Mr. Rumpf advised this is an attempt to meet a request from a restaurant and brewery in town to work
collaboratively. They looked at Industry standards and best plans and practices and they did not come up
with a conclusion of allowing the business model they wanted. He noted the changes would not affect
statutory requirements for medical places. Regarding breweries,this was a collaborative effort with local
businesses and the City.
Chair Rosecrans asked about the take-out, grease traps, and sewer, and questioned if that would have to
be provided and improved if they move into a Commercial warehouse.
Mr. Meyer replied that improvements would be needed.
Motion was made by Mr. Simon, seconded by Vice Chair Buoni, to approve Item 7E. In a voice vote,
the motion passed unanimously. (7-0)
8. Other —None.
9. Comments by Members —None.
10. Adjournment
Upon Motion duly made and seconded, the meeting at was adjourned at 9:33 p.m.
[Minutes prepared by C. Guifarro,Prototype,Inc.]
Page 18 of 91
7.7.A.
New Business
2/22/2022
CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH
AGENDA ITEM REQUEST FORM
PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT MEETING DATE: 2/22/2022
REQUESTED ACTION BY PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT BOARD: Approve request for a
Community Design Appeal (CDPA 22-001) of Chapter 4, Article 111, Section 6.F.2.d "Integrated Garages",
requiring habitable floor area to wrap all upper levels of the parking structure where the structure has street
frontage, in order to disguise the garage's facade and maximize design compatibility for the Broadstone
Boynton Beach project proposed for 212 S. Federal Highway. Applicant: Steven Scaggs, DSS Properties
L.C.
EXPLANATION OF REQUEST:
The applicant is requesting approval for a Community Design Appeal (CDPA 22-001) of Chapter 4, Article
111, Section 6.F.2.d "Integrated Garages", which requires habitable floor area to wrap all upper-levels of the
parking structure where the structure has frontage along a public right-of-way. The request for relief is
concurrent with the Major Master Plan Modification (MPMD 22-002) and Major Site Plan Modification
(MSPM 22-001) Applications for the proposed alterations to the previously approved site plan now titled
Broadstone Boynton Beach.
In lieu of wrapping the parking structure with habitable floor area, the applicant proposes alternative
architectural facade treatments such as open metal frames designed to appear as window fenestrations, metal
frame panels which resemble metal railings that will be used on the balconies, metal canopies along the
ground floor and at strategic locations on the upper levels, artistic metal screening, stucco banding, raised
stucco surrounds, and architectural articulation through recesses, projections, and variations in the roofline
where the parking structure fronts SE 1St Avenue. Staff has determined that the applicant has sufficiently
addressed the intent of the "integrated garages" code section with the aforementioned proposed architectural
enhancements and therefore recommends APPROVAL of the request, subject to the accompanying
conditions.
HOW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES? N/A
FISCAL IMPACT: N/A
ALTERNATIVES:
None recommended
STRATEGIC PLAN:
STRATEGIC PLAN APPLICATION: N/A
CLIMATE ACTION APPLICATION: N/A
Page 19 of 91
Is this a grant?
Grant Amount:
ATTACHMENTS:
Type Description
D Staff Report Staff Report
D Location Map Exhibit A® Location Map
D Drawings Exhibit B ® Project Plans
D Exhibit Exhibit C ® Justification Statement
D Conditions of Approval Exhibit D ® Conditions of Approval
Page 20 of 91
DEVELOPMENT DEPARTMENT
PLANNING AND ZONING DIVISION
MEMORANDUM NO. PZ 22-009
STAFF REPORT
TO: Chair and Members
Planning and Development Board
THRU: Michael Rumpf
Planning and Zoning Administrator
FROM: Amanda B. Radigan, Principal Planner
Craig Pinder, Planner II
DATE: February 11, 2022
PROJECT: Broadstone Boynton Beach
CDPA 22-001
REQUEST: Approve request for a Community Design Appeal of Chapter 4, Article III,
Section 6.F.2.d "Integrated Garages", requiring habitable floor area to wrap all
upper levels of the parking structure where the structure has street frontage, in
order to disguise the garage's facade and maximize design compatibility.
Property Owner: Multiple Owners (see Exhibit Al)
Applicant: Steven Scaggs, DSS Properties L.C.
Agent: Bonnie Miskel and Beth Schrantz, Dunay, Miskel, Backman, LLP
Location: 212 S. Federal Highway (Additional Parcels Included)
Site Details: The applicant has submitted development applications for a Major Site Plan
Modification, Major Master Plan Modification, and Community Design Appeal for
a mixed-use project known as Broadstone Boynton Beach, which proposes an
eight-story mixed-use building with 274 multi-family units, approximately 13,110
square feet of commercial space, recreational amenities, parking, and other
related site improvements. The proposed site plan shows the placement of the
building along S. Federal Highway, SE 2nd Avenue, and SE 1St Avenue.
NATURE OF REQUEST
Bonnie Miskel and Beth Schrantz are requesting approval of a Community Design Appeal of
Chapter 4, Article III, Section 6.F.2.d "integrated garages", which requires habitable floor area
to wrap all upper-levels of the parking structure where the structure has frontage along a public
right-of-way.
Page 21 of 91
Broadstone Boynton Beach (CDPA 22-001)
Memorandum No PZ 22-009
Page 2
BACKGROUND AND ANALYSIS
The application submitted for Community Design Appeal is pursuant to the Land Development
Regulations (LDR) Chapter 4, Article III, Section 6.F.2.d "integrated garages", which requires
habitable floor area to wrap all upper-levels of the parking structure where the structure has
frontage along a public right-of-way. Any deviation from the exterior building and site design
standards is subject to review and approval by the City Commission. As described, the
integrated parking garage is proposed to front SE 1St Avenue without being wrapped with
habitable floor area, and accordingly, is the subject of this appeal request. The applicant has
submitted a Justification Statement (Exhibit "C") dated January 21, 2022 addressing each of
the following review criteria for such applications:
a) Whether the proposed request will demonstrate consistency with the Comprehensive
Plan;
b) Whether the proposed request will not significantly detract from the livability or
appearance of the city and will be consistent with the established or desired character of
the area, or with the redevelopment plan, where applicable;
c) On balance, whether the proposed request will be consistent with the purpose of the
standard for which a deviation is requested. Granting the request will equally or better
meet the purpose of the standard to be appealed;
d) Whether the proposed request is intended to save or preserve existing trees or desired
flora;
e) Whether the proposed request will have adverse environmental impacts that cannot be
prevented by the imposition of conditions;
fl Whether the proposed request will have an adverse impact on property values of abutting
or adjacent land;
g) Whether the proposed request will seriously reduce the quality or quantity of light and air
available to adjacent properties;
h) Whether the proposed request is necessary to further the objectives of the City to assist
with economic development and business promotion; and
i) Whether the proposed request meets the purpose and intent of these regulations but
conflicts with another site development standard or requirement, including sustainable
development and green initiatives.
The proposed building site totals 120,347 square feet or 2.76 acres,with developed commercial
properties to the north, S. Federal Highway to the west, developed commercial properties on
the northeast, a multifamily development on the southeast, SE 2nd Avenue to the south, then
developed commercial properties farther to the south. The proposed mixed-use development
is comprised of one structure including commercial space and private recreational amenities
on the ground floor, multi-family units on levels two through eight, and an eight-floor integrated
parking structure. As shown in the attached Justification Statement (pages 2-3), a portion of
the integrated parking garage fronts SE 1 st Avenue for approximately 78'6", with the remainder
of the north elevation fronting the ground floor recreation amenities within the site. This
represents a modification from the original footprint of the parking structure in order to increase
the percentage of usable open space from 2.1% to 40.77%. The revised footprint ensures that
the viewshed from SE 1St Avenue does not terminate at a parking garage ingress/egress,
instead it provides a view to landscaped active outdoor amenities and habitable space in the
residential building.
Page 22 of 91
Broadstone Boynton Beach (CDPA 22-001)
Memorandum No PZ 22-009
Page 3
The strict application of the site design standards for integrated garages, in this instance, would
require habitable floor area to wrap a portion of the garage where street level activity is
anticipated to be minimal due in part to the partial abandonment of SE 1St Avenue. In addition,
providing habitable space or additional dwelling units along this portion of the parking structure
will significantly reduce the number of parking spaces and impact vehicular circulation within
the parking structure, thereby rendering the project unfeasible. Moreover, this portion of SE 1St
Avenue services parking areas and "back-of-house" uses for the commercial properties fronting
E. Ocean Avenue.
In lieu of wrapping the parking structure with habitable floor area, the applicant proposes
alternative architectural fagade treatments such as open metal frames designed to appear as
window fenestrations, metal frame panels which resemble metal railings that will be used on
the residential balconies, metal canopies along the ground floor and at strategic locations on
the upper levels, artistic metal screening, stucco banding, raised stucco surrounds, and
architectural articulation through recesses, projections, and variations in the roofline where the
parking structure fronts SE 1St Avenue. This proposal allows for the elevation of the parking
structure to be designed to appear as habitable space and remain consistent with the
architectural design language of the building.
RECOMMENDATION
Staff has reviewed this request for Community Design Appeal approval. Based on the analysis
contained herein, staff recommends approval contingent upon City Commission approval of
concurrent requests for the Major Site Plan Modification and Major Master Plan Modification,
and satisfying all comments indicated in Exhibit "C" — Conditions of Approval. Any additional
conditions recommended by the Board or City Commission shall be documented accordingly
in the Conditions of Approval.
\\Fps\main\SHRDATA\Planning\SHARED\WP\PROJECTS\Broadstone(FKA GCI-Legacy)\_Staff Report\CDPA 22-001 Staff Report.docx
Page 23 of 91
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Page 28 of 91
DUNAY
Gary 0unay Hope Gathoun Christina Bitenkl
MISKEL Bonnie Mickel 0wayne Dickerson LaUrf'n G.Odom
Scent Backman Ete Zachariades Nicole Jaeger
L.LP Eric Coffman Matthew H.Scott Rachael.0ond P:atmer
Alliance Residential
Statement of Use and Justification for
Community Design Appeal
Submitted: December 13,2021
Resubmitted:January 21,2022
DSS Properties, LLC ("Petitioner") is the assignee and representative for the owners of a +/- 2.76 acre
assemblage of nine(9) parcels as shown below("Property"),which is generally located on the east side of
Federal Highway one block south of Ocean Avenue in the City of Boynton Beach ("City"). The Property is
designated MU-H, Mixed Use—High,on the City's Future Land Use Map and located within the City's MU-
C, Mixed Use — Core, zoning district. The Property is also located within the boundaries of the City's
Community Redevelopment Agency ("CRA"), as well as the DTODD, Downtown Transit-Oriented
Development District.The Property addresses and parcel control numbers are detailed below.
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PRIOR APPROVALS08-43-45-27-04-000-0150
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On January 19, 2021,the City Commission approved Ordinance 20-034, Ordinance 20-035, and Major Site
Plan Application NWSP 20-003 to allow the following requests:
14 5.E.4th Street,Suite 36,Boca Raton, FL 33432 Tel: 15611405-3300 ! Fax: [561)409-2341 wwwArribbl.aw,corn
Page 29 of 91
• Rezone the Property from the CBD, Central Business District, zoning district to the current MU-C
zoning district in order to make the zoning consistent with the MXH Future Land Use designation.
• Abandon a portion of the improved 45 foot wide right-of-way of SE I"Avenue running east from
Federal Highway for a distance of approximately 175 feet in order to provide a continuous and
uninterrupted frontage along Federal Highway; and
• Major Site Plan Approval for a mixed-use development consisting of an eight (8) story building
with 274 dwelling units, 12,422 square feet of commercial space, and associated recreational
amenities, subject to 40 conditions of approval, which are detailed under STATUS OF
CONDITIONS OF APPROVAL below.
The foregoing approvals are collectively referred to herein as "Original Approval".
APPLICATION REQUEST
At this time,Alliance Residential is under contract to purchase the Property from the collective ownership
group identified above in order to develop the Property as a mixed use development consistent with the
Original Approval. Petitioner has submitted an application for Major Master Plan Modification and Major
Site Plan Modification (MMSP 22-002) in order to make certain improvements to the site design that will
significantly improve the quality of the development by modifying the unit mix for the residential
component of the development, modifying the commercial component of the development to 13,110
square feet, expanding the recreational amenities to increase usable open space by 38.77% (from the 2%
minimum required to 40.77%), and reconfiguring the site plan to insulate the parking garage and add
more lush plantings to ensure no viewsheds to the garage from adjacent roadways ("Major Master Plan
Modification and Major Site Plan Modification"). These changes will create a meaningfully higher quality
of life for the future residents of the project and the City by providing world class recreational amenities
and creating an urban environment in the City's downtown while respecting the surrounding area by
ensuring that the parking areas do not impact the adjacent roadways.
As noted above, the integrated parking garage has been redesigned in order to ensure that the viewshed
from SE 1st Avenue from the east does not terminate at a parking garage entry, and instead provides a
view to lush and attractive landscaping. The reorientation of the parking garage places the garage entry
on the north side of the building facing the south side of SE I"Avenue and back of house/parking areas
for the small retail uses existing to the north.This results in a +/-78'-6" portion of the integrated parking
garage having frontage on SE I"Avenue, as shown on the excerpt from the Site Plan provided below.
SE 1ST AVENUE
S
Page 2 of 9
Page 30 of 91
The City's Land Development Regulations ("LDRs") require that habitable floor area must wrap all upper-
levels of the parking structure where an integrated parking structure has frontage along a public right-of-
way with the intent to disguise the garage and create continuity in street-level activity by maintaining
interest for pedestrians and passing automobile traffic. Habitable space along such a minimal portion of
the garage fagade adjacent to back-of-house and parking areas and at a dead-end location where street
level activity and passerby traffic does not exist is not feasible and would not create a successful
development project. As such, Petitioner proposes alternative architectural fagade treatments as shown
in the excerpt from the architectural elevations provided below, including awnings along the ground floor
and at strategic locations on the upper levels, open metal frames and metal screen wall panels that
provide the appearance of window fenestration, artistic metal panels, and architectural articulation
through recesses, projections, and variations in roofline. Further,two(2) large live oak trees are proposed
adjacent to this frontage that will provide additional screening and ensure a pleasant street-level
environment for any pedestrians.
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In consideration of the foregoing information, Petitioner respectfully requests approval for the following
community design appeal in order to provide the alternative design elements and high-quality
architectural fagade treatment to screen and disguise the garage while also providing for a pleasant
pedestrian experience at the street level:
Page 3 of 9
Page 31 of 91
Relief from Part 111, Chapter 4, Article 111, Section 6.F.2.d to provide alternative design
elements and faVode treatment to shield the+/-78'-6"portion of the integrated parking
garage faVode that fronts SE 15Y Avenue, as shown in the excerpt from the Site Plan
below, in lieu of wrapping this portion of the faVode with habitable floor area.
("Community Design Appeal")
Approval of the requested Community Design Appeal will allow the Major Master Plan Modification and
Major Site Plan Modification and ultimately development of the project.
COMPLIANCE WITH COMMUNITY DESIGN APPEAL CRITERIA
In accordance with the review criteria of Chapter 2, Article 11, Section 4.13.3 of the City's LDRs, Petitioner
will demonstrate below that the Community Design Appeal:(a)is consistent with the Comprehensive Plan,
(b) will not significantly detract from the livability or appearance of the City and will be consistent with
the established or desired character of the area, or with the redevelopment plan,where applicable; (c) is
consistent with the purpose of the standard for which a deviation is requested and will equally or better
meet the purpose of the standard; (d) is intended to save or preserve existing trees or desired flora (e)
will not have an adverse environmental impact that cannot be prevented by the imposition of conditions;
(f) will not have an adverse impact on property values of abutting or adjacent land; (g) will not seriously
reduce the quality or quantity of light and air available to adjacent properties; (h) is necessary to further
the objectives of the City to assist with economic development and business promotion; (i) meets the
purpose and intent of these regulations and does not conflict with another site development standard or
requirement, including sustainable development and green initiatives.
(a) Whether the proposed request is consistent with the Comprehensive Plan.
As noted above, the Property has a future land use designation of Mixed-Use High. Per the City's
Comprehensive Plan,the MX-H category is intended to provide for the vertical or horizontal mixing of
land uses within a single site in order to allow for redevelopment in specific areas of the City that take
maximum advantage of existing utility systems and services and promote compact development,safe
and pedestrian friendly streets, and provide for transportation choices. The MX-H category east of I-
95 specifically provides for high density residential development. As such, the Project is consistent
with the higher-density residential development clearly contemplated in the City's Comprehensive
Plan.
The requested relief is required to provide more appropriate architectural fagade treatment for the
+/-78'-6" portion of the integrated parking garage fagade that fronts SE 1st Avenue. This portion of
SE V Avenue is where the public roadway terminates at the project entrance and serves as the entry
for back-of-house parking areas for the small scale retail uses located to the north. As such, there is
not a high level of pedestrian activity in this area and ground floor uses located in this area are not
likely to be viable.
The Project is further consistent with the goals, policies and objectives outlined in the City's
Comprehensive Plan as follows:
Page 4 of 9
Page 32 of 91
• Objective 1.3 — Future development and redevelopment within the City shall continue to be
regulated through administration of the Land Development Regulations specified within the City's
Zoning Code, Community Redevelopment Plans, Florida Building Code and subdivision
regulations. — The requested Community Design Appeal is consistent with the LDRs, CRA's
Downtown Master Plan, Florida Building Code, and subdivision regulations.
• Policy 1.3.1.d—The requested Community Design Appeal provides for the vertical mixing of land
uses within a single site in order to allow for redevelopment that takes advantage of existing utility
systems; and promotes compact development, safe and pedestrian-friendly streets and
transportation choices — Approval of the requested Community Design Appeal will allow
development of the project,which provide for compact development, pedestrian friendly streets,
improved recreational amenities, and a higher quality view down SE I" Avenue than were
contemplated under the Original Approval.
• Objective 1.7 —The City shall strive to improve blighted residential neighborhoods and business
districts through the implementation of the Community Redevelopment Plan within the
Community Redevelopment Area. — The project proposes to redevelop an aggregation of
underdeveloped parcels along the Federal Highway corridor with a vibrant mixed-use project that
will serve the community.
• Policy 1.7.3—The City shall require that designs for redevelopment and infill projects encourage
use of public transit, pedestrian and bicycle travel as alternatives to the car and shall maximize
personal safety. — Approval of the requested Community Design Appeal provides for an infill
mixed-use development that encourages pedestrian activity and use of alternate transportation
options in the vicinity of the Property.
• Policy 2.4.12 — The City shall provide a variety of transportation choices within the CRA by
supporting the following design features for street — new continuous and permanent on-street
parking; bus stops and transit enhancements;widening sidewalks... -The Project proposes a wide
sidewalk along SE I"Avenue to create a safe area for pedestrian activities.
• Objective 2.12 — Promote a pedestrian environment by providing adequate facilities, such as
wider sidewalks, buffer from travel lanes, etc. for pedestrians and bicyclists —A well landscaped
pedestrian area is provided along this frontage to promote a safe pedestrian environment. Two
(2) large live oak trees are proposed adjacent to the portion of the fagade for which relief is
sought, which will provide a pleasant, shaded pedestrian experience.
Considering the foregoing,approval of the requested Community Design Appeal is consistent with the
City's Comprehensive Plan.
Page 5 of 9
Page 33 of 91
(b) Whether the proposed request will not significantly detract from the livability or appearance of the
city and will be consistent with the established or desired character of the area, or with the
redevelopment plan, where applicable.
Approval of the requested Community Design Appeal will not significantly detract from the livability
or appearance of the City the intent to disguise the garage and create continuity in street-level activity
by maintaining interest for pedestrians and passing automobile traffic.The intent of the requirement
to provide habitable space wrapping an integrated parking garage is to disguise the garage and create
continuity in street-level activity by maintaining interest for pedestrians and passing automobile
traffic. Habitable space along such a minimal portion of the garage fagade adjacent to back-of-house
and parking areas and at a dead-end location where street level activity and passerby traffic does not
exist is not feasible and would not create a successful development for the City. As such, Petitioner
proposes alternative architectural fagade treatments to meet the intent of the LDRs, including
awnings along the ground floor and at strategic locations on the upper levels, open metal frames and
metal screen wall panels that provide the appearance of window fenestration, artistic metal panels,
and architectural articulation through recesses, projections, and variations in roofline.
Further, approval of the requested Community Design Appeal is consistent with the desired character
of the area and applicable redevelopment plan. As noted above,the Property is further located within
the TOD District around the future transit station under the CRA's Downtown Master Plan. This
particular district is intended to create a downtown core that builds momentum for other
redevelopment, allowing for provisions today which will accomplish the long-term vision of the
commuter rail transit station. This district creates transit-supportive densities within walking distance
of the marina and the future transit station. Redevelopment of the Property with high density
residential development and a ground-floor retail component coincides with the goal contemplated
by the TOD district.
Finally, the City's mixed-use urban zoning districts are intended to implement the community
redevelopment plans by providing for a mixture of land uses, accommodating varying densities and
intensities for each planning area and by establishing a compact urban setting. These districts area
also intended to support transit ridership, and in particular the development of transit-oriented
development near planned passenger train stations. The Property is within a special focus area, the
DTODD Overlay district, as it is in close proximity to a planned station area. Specifically, the DTODD
Overlay zone is intended to improve land development patterns around the future station of the
planned commuter service and further enhance the vision embodied by the mixed-use zoning districts
with increased density and intensity as well as a strong emphasis on interconnectivity throughout the
area. Again,there is an emphasis of high density development for this overlay district which includes
the Property. Approval of the requested Community Design Appeal will allow for the higher density
development encouraged by such provisions in the City's Land Development Regulations. As such,
approval of the Community Design Appeal will not detract from the livability or appearance of the
City, and is consistent with the purpose and intent of the applicable Comprehensive Plan policies,
redevelopment plans and land use regulations.
Page 6 of 9
Page 34 of 91
(c) On balance, the proposed request is consistent with the purpose of the standard for which a deviation
is requested. Granting the request will equally or better meet the purpose of the standard to be
appealed.
Approval of the requested Community Design Appeal is consistent with the purpose of this provision.
The intent of the requirement to provide habitable space wrapping an integrated parking garage is to
disguise the garage and create continuity in street-level activity by maintaining interest for
pedestrians and passing automobile traffic.The alternative architectural fagade treatments proposed
(awnings along the ground floor and at strategic locations on the upper levels, open metal frames and
metal screen wall panels that provide the appearance of window fenestration, artistic metal panels,
and architectural articulation through recesses, projections,and variations in roofline) meet the intent
of the LDRs. The proposed architectural treatment, in combination with the proposed live oak trees
and wide pedestrian sidewalk meets the purpose of the standard.
(d) Whether the proposed request is intended to save or preserve existing trees or desired flora (1)
whether the applicant is unable to design or locate proposed buildings, structures, or improvements
and preserve the tree(s) and comply with all provisions of these community design standards without
causing the applicant undue hardship, and (2) whether it is not feasible to transplant the trees to
another location on the subject site considering the following: 1) shape and dimensions of the real
property,2) location of existing structures and infrastructure improvements; and 3)size, age, health
and species of trees sought to be protected.
Approval of the requested Community Design Appeal will not have an impact on existing trees or
desired flora. Street trees will be provided along all street frontages as required by the City's Code.
This specific request relates to habitable space along the upper levels of the garage and is required to
provide a safe and functioning garage facility. As noted above, the garage has been designed to
continue the appearance of the livable space in the associated residential building. As such, this
criterion is not applicable to the Project.
(e) Whether the proposed request will have an adverse environmental impact that cannot be prevented
by the imposition of conditions.
Approval of the requested Community Design Appeal will not have an adverse environmental impact.
Rather, approval of the requested Community Design Appeal will allow for approval of the requested
Major Master Plan Modification and Major Site Plan Modification,which is designed to provide 42.3%
usable open space (where the Original Approval provided only 2.1% usable open space). As such, the
environmental quality of the current proposal is significantly higher than the Original Approval.
Considering that approval of the Community Design Appeal is necessary for the approval of the Major
Master Plan Modification and Major Site Plan Modification, approval of this request will have a
positive environmental impact.
(f) Whether the proposed request will have an adverse impact on property values of abutting or adjacent
land.
Page 7 of 9
Page 35 of 91
Approval of the requested Community Design Appeal will not have an adverse impact on property
values of abutting or adjacent land. The Property is currently underdeveloped with small retail uses
that do not serve the needs of the community or meet the intent of the City's adopted regulations
and plans. Approval of this request will allow for revitalization of the Property with a Project that is
consistent with the City's master plans. As noted above, the Property is further located within the
TOD District around the future transit station under the City's CRA Downtown Master Plan. This
particular district is intended to create a downtown core that builds momentum for other
redevelopment, allowing for provisions today which will accomplish the long-term vision of the
commuter rail transit station. This district creates transit-supportive densities within walking distance
of the marina and the future transit station. Redevelopment of the Property with high density
residential development and a ground-floor retail component coincides with the goal contemplated
by the TOD district and will provide the needed residential density to serve as an economic stimulus
to the surrounding commercial uses. As such,this request will not have an adverse impact on property
values.
(g) Whether the proposed request will seriously reduce the quality or quantity of light and air available to
adjacent properties.
Approval of the requested Community Design Appeal will not reduce the quality or quantity of light
and air available to adjacent properties. Petitioner is requesting relief from the requirement to
provide habitable space wrapping the minimal portion of the integrated parking garage that fronts SE
I" Avenue. Approval of the requested Community Design Appeal will allow for approval of the
requested Major Master Plan Modification and Major Site Plan Modification, which is designed to
provide 42.3% usable open space (where the Original Approval provided only 2.1% usable open
space). As such, the quality and quantity of light and air available to adjacent properties will be
significantly increased by the current proposal than was provided under the Original Approval.
Considering that approval of the Community Design Appeal is necessary for the approval of the Major
Master Plan Modification and Major Site Plan Modification, approval of this request will have a
positive impact on the quality and quantity of light or air available to adjacent properties.
(h) Whether the proposed request is necessary to further the objectives of the city to assist with economic
development and business promotion.
Approval of the requested Community Design Appeal is necessary to further the City's objectives to
assist with economic development and business promotion. As noted above, the Property is located
within the TOD District around the future transit station under the City's CRA Downtown Master Plan.
This particular district is intended to create a downtown core that builds momentum for other
redevelopment, allowing for provisions today which will accomplish the long-term vision of the
commuter rail transit station. This district creates transit-supportive densities within walking distance
of the marina and the future transit station. Redevelopment of the Property with high density
residential development and a ground-floor retail component coincides with the goal contemplated
by the TOD district. Petitioner is requesting relief from the requirement to wrap a small portion of
the integrated parking garage with habitable space in order to be able to develop the project further
these objectives.
Page 8 of 9
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Approval of this request is necessary to redevelop this underdevelopment aggregation of parcels with
the vertically integrated mixed-use project,which provides public art and recreational amenities that
will promote the City as a first class destination and place to live. The proposed Project is compatible
with development in the adjacent areas with high-density residential development to the west, as
well as the commercial redevelopment to the north and south. The Project will help satisfy a
community need and is compatible with surrounding residential and commercial development. As
such,the request is consistent with this criterion.
(i) Whether the proposed request meets the purpose and intent of these regulations but conflicts with
another site development standard or requirement, including sustainable development and green
initiatives.
The intent of the requirement to provide habitable space wrapping an integrated parking garage is to
disguise the integrated parking garage and create continuity in street-level activity by maintaining
interest for pedestrians and passing automobile traffic. Habitable space along such a minimal portion
of the garage fagade adjacent to back-of-house and parking areas and at a dead-end location where
street level activity and passerby traffic does not exist is not feasible and would not create a successful
development for the City.As such, Petitioner proposes alternative architectural fagade treatments to
meet the intent of the LDRs, including awnings along the ground floor and at strategic locations on
the upper levels, open metal frames and metal screen wall panels that provide the appearance of
window fenestration, artistic metal panels, and architectural articulation through recesses,
projections, and variations in roofline. The project is designed to comply with all other site
development standards and requirements. As such, the requested Community Design Appeal
complies with this criterion.
Page 9 of 9
Page 37 of 91
EXHIBIT "D"
Conditions of Approval
Project Name: Broadstone Boynton Beach (fka Legacy at Boynton Beach)
File number: CDPA 22-001
Reference: Approve request for a Community Design Appeal (CDPA 22-001) of Chapter 4,
Article III, Section 6.F.2.d "Integrated Garages", requiring habitable floor area to
wrap all upper levels of the parking structure where the structure has street frontage,
in order to disguise the garage's facade and maximize design compatibility.
DEPARTMENTS INCLUDE REJECT
ENGINEERING / PUBLIC WORKS / FORESTRY/ UTILITIES
Comments: None
FIRE
Comments: None
POLICE
Comments: None
BUILDING
Comments: None
PARKS AND RECREATION
Comments: None
PUBLIC ART
Comments: None
PLANNING AND ZONING
Comments:
1. Please revise the "knee wall" section of the parking garage X
elevation to either:
a. Provide additional screening within the metal open frames to
effectively screen vehicles from view; and/or
b. Raise the "knee walls" to effectively screen the vehicles from view.
The intent is to ensure that parked vehicles are not able to be seen, and
the appearance of habitable floor area must be maintained.
COMMUNITY REDEVELOPMENT AGENCY
Comments: None
Page 38 of 91
Broadstone Boynton Beach (fka Legacy at Boynton Beach) CDPA 22-001
Conditions of Approval
Page 2 of 2
PLANNING & DEVELOPMENT BOARD CONDITIONS
Comments: To be determined.
CITY COMMISSION CONDITIONS
Comments: To be determined.
ADDITIONAL REPRESENTATION /COMMITMENTS
2. The applicant or applicant's representatives made the following
representations and commitments during the quasi-judicial and/or
public hearings that now constitute binding obligations of the
applicant. The obligations have the same weight as other
conditions of approval.
\\Fps\main\SHRDATA\Planning\SHARE D\WP\PROJECTS\Broadstone (FKA GCI-Legacy)\_Staff Report\Exhibit D - COA Broadstone CDPA
22-001.doc
Page 39 of 91
7.7.B.
New Business
2/22/2022
CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH
AGENDA ITEM REQUEST FORM
PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT MEETING DATE: 2/22/2022
REQUESTED ACTION BY PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT BOARD:
Approve request for Major Site Plan Modification (MSPM 22-001) to amend the previously approved site plan
with the proposed changes contained herein for the Broadstone Boynton Beach project to allow construction
of a mixed-use development consisting of an eight (8)-story building with 274 dwelling units, 13,110 square
feet of commercial space, associated recreational amenities, and parking on a 2.76 acre site within the
Downtown District. Applicant: Steven Scaggs, DSS Properties L.C.
Approve request for Major Master Plan Modification (MPMD 22-002) for Broadstone Boynton Beach to
amend the previously approved master plan with the proposed revisions to the concurrent Major Site Plan
Modification Application, located at the northeast corner of SE 2nd Avenue and Federal Highway, extending
north to one block south of Ocean Avenue and Federal Highway, extending south to SE 2nd Avenue and east
to approximately SE 6th Street, in the Mixed-Use Core (MU-C) zoning district. Applicant: Steven Scaggs,
DSS Properties L.C.
EXPLANATION OF REQUEST:
Broadstone Boynton Beach is a proposed mixed-use development that will be situated on 2.76 acres located
within the Downtown District as defined by the CRA Community Redevelopment Plan. The project site is an
assembly of properties consisting of nine (9) developed and undeveloped parcels, including one story retail,
office, and residential multi-family units.
The applicant is requesting approval of several concurrent applications for the development of Broadstone
Boynton Beach (see the respective staff reports). The first two applications, MSPM 22-001 and MPMD 22-
002, are for Major Site Plan Modification and Major Master Plan Modification approval. The requests include
an increase in the commercial square footage from 12,422 square feet to 13,110 square feet, a reduction in
the overall building footprint to provide additional outdoor amenities for the residents thereby increasing the
percentage of usable open space, a revision to the unit mix for the residential component of the project, and
reconfiguration of the integrated parking garage to provide 540 parking spaces. The project maintains its
original proposal of an 8-story mixed-use development consisting of ground floor commercial space adjacent
to Federal Highway, 274 multi-family residential units, and the aforementioned supporting parking garage.
Lastly, application CDPA 22-001 represents the request to provide relief for the north elevation of the parking
garage from Part 111, Chapter 4, Article 111, Section 6.F.2.d. which requires the parking garage to be wrapped
with habitable floor area.
The proposed project's main vehicular access point is located at SE 2nd Avenue, east of Federal
Highway, with a secondary access point on SE 1st Avenue. The project's access design is contingent on the
approval of an Engineering Wavier.
The architectural style for the project is a mid-rise interpretation of"Contemporary Coastal" architecture,
which is a variation of Florida Vernacular Architecture. The project features a strong base utilizing framed
entrance features that provide shade and protection and interact with the pedestrian zone along Federal
Highway and SE 2nd Avenue. The upper portions of the building include separate vertical elements that
create a scale consistent with the 500 Ocean development. The project's materials include simulated wood
cladding, clear glass at the retail level, vertically-oriented windows, and subtle tan tones that create a warmth to
Page 40 of 91
the building while maintaining clean lines. The materials and finishes are consistent with the contemporary
coastal architectural style.
HOW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES? N/A
FISCAL IMPACT: N/A
ALTERNATIVES: N/A
STRATEGIC PLAN:
STRATEGIC PLAN APPLICATION: N/A
CLIMATE ACTION APPLICATION: N/A
Is this a grant?
Grant Amount:
ATTACHMENTS:
Type Description
D Staff Report Staff Report
D Exhibit Exhibit Al ® PCN and Owner List
D Location Map Exhibit A2 ® Location Map
D Drawings Exhibit B ® Project Plans
D Conditions of Approval Exhibit C ® Conditions of Approval
Page 41 of 91
DEVELOPMENT DEPARTMENT
PLANNING AND ZONING DIVISION
MEMORANDUM NO. PZ 22-008
STAFF REPORT
TO: Chair and Members
Planning and Development Board
THRU: Michael Rumpf
Planning and Zoning Administrator
FROM: Amanda B. Radigan, Principal Planner
Craig Pinder, Planner II
DATE: February 11, 2022
PROJECT NAME: Broadstone Boynton Beach (MSPM 22-001, MPMD 22-002, CDPA22-001)
REQUEST: Approval of a Major Master Plan Modification and Major Site Plan
Modification Application for a mixed-use development consisting of an eight
(8)-story building with 274 dwelling units, 13,110 square feet of commercial
space, associated recreational amenities, and parking on a 2.76 acre site.
PROJECT DESCRIPTION
Property Owner: Multiple Owners (see Exhibit Al)
Applicant: Steven Scaggs, DSS Properties L.C.
Agent: Bonnie Miskel and Beth Schrantz, Dunay, Miskel, Backman, LLP
Location: Northeast corner of SE 2nd Avenue and Federal Highway, extending
north to one block south of Ocean Avenue and Federal Highway,
extending south to SE 2nd Avenue and east to approximately SE 6th
Street (see Exhibit "A2" — Site Location Map)
Existing Land Use: MXH (Mixed Use-High)
Proposed Land Use: MXH (Mixed Use High)
Existing Zoning: MU-C (Mixed Use Core)
Proposed Zoning: MU-C (Mixed Use Core)
Proposed Use: Mixed use development with 274 multi-family units, approximately
13,110 square feet of commercial space, recreational amenities,
parking, and other related site improvements.
Page 42 of 91
Broadstone Boynton Beach (MSPM 22-001,MPMD 22-002)
Memorandum No PZ 22-008
Page 2
Acreage: 2.76 acres
Adjacent Uses:
North: Developed commercial properties, classified Mixed Use-High
(MXH) and zoned CBD, Central Business District; farther north,
the right-of-way for Ocean Avenue;
South: Right-of-way for SE 2nd Avenue, then developed commercial
property classified Mixed Use-Medium (MXM) and zoned CBD,
Central Business District, and developed rental residential
properties classified Mixed Use-Medium (MXM) and zoned R-3
Multi-Family; further south, the residential community of Sterling
Village Condominiums, classified Medium Density Residential
(MEDR) and zoned R3;
East: On the northeast, developed commercial properties classified
MXH, Mixed Use-High and zoned CBD, Central Business
District; on the southeast, a multifamily development (Sea
Terrace Condominiums), also under the MXH and CBD
designations; farther east, the right-of-way of SE 6th Street; and
West: Right-of-way of Federal Highway, then a mixed-use project (500
Ocean), classified Mixed Use-High (MXH) and zoned MU-C,
Mixed-Use Core.
PROPERTY OWNER NOTIFICATION
Owners of properties within 400 feet of the subject request were
mailed a notice of this request and its respective hearing dates. The
applicant certifies that they posted signage and mailed notices in
accordance with Ordinance No. 04-007.
BACKGROUND
Proposal: Broadstone Boynton Beach is a proposed mixed-use development
that will be situated on 2.76 acres located within the Downtown
District as defined by the CRA Community Redevelopment Plan. The
project site is an assemblage of properties consisting of nine (9)
developed and undeveloped parcels, including one story retail,
offices, and residential multi-family units.
The applicant is requesting approval of several concurrent
applications for the development of Broadstone Boynton Beach (see
2
Page 43 of 91
Broadstone Boynton Beach (MSPM 22-001,MPMD 22-002)
Memorandum No PZ 22-008
Page 3
the respective staff reports). The first two applications, MSPM 22-
001 and MPMD 22-002, are for Major Site Plan Modification and
Major Master Plan Modification approval. The requests include an
increase in the commercial square footage from 12,422 square feet
to 13,110 square feet, a reduction in the overall building footprint to
provide additional outdoor amenities for the residents thereby
increasing the percentage of usable open space, a revision to the
unit mix for the residential component of the project, and the
reconfiguration of the integrated parking garage to provide 540
parking spaces. The project maintains its original proposal of an 8-
story mixed-use development consisting of ground floor commercial
space adjacent to Federal Highway, 274 multi-family residential
units, and the aforementioned supporting parking garage. Lastly,
application CDPA 22-001 represents the request to provide relief for
the north elevation of the parking garage from Part III, Chapter 4,
Article III, Section 6.F.2.d. which requires the parking garage to be
wrapped with habitable floor area.
ANALYSIS
Traffic: A traffic study was sent to the Palm Beach County Traffic Division for
review. The project is located within the boundaries of the City of
Boynton Beach TCEA (Traffic Concurrency Exception Area) and
therefore meets the Palm Beach County Traffic Performance
Standards. The project would generate 1,543 new daily trips with 59
AM peak trips and 113 PM peak trips.
School: The applicant has submitted a School Capacity Availability
Determination (SCAD) application to the School District of Palm
Beach County to confirm that area schools have adequate capacity
to accommodate the potential public school students who will reside
in the proposed dwelling units with their families. Approval of the
modification request is contingent upon approval of the SCAD
application.
Utilities: The City's water capacity would meet the projected potable water
demand for this project. Sufficient sanitary sewer and wastewater
treatment capacity is also currently available to serve the project. The
applicant will be making several upgrades to utility lines in the vicinity
of the project as part of the site development. The Utilities
Department has requested for the existing 8-inch and 24-inch gravity
sewer mains to be lined with cured-in-place pipe methods (see
Exhibit C — Conditions of Approval).
3
Page 44 of 91
Broadstone Boynton Beach (MSPM 22-001,MPMD 22-002)
Memorandum No PZ 22-008
Page 4
Police/Fire: The Police and Fire Departments have reviewed the site plan and
the applicant has addressed all review comments during the DART
review process. The Fire Department notes that they will be able to
provide an adequate level of service for this project with current or
expected infrastructure and/or staffing levels. Further plan review by
Police and Fire will occur during the building permit process.
Drainage: Conceptual drainage information was provided for the City's review.
The Engineering Division has found the conceptual information to be
adequate and is recommending that the review of specific drainage
solutions be deferred until time of permit review. Additionally, the
project has the opportunity to utilize the Downtown Stormwater
improvement Watershed for a fee-in-lieu-of capital contribution (see
Exhibit C — Conditions of Approval).
Access: The proposed project's main vehicular access point is located on SE
2nd Avenue with a secondary access point on SE 1St Avenue. The
project's access design is contingent on the approval of an
Engineering Waiver. The Engineering Waiver is a request to reduce
the driveway's throat depth from the required 100 feet to 75 feet (see
Exhibit C — Conditions of Approval). A portion of SE 1St Avenue was
approved to be abandoned (Ordinance No. 20-035) by the City
Commission on January 19, 2021 and will no longer connect to
Federal Highway, but instead will provide direct access to the
secondary ingress/egress of the parking garage. In addition, the
project also provides nine (9) on-street parking spaces along Federal
Highway and SE 2nd Avenue to serve the retail uses on the first floor
of the project. Sidewalks are provided along all street rights-of-way.
The proposed sidewalks are a minimum of ten (10) feet wide and are
lined with street trees for shade. The sidewalk along Federal Hwy
also abuts a covered eight (8) foot active area that may be used for
commercial uses. The project also proposes a private dog park along
the northern property line and two public art sculptures — one to the
north end and one to the south end of the project — to encourage
pedestrian activity along the ground floor. There is limited pedestrian
access from SE 2nd Avenue into the private amenities for the
residents.
Parking: Off-street parking for the MU-C zoning district requires 1.33 parking
spaces for studios and one-bedroom units, and 1.66 parking spaces
for two (2) or more bedroom units. The project proposes 274 units
(149 studios and one-bedrooms, and 125 two and three-bedrooms),
which would require 407 parking spaces. Additionally, the code
requires guest parking at a rate of 0.15 spaces per unit, which adds
an additional 42 required spaces. . The commercial space, which
4
Page 45 of 91
Broadstone Boynton Beach (MSPM 22-001,MPMD 22-002)
Memorandum No PZ 22-008
Page 5
would allow a mix of retail and office uses, requires one (1) parking
space per 200 square feet of gross floor area. Proposed is 13,110
square feet of retail, thereby requiring an additional 66 parking
spaces. Additionally, the developer will maintain a parking agreement
that involves an additional 20 parking spaces being provided for use
in the operation of the Two George's restaurant. Under this standard
methodology for calculating required off-street parking spaces, a
grand total of 535 parking spaces would be required.
The site plan proposes 549 parking spaces, an excess of fourteen
(14) spaces. Regular parking space dimensions would conform to
code requirements for the CRA of 9 feet by 18 feet for 90-degree
parking and 8 feet by 22 feet for parallel spaces.
The applicant is proposing an eight (8)-story parking garage that
would accommodate up to 540 vehicles. The developer will be
required to comply with the City's residential parking requirements to
ensure that designated resident parking spaces are reserved for, and
made available to the residents to minimize the use of the retail
parking spaces by residents. This requirement shall be monitored
and enforced by the developer (see Exhibit C — Conditions of
Approval). There are an additional 9 on-street parking spaces; six (6)
on Federal Highway and three (3) on SE 2nd Avenue.
Landscaping: The Plant List (Sheet LP-1) indicates that the project would add a
total of 202 trees, 70 of them being canopy trees, and 132 palm trees
(including 16 relocated), 2,388 accent and shrub specimens, and
1,756 small shrubs/groundcover plants. Canopy trees are being
maximized where spatially feasible, while palm trees are proposed
in areas near the building foundation, along the property lines within
the landscape buffer and landscape barrier to further screen the
building. The exception to this objective intended to maximize
canopy trees is within the ground floor amenity areas in an effort to
maximize the amount of programmable open space on the site. All
plant materials to be used in the landscape design are required to be
Florida number one grade and must be identified as having "low" or
"medium" watering needs as indicated in the South Florida Water
Management's "Waterwise" publication. The proposed tree species
would include the following: Cathedral Live Oak, Gumbo Limbo,
Satin Leaf, Royal Poinciana, Orange Geiger, Timor Black Bamboo,
Crape Myrtle, Privet, Simpson Stopper, Mast Tree, Yellow Trumpet
Tree, Paurotis Palm, Fishtail Palm, Areca Palm, Ruffled Fan Palm,
Medjool Date Palm, Solitaire Palm, Cabbage Palm, Thatch Palm,
Montgomery Palm Double, and Montgomery Palm Triple. The
applicant has selected several butterfly attracting plants and has
exceeded the sustainability code's requirement of utilizing a
5
Page 46 of 91
Broadstone Boynton Beach (MSPM 22-001,MPMD 22-002)
Memorandum No PZ 22-008
Page 6
minimum of 5% of butterfly attracting shrubs and trees in the planting
scheme.
Projects proposed in the Mixed-Use Core (MU-C) zoning district are
subject to the "Streetscape Design" portion of the landscape code
regulations. These code provisions recognize the desire for reduced
building setbacks, thus creating an urban setting. The purpose of the
"Streetscape Design" concept is to create a landscape design that
encompasses both the private and public domain, to blend the two
areas into one unified landscape scheme and optimize the
pedestrian experience. This is accomplished through hardscape and
landscape choices, covered walkways (arcades, awnings, tree
canopy), and streetscape amenities (benches/seatwalls, lighting,
accent plantings). The landscape design proposed by the applicant
depicts the use of street trees and covered arcades to create the
streetscape theme. This includes the uses of lower landscape
material placed around private terraces and along the building
foundation, and street trees placed between the street and sidewalk
in an effort to provide maximum clear pedestrian pathways.
Lastly, a 15-foot wide urban landscape barrier with a 6-foot wall is
proposed along the east property line intended to mitigate off site
impacts (see Exhibit C—Conditions of Approval).
Building and Site: The proposed site area totals 2.76 acres. The proposed mixed-use
buillding contains 274 dwelling units which are located above the
retail spaces fronting Federal Highway and wrapping a central
parking garage. Along SE 2nd Avenue the building creates a large
courtyard which allows for the ground floor amenity deck to be
visable from the unit balconies. The retail portion of the project totals
13,110 square feet and provides an elevated covered arcade
adjacent to Federal Highway. As noted previously, the parking
garage has eight (8) levels of parking. The north elevation of the
parking garage is visable from SE 1St Avenue and is to be enhanced
with architecturual elements to ensure that the elevation has the
appearance of habitable floor area and that vehicles are completely
screened from view (see Exhibit C — Conditions of Approval).
Of the 274 residential units 29 are studio, 120 are one (1) bedroom,
103 are two (2) bedroom, and 22 are three (3) bedroom units. The
units range in size from 576 square feet to 1,425 square feet. Each
unit also has a balcony or terrace that either faces out towards the
street or in towards the ground floor amenity deck.
Relative to the floor area ratio (FAR) regulations within the code, the
6
Page 47 of 91
Broadstone Boynton Beach (MSPM 22-001,MPMD 22-002)
Memorandum No PZ 22-008
Page 7
Mixed Use Core (MU-C) zoning district has a maximum FAR of 4.0.
The project is also located within the "Transit Core" (1/4 mile radius
of the planned station), which requires that new development have a
minimum density of 40 dwelling units per acre; the project proposes
a density of 99.3 du/ac based on the one-half (1/2) unit provision.
Under this provision, the development must not exceed: a) the
maximum density of the MU-C zoning district (80 du/ac) when using
1/2 density units and the maximum density of the MXH future land
use classification (100 du/ac) when counting each individual unit as
a whole. Efficiency and one-bedroom units which are 750 square feet
or less and located within the MU-C zoning district may count as one-
half density units. The project proposes a total of 113 efficiency and
one-bedroom units that are 750 square feet or less, therefore,
providing a density count of 57 units. The remaining 36 one-bedroom
units count as whole units, in addition to the number of two-bedroom,
and three-bedroom units. Under the 1/2 unit provision, the total is 79
du/ac which complies with the maximum density allowed within the
MU-C zoning district. When counting each individual unit as a whole,
the proposed density is 99.3 du/ac which complies with the maximum
density permitted within the MXH future land use.
Building Height: The maximum building height allowed in the MU-C (Mixed Use Core)
zoning district is 150 feet. The proposed building elevations depict
the typical roof deck height of the mixed-use building at seventy-
seven (77) feet, with an overall height of approximately eighty-six
(86) feet six (6) inches, sixty-three (63) feet five (5) inches below the
maximum allowable height. Along Federal Highway, the proposed
building elevations show that the building steps back thirteen (13)
feet at an approximate height of twenty-six (26)feet and then extends
to its overall height.
Setbacks: The MU-C zoning district requires no building setbacks, but rather a
zero (0) build-to line with accommodation of the required pedestrian
zone. The Land Development Regulations requires the building to
be setback to allow for an enhanced public realm that includes 2.5
feet—5 feet for street trees, 10 feet for sidewalks, and 8 feet for active
areas such as outdoor seating and retail uses. The building setback
is measured from the property line to the exterior surface of the
building or supporting columns. Along Federal Highway, the
proposed building setback along the length of the building is between
27 feet and 37 feet. Along SE 2nd Avenue, the building setback is
between 7.7 feet and 15.5 feet except for the areas of the ground
floor amenity deck, which is setback approximately 107 feet. The
building setback along SE 1St Avenue varies between 8.5 feet and
21.5 feet. The eastern property line abuts the adjacent property
where the setback is 67 feet and includes a putting green, pickleball
7
Page 48 of 91
Broadstone Boynton Beach (MSPM 22-001,MPMD 22-002)
Memorandum No PZ 22-008
Page 8
court, bocce ball court and additional outdoor amenities. Lastly, the
building is setback approximately 26 feet from the northern property
line to allow for a private dog park.
Amenities: As noted above, a covered active area is proposed along Federal
Highway to encourage a mixture of active uses along the exterior of
the ground floor retail spaces, and pedestrian zone designs are
proposed along SE 1St Avenue and SE 2nd Avenue. The pedestrian
zones include a street tree area, sidewalks, active areas and covered
walkways.
The project has been designed with a large interior courtyard for
resident use, containing the community pool, outdoor lounging
areas, and lush tropical landscaping. The private amenities located
within the building will include a host of programmed spaces on the
ground floor and a rooftop amenity for the residents' enjoyment. The
developer also worked with Palm Tran of Palm Beach County to
locate and create a new transit shelter on site (Sheet SP-1),
designed utilizing some of the architectural characteristics of this
project.
Design: The intended architectural style for the project is a mid-rise modern
interpretation of "contemporary coastal" architecture, which is a
variation of Florida Vernacular Architecture. This architectural style
fosters a sense of place and identity for the district. The project
features a strong base utilizing framed entrance features that interact
with the pedestrian zone along Federal Highway and SE 2nd Avenue,
and provides shade and protection. The upper portions of the
building include separate vertical elements that create a scale
consistent with the 500 Ocean development. The project's materials
include simulated wood cladding, clear glass at the retail level,
concrete eyebrows, metal awnings, vertically-oriented windows, and
subtle tan tones that create a warmth to the building while
maintaining clean lines. The materials and finishes are consistent
with the contemporary coastal architectural style.
Mixed-use projects are designed to create a pedestrian-friendly
environment by placing the buildings along the pedestrian zones and
articulating the building mass to avoid a repetitive, continuous,
monotonous building block. The building mass fronting SE 2nd
Avenue steps back and wraps the ground floor amenity deck,
creating a break in the building mass. This approach mitigates the
impact of the building's height on the multifamily properties to the
south. Along Federal Highway, the building maintains its mass along
the length of the road and varies in height to create tower elements
at the north end, middle, and south end of the building. As mentioned
8
Page 49 of 91
Broadstone Boynton Beach (MSPM 22-001,MPMD 22-002)
Memorandum No PZ 22-008
Page 9
previously, the building facing Federal Highway is stepped back
thirteen (13) feet at a height of 26 feet in order to move the mass of
the building farther from the pedestrian environment.
Sustainability: Mixed-use developments must achieve a minimum of 25
sustainability points (see Exhibit "C" — Conditions of Approval). The
development would satisfy the requirement by providing the
following:
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT STANDARDS POINTS
ENERGY
Heat Island Reduction - 75% of the non-roof
impervious site 6
Efficient Cooling - All air conditioners are Energy Star
qualified. Minimum SEER 16. 2
Building Color - Use of white or cool light colors for the
body of buildings to reflect rather than absorb heat and
reduce cooling costs - as shown on architectural plans.
2
Lighting - Provide energy efficient lighting such as LED
lighting for building interiors for 100% of proposed
lighting.
1
Energy star appliances -All appliance with in a
building are 100% energy star. 2
Recycle & Waste Reduction
Recycle Content in infrastructure For all new
roadways, parking lots, sidewalks, and curbs. 2
Recycle station \ dumpster area Recycle chute(s) in
Mixed Use Districts and dumpster, which include a
recycle station. 1
URBAN NATURE
Tree Canopy - Provide canopy trees in an amount that
exceeds the minimum number of required trees by
20%. 4
TRANSPORTATION
Parking Structure At least 75% of the development's
total number of required off-street parking spaces is
contained in a parking deck or garage.
2
9
Page 50 of 91
Broadstone Boynton Beach (MSPM 22-001,MPMD 22-002)
Memorandum No PZ 22-008
Page 10
Electric Charging Stations - Provide four (4) over the
required number of electric car charging stations. 4
Total Points 26
Lighting: The photometric plans (Sheets PH-1 & PH-2) include 33 freestanding
pole light fixtures, with a pole height of 20 feet. The condition of
approval requires the ground level poles and fixtures to match the
design of the existing poles and light fixtures located along the 500
Ocean and Casa Costa developments. In addition, the condition of
approval requires the spot reading to be a maximum of 5.9 foot-
candles (see Exhibit "C" — Conditions of Approval).
Signage: Site and building signage have not been finalized and a Sign
Program must be approved in conjunction with requesting any sign
permits for the site (see Exhibit "C" — Conditions of Approval).
Public Art: The project is subject to the Art in Public Places requirement, and
the applicant has identified two locations for artwork along Federal
Highway, one to the north end of the project and one to south end at
the SE 2nd Avenue intersection. This concept is supported by City
staff as well as the Art Advisory Board. The project also proposes to
utilize portions of the exterior wall on the parking garage for Public
Art. The applicant is required to secure approval from the Art
Advisory Board and install the artwork prior to receiving the certificate
of occupancy (see Exhibit "C" — Conditions of Approval).
RECOMMENDATION
Staff has reviewed this request for a Major Site Plan Modification and Major Master Plan
Modification, and recommends APPROVAL, subject to approval of the accompanying
applications and satisfying all comments indicated in Exhibit "C" —Conditions of Approval.
Any additional conditions recommended by the Board or required by the City Commission
shall be documented accordingly in the Conditions of Approval.
\\Fps\ma in\S H RDATA\Pla nni ng\S HARE D\WP\PROJ ECTS\Broadstone(FKA GCI-Legacy)\_Staff Report\Staff Report.docx
10
Page 51 of 91
EXHIBIT Al — List of Owners & PCNs
206 S Federal Highway 625 SE 2nd Ave 0010 Federal Highway
08-43-45-27-04-000-0090 08-43-45-27-04-000-0010 08-43-45-27-04-000-0131
Bowden INC Sara N Garcia Francisco and Olga Solis
1622 NE 4th Street 625 SE 2nd Ave #A 80 SW 15th Court
Boynton Beach, FL 33434 Boynton Beach, FL 33435 Boca Raton, FL 33486
SE 1 st Avenue 625 SE 2nd Ave 0020 212 S Federal Highway
08-43-45-27-04-000-0650 08-43-45-27-04-000-0020 08-43-45-27-04-000-0150
One Twelve South Fed Hwy Maria CS Ruggeri Downtown Properties of South
INC Florida LLC
3549 Harbor Cir
W Bingham c/o PO Box 1182 4283 Fox Trace
Delray Beach, FL 33483
Boynton Beach, FL 33425 Boynton Beach, FI 33436
SE 1 st Avenue 625 SE 2 nd Ave 0030 112 S Federal Highway
08-43-45-27-04-000-0670 08-43-45-27-04-000-0050
08-43-45-27-04-000-0030
Joseph W Scaggs One Twelve South Fed Hwy
Linda and Christopher Chiodo
728 Casa Loma Blvd INC
2515 SW 13th Ct
Boynton Beach, FL 33435 Boynton Beach, FL 33426 W Bingham c/o PO Box 1182
Boynton Beach, FL 33425
SE 1St Avenue
625 SE 2nd Ave 0040
08-43-45-27-04-000-0710
08-43-45-27-04-000-0040
DSS Properties
Howard and Marianne Spencer
728 Casa Loma Blvd
731 NE 12th Terrace Apt 1
Boynton Beach, FL 33435
Boynton Beach, FL 33435
Ocean Avenue
SE 2nd Ave
08-43-45-27-04-000-0610
08-43-45-27-04-000-0630
Francisco and Olga Solis
Francisco and Olga Solis
80 SW 15th Court 80 SW 15th Court
Boca Raton, FL 33486
Boca Raton, FL 33486
Page 52 of 91
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Page 62 of 91
EXHIBIT "C"
Conditions of Approval
Project Name: Broadstone Boynton Beach (fka Legacy at Boynton Beach)
File number: MSPM 22-001, MPMD 22-002, CDPA 22-001
Reference: 51h review of plans identified as a Maior Site Plan Modification and Maior Master Plan
Modification with a January 24, 2022 Planning and Zoning Department date stamp
marking.
DEPARTMENTS INCLUDE REJECT
ENGINEERING / PUBLIC WORKS / FORESTRY/ UTILITIES
Comments:
1. The City has received an Engineering Waiver request for the X
driveway throat depth at the SE 2nd Ave access. The plan
proposes to have 75 ft in lieu of the required 100 ft. The project is
conditioned on the waiver's approval.
2. The ingress/egress on SE 2nd Ave will have night time traffic X
shining their headlights at the building at 610 SE 2nd Ave. Please
contact the building management and offer to supplement the
existing planting in an attempt to reduce the impact of the lights.
3. Developer will be responsible for replacement of existing FPL X
street lighting adjacent to the site with underground decorative
street lighting to match the City's standards.
4. The site appears to be in an A/E flood zone (EI 6 ft). The code X
requires the FF to be 12" above the average crown height of the
adjacent roadway. Please provide a narrative that indicates how
the finished floor elevation was determined (i.e. what road(s) and
crown were used). Please be aware that this area discharges into
Marina Village at Boynton (i.e. the intracoastal waterway). The
intersection of E Ocean Ave and SE 6th St regularly floods during
the seasonal King Tides and during tropical disturbances. The wet
season water table will limit the quantity of storage available in the
proposed exfiltration. Have you approached FDOT for legal
positive outfall? Signed and sealed drainage calculations will be
required.
5. Confirm that the Engineer of Record is aware of any historical X
drainage patterns on site. Any current (historic) surface water
flows, directed to the site, shall be accommodated into the post
development design.
6. Be aware that the existing 48" RCP in the FDOT R/W is the main X
trunk line serving 500 Ocean and NE 4th St basin. Its legal positive
outfall connection will need to be maintained.
Page 63 of 91
Broadstone Boynton Beach (fka Legacy at Boynton Beach) MSPM 22-001, MPMD 22-002, CDPA 22-001
Conditions of Approval
Page 2 of 6
7. The trash service shall be a dock height, roll off type compactor X
unit. Please provide a narrative that describes how trash removal
will be handled for the project. Be sure to discuss residential, retail
and City Sanitation Division perspectives. How will bulk trash be
handled? Where will bulk trash be located?
8. Has the developer determined if water quality and quantity is X
available via the Downtown Stormwater improvement Watershed?
If it is, a "fee-in-lieu-of" capital contribution for properties utilizing
the installed storm water treatment and/or conveyance facilities
within that watershed are as follows:
a. Capital cost per impervious square food for water quality is
$2.05
b. Capital cost per impervious square foot for water quantity is
$0.18
c. Total capital cost per impervious square foot for Water
Quality and Quantity is $2.23.
The Fee shall be paid prior to the issuance of a building permit for
new construction and/or redevelopment in the Downtown
Watershed.
9. The existing 8-inch and 24-inch gravity sewer mains are vitrified X
clay pipe (VCP) and shall be lined utilizing cured-in-place pipe
(CIPP) methods.
FIRE
Comments: All previous comments addressed at DART meeting.
POLICE
Comments: All previous comments addressed at DART meeting.
BUILDING
Comments: All previous comments addressed at DART meeting.
PARKS AND RECREATION
Comments:
10. Per City Ordinance, the Park Impact Fee is based upon a factor of X
$595 per unit for multi-family dwellings. Based upon the proposed
274 units, the fee will be $163,030 (274 X $595) due at time of
building permit issuance.
Page 64 of 91
Broadstone Boynton Beach (fka Legacy at Boynton Beach) MSPM 22-001, MPMD 22-002, CDPA 22-001
Conditions of Approval
Pae 3 of 6
PUBLIC ART
11. As per Article II, Section 27-25 of the Administrative Code, the X
project must satisfy the Art in Public Places requirements by the
payment of 30% of art fees at the time of permitting and the
installation of artworks with an art project cost of 70% or greater of
the art fees.
12. Artwork shall be placed at both the south and north corners of the X
property along S Federal Highway as shown on the Landscape
Plan (sheet LP-1) submitted on 1-24-2022. Both artworks must
satisfy the Art in Public Places Guidelines, be publicly accessible
24 hours a day, and be fully visible from public property with
targeted night lighting.
13. The artworks shall be approved by the Art Advisory Board and be X
installed prior to the issuance of the certificate of occupancy.
PLANNING AND ZONING
Comments:
14. Approval of the Major Master Plan Modification and Major Site Plan X
Modification is contingent upon approval of the School Capacity
Availability Determination (SCAD) application.
15. The Major Master Plan Modification and Major Site Plan X
Modification approval is contingent on the approval of the
Community Design Appeal Application (CDPA 22-001) for relief of
Chapter 4, Article III, Section 6.F.2.d. "integrated garages", which
requires habitable floor area to wrap the parking structure where
the structure has frontage along a public right-of-way.
16. Please revise the "knee wall" section of the parking garage X
elevation to either:
a. Provide additional screening within the metal open frames to
effectively screen vehicles from view; and/or
b. Raise the "knee walls" to effectively screen the vehicles from view.
The intent is to ensure that parked vehicles are not able to be seen, and
the appearance of habitable floor area must be maintained.
17. The proposed design treatments on the parking structure's north X
elevation shall also be applied to the elevation of the parking
structure fronting the pool courtyard. The intent is to ensure that
parked vehicles are not able to be seen and the appearance in
habitable floor area is also translated onto this elevation. At the
time of permitting, please include an elevation that shows the
enhanced elevation design meeting this requirement.
Page 65 of 91
Broadstone Boynton Beach (fka Legacy at Boynton Beach) MSPM 22-001, MPMD 22-002, CDPA 22-001
Conditions of Approval
Page 4 of 6
18. On the north elevation, please revise the position of the framed X
window openings located above the ingress/egress of the parking
structure to be centered with the ingress/egress opening below.
19. Provide a detail of the proposed wall separating the pool courtyard X
from the public sidewalk on SE 2nd Avenue. The proposal should
include architectural enhancements and possibly an integrated
green/vine wall feature or public art to avoid a monolithic
appearance.
20. Please increase the width and height of the columns of the X
proposed landscape barrier wall to provide adequate horizontal and
vertical offsets to avoid an expansive monolithic appearance. The
proposal should resemble the scale and proportions shown in the
image example below:
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21. The project plans shall be revised to identify which parking spaces X
are reserved for the residents. The resident parking spaces shall
be separated by a gate and/or gate arm to restrict public access to
resident parking. The developer shall comply with the City's
residential parking requirements to ensure that designated resident
parking spaces are reserved for, and made available to the
residents to minimize the use of the retail parking spaces by
residents. This requirement shall be monitored and enforced by the
developer.
22. Revise the proposed Satin Leaf tree specification to be a minimum X
4-inch caliper at the time of installation. The caliper of all trees,
except for palms and those trees classified as a development's
"signature tree" shall be a minimum of four (4) inches at the time of
installation.
23. The applicant shall provide on-street parking on S Federal Highway X
and SE 2nd Avenue as depicted on the site plan submitted on 1-24-
2022.
24. Provide benches near the proposed art work at both locations on S X
Federal Highway. The project is required to provide a total of six (6)
benches, therefore, three (3) additional benches are required to be
located on the site plan. In addition, the project shall also provide a
total of six (6) trash receptacles on site, therefore, three (3)
Page 66 of 91
Broadstone Boynton Beach (fka Legacy at Boynton Beach) MSPM 22-001, MPMD 22-002, CDPA 22-001
Conditions of Approval
Pae 5 of 6
additional trash receptacles shall be located on the site plan.
25. At time of permitting, provide a detail drawing of the proposed bike X
shelters, designed utilizing architectural elements, materials and
colors matching the proposed building.
26. The applicant shall dedicate a 10' x 30' easement and place, at X
their cost, a bus shelter designed utilizing architectural elements,
materials, and colors matching the proposed building.
27. Revise the photometrics plan to provide the proposed lighting X
levels along the east side of the project, between the east property
line and the building. The lighting levels shall not exceed the
maximum foot-candles allowed by code (5.9) and shall not spill
(levels greater than 0.3 foot-candles) onto the adjacent property.
28. All ground level poles and light fixtures shall match the design of X
the existing poles and light fixtures located along the 500 Ocean
and Casa Costa developments.
29. The applicant will be placing, at their cost, all overhead utilities X
below ground around the perimeter of the site.
30. A Sign Program will need to be submitted and approved in X
conjunction with requesting any sign permits for the project.
31. Prior to issuance of any permits, a narrative and phasing drawing X
shall be provided outlining how the required parking for the Two
Georges Restaurant will be provided throughout the construction of
the project.
COMMUNITY REDEVELOPMENT AGENCY
Comments: All previous comments addressed at DART meeting.
PLANNING & DEVELOPMENT BOARD CONDITIONS
Comments: To be determined.
CITY COMMISSION CONDITIONS
Comments: To be determined.
ADDITIONAL REPRESENTATION /COMMITMENTS
32. The applicant or applicant's representatives made the following
representations and commitments during the quasi-judicial and/or
public hearings that now constitute binding obligations of the
applicant. The obligations have the same weight as other
conditions of approval.
Page 67 of 91
Broadstone Boynton Beach (fka Legacy at Boynton Beach) MSPM 22-001, MPMD 22-002, CDPA 22-001
Conditions of Approval
Pae 6 of 6
F:\Exhibit C-COA Broadstone MSPM 22-001 MPMD 22-002.doc
Page 68 of 91
7.7.C.
New Business
2/22/2022
CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH
AGENDA ITEM REQUEST FORM
PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT MEETING DATE: 2/22/2022
REQUESTED ACTION BY PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT BOARD: Approve requests for Major
Site Plan Modification (MSPM 21-001) and Conditional Use (COUS 21-001) approval for Raising Cane's
Restaurant including a new 2,771-square foot building with dual drive-through facilities and 68 seats (50
indoor, 18 outdoor) on a BJ's Wholesale Club outparcel located at 1550 West Boynton Beach Boulevard
within the Planned Commercial Development (PCD) zoning district. Applicant: Kristina Belt, Kimley Horn &
Associates.
EXPLANATION OF REQUEST: The Applicant is seeking Conditional Use/ Major Site Plan Modification
approval for the construction of a 2,771 square foot Raising Cane's fast food restaurant and associated site
improvements, located at 1550 W. Boynton Beach Boulevard in the PCD (Planned Commercial
Development) zoning district. The subject outparcel was previously a Wells Fargo Bank and the existing bank
building is proposed to be demolished, allowing for construction of a new fast food restaurant. The proposed
drive-through facilities require Conditional Use approval. Additionally, per Ch. 2 Art. 11. Sec. FA.b. of the
Land Development Regulations (LDR), the proposed restaurant and related site improvements require Major
Site Plan Modification approval prior to permitting. The proposed restaurant use is permitted in the PCD
zoning district; however, per Ch. 3Art. IV. Sec. 3.13.5. of the LDR, the proposed drive-through facility
requires Conditional Use approval.
HOW WILL THIS AFFECT CITY PROGRAMS OR SERVICES? N/A
FISCAL IMPACT: N/A
ALTERNATIVES: To not approve a new commercial use for a vacant building at a shopping center.
STRATEGIC PLAN:
STRATEGIC PLAN APPLICATION:
CLIMATE ACTION APPLICATION: N/A
Is this a grant?
Grant Amount:
Page 69 of 91
ATTACHMENTS:
Type Description
D Staff Report Raising Cane's Staff Report
D Location Map Exhibit A Location Map
D Drawings Exhibit B Survey
D Drawings Exhibit B Site Plan
D Drawings Exhibit B Civil Plan
D Drawings Exhibit B Floor Plan
D Drawings Exhibit B Exterior Elevations
D Drawings Exhibit B Exterior Elevations
D Drawings Exhibit B Landscape Plan
D Drawings Exhibit B Photometric Plan
D Exhibit Exhibit C Applicant Justification
D Conditions of Approval Exhibit D Conditions of Approval
Page 70 of 91
DEVELOPMENT DEPARTMENT
PLANNING AND ZONING DIVISION
MEMORANDUM NO. PZ 22-007
STAFF REPORT
TO: Chair and Members
Planning and Development Board
FROM: Kathleen Hatcher
Senior Planner
DATE: February 10, 2022
PROJECT NAME/NO: Raising Cane's Restaurant COUS 21-001 / MSPM 21-001
REQUEST: Conditional Use and Major Site Plan Modification approval for the
construction of a 2,771 square foot Raising Cane's fast food
restaurant and associated site improvements, located at 1550 W.
Boynton Beach Blvd. in the PCD (Planned Commercial
Development) zoning district.
PROJECT DESCRIPTION
Property Owner: Boynton St LLC
Applicant/Agent Kristina Belt with Kimley Horn &Associates, Inc.
Location: 1550 W Boynton Beach Blvd (see Exhibit "A")
Existing Land Use/Zoning: LRC (Local Retail Commercial) / PCD (Planned Commercial
Development)
Proposed Land Use/Zoning: No change proposed
Proposed Uses: Fast Food Restaurant
Acreage: 0.8597-acres/ 37,448 square feet
Adjacent Uses:
North: Right-of-way for W Boynton Beach Blvd, and farther north a bank
(TD Bank) zoned C-3 (Community Commercial);
South: A Big-Box Discount Store (BJ's Wholesale Club) on 12 acres
zoned PCD (Planned Commercial Development);
East: Main ingress/egress drive for BJ's shopping center, and farther
east a government facility (USPS Post Office) zoned PU (Public
Usage); and
Page 71 of 91
Raising Cane's— 1550 W Boynton Beach Blvd Staff Report
COUS 21-001 /MSPM 21-001
Page 2
West: A restaurant with drive through (Chick Fil-A), another outparcel of
the BJ's PCD, zoned PCD (Planned Commercial Development).
PROPERTY OWNER NOTIFICATION
Owners of properties within 400 feet of the subject project were mailed a notice of this request
and its respective hearing dates. The applicant has certified that signage is posted and notices
mailed in accordance with Ordinance No. 04-007 and 05-004.
BACKGROUND/ PROPOSAL
Mr. Bryan Brown, representing Raising Cane's Restaurants, LLC, is seeking Conditional Use /
Major Site Plan Modification approval for the construction of a 2,771 square foot Raising Cane's
fast food restaurant and associated site improvements, located at 1550 W. Boynton Beach
Boulevard in the PCD (Planned Commercial Development) zoning district. The subject property
is one (1) of three (3) outparcels of the BJ's Wholesale Club PCD. The subject outparcel was
previously a Wells Fargo Bank and was closed long ago. The existing bank building is proposed
to be demolished, allowing for construction of the proposed fast food restaurant. The proposed
drive-through facilities require a Conditional Use approval. Additionally, per Ch. 2 Art. II. Sec.
FA.b. of the Land Development Regulations (LDR), the proposed restaurant and related site
improvements require a Major Site Plan Modification approval prior to permitting. The proposed
restaurant use is a permitted use in the PCD zoning district; however, per Ch. 3 Art. IV. Sec.
3.13.5. of the LDR, the proposed drive-through facilities require Conditional Use approval.
STANDARDS FOR EVALUATING CONDITIONAL USES AND ANALYSIS
Ch. 3 Art. IV. Sec. 4.C. of the LDR contains the following standards to which conditional uses
are required to conform. Following each of these standards is the Planning and Zoning
Division's evaluation of the application as it pertains to each of the standards. In addition, the
applicant has submitted a separate detailed justification statement that addresses each of these
standards (see Exhibit"C" —Justification Statement).
The Planning & Development Board and City Commission shall consider only such conditional
uses as are authorized under the terms of these zoning regulations and, in connection
therewith, may grant conditional uses absolutely or conditioned upon adherence to conditions of
approval including, but not limited to, the dedication of property for streets, alleys, recreation
space and sidewalks, as shall be determined necessary for the protection of the surrounding
area and the citizens' general welfare, or deny conditional uses when not in harmony with the
intent and purpose of this section. In evaluating an application for conditional use approval, the
Board and Commission shall consider the effect of the proposed use on the general health,
safety and welfare of the community and make written findings certifying that satisfactory
provisions have been made concerning the following standards, where applicable:
1. Ingress and egress to the subject property and proposed structures thereon, with particular
reference to automobile and pedestrian safety and convenience, traffic flow and control, and
access in case of fire or catastrophe.
Page 72 of 91
Raising Cane's— 1550 W Boynton Beach Blvd Staff Report
COUS 21-001 /MSPM 21-001
Page 3
The subject property currently has two (2) points of ingress and egress via cross-access
easements; one (1) full driveway located on the east side of the parcel, at the main entrance
into the BJ's Wholesale Club site where Winchester Park Blvd. intersects with W. Boynton
Beach Blvd. (see Exhibit "A"). The second driveway is right-in, right-out access located to
the west between the adjacent outparcels of Chick-Fil A and Autozone (formerly
Applebee's). There are no new vehicular access points proposed. A dual-drive through with
two (2) lanes is proposed for the restaurant that will provide sufficient vehicle stacking. In
addition, pedestrian access to the site is proposed to be enhanced with stamped concrete
and pedestrian lighting along the north and south pedestrian pathways.
2. Off-street parking and loading areas where required, with particular attention to the items in
standard#1 above, and the economic, glare, noise, and odor effects the conditional use will
have on adjacent and nearby properties, and the city as a whole.
The minimum parking required for restaurant uses is calculated at one (1) parking space per
100 square feet of gross floor area, or one (1) parking space for every 2.5 seats, whichever
is greater. The site plan indicates 68 seats (50 inside, 18 outside) are proposed, therefore a
minimum of 28 parking spaces would be required based on the seat count. The building is
proposed to be 2,771 square feet, also requiring a minimum of 28 parking spaces.
Therefore, minimum required parking is calculated to be 28 spaces. The applicant is
proposing the five percent (5%) reduction in the number of parking spaces allowed per Ch.
4. Art. V. Sec. 3.A. of the LDR. A 5% reduction would be one (1) parking space less, or 27
parking spaces required. However, the reduction requires landscaping within the parking lot
to be maximized, impervious surfaces to be minimized, and pedestrian connections to be
enhanced. The applicant has submitted a written justification for the request and revised the
plans to comply with the above criteria. The site plan depicts the provision of 27 parking
spaces within the proposed lease parcel boundaries, including two (2) handicap spaces, in
compliance with code requirements.
Relative to impacts on adjacent properties, the nearest residential structure to the west is
approximately 425 feet away from the subject property. Any proposed lighting will have to
comply with the City's lighting regulations, which are designed to reduce the impact of glare
in adjacent properties. The noise associated with the proposed business should not be
much different from the current surrounding commercial businesses.
3. Refuse and service areas, with particular reference to the items in standards 1 and 2 above.
The applicant intends to have a dumpster enclosure for trash and another for recycling that
are proposed to the south of the building and drive-through lanes, for waste removal
purposes. Trash removal needs would be absorbed into current solid waste services by the
City without any anticipated capacity limitations.
4. Utilities, with reference to locations, availability, and compatibility.
The City of Boynton Beach Utility Department currently serves the site, and utilities would
continue to be available and provided, consistent with Comprehensive Plan policies and City
regulations. No additional impacts are anticipated with this application.
5. Screening, buffering and landscaping with reference to type, dimensions, and character.
The property has existing landscaping around the perimeter of the entire site. The
Landscape Plan (Sheet L-1) depicts the addition of landscape plantings along all property
Page 73 of 91
Raising Cane's— 1550 W Boynton Beach Blvd Staff Report
COUS 21-001 /MSPM 21-001
Page 4
lines, to fill in any gaps and further enhance the existing material. Additionally, the plan
depicts landscaping along the north and south sides of the subject property, including
screening of the drive-through operation as required by code, and landscaping of the
parking lot islands and service area at the rear of the building. Typical landscape material
utilized in the design include Live Oak, Gumbo Limbo, and Orange Geiger trees, Sabal and
Montgomery palms, Cocoplum, Schefflera Arboricola, Fakahatchee Grass, Podocarpus and
Croton shrubs, as well as Green Island Ficus and Jasmine groundcovers. There are also
existing mature Live Oak trees and Palms that will remain in place in the final site design.
6. Signs, and proposed exterior lighting, with reference to glare, traffic safety, economic effect,
and compatibility and harmony with adjacent and nearby properties.
The project proposes the installation of eight (8) new light poles on the site. The new poles
will be comparable in height (25 feet tall) to the existing light poles in the area. In an effort to
minimize glare and impact on surrounding properties, the light fixures will be full cutoff
design, as required by code. The light levels depicted on Sheet E1.1 do not exceed the
maximum allowable of 5.9 foot-candles.
Relative to signage for the project, the applicant proposes to add a tenant panel on the
existing monument sign for the shopping center located at the northeast corner of the
subject property next to the ingress/egress drive. This tenant identification sign is designed
to match the existing sign colors of red and white.
The maximum wall signage allowed for the new restaurant building has been determined to
be approximately 58 square feet (length of north building wall x 1.5). The applicant has
proposed more wall signage than allowed on the building elevations submitted. In addition
to wall signage and two (2) menu boards, the applicant has proposed additional signage that
is considered artwork and is subject to City review and approval by the Art Advisory Board.
The agent for the project has been informed of this, as well as that project signage will be
reviewed for compliance with the maximum area standard at the permitting stage.
7. Required setbacks and other open spaces.
The proposed restaurant building is designed to meet or exceed the minimum setback
requirements of the PCD zoning district. Minimum building setbacks from property lines are:
front (north) required 40'; rear (south) required 40'; side (east and west) required 30'. The
proposed restaurant building complies with all required setbacks. The closest residential
structure is nearly 425 feet to the west. The perimeter of the site has existing mature
landscaping that will be further enhanced to provide a nice streetscape along West Boynton
Beach Boulevard.
8. General compatibility with adjacent properties, and other property in the zoning district.
The proposed restaurant use is generally compatible with the remainder of the commercial
uses in the area, and with the residential properties in the vicinity. The building's design is
typical of most commercial structures with a smooth stucco finish, control joints and cornices
in soft earth tone colors; a neutral gray primary body color (Sherwin Williams "Summit
Gray'), and a light beige secondary body/accent color ("Oyster Shell'). A brick veneer will
accent portions of the fagade in paints named "Alamo"and `Beldan Norman" The proposed
canopies and awnings are black aluminum as well as the store front and window trim.
Page 74 of 91
Raising Cane's— 1550 W Boynton Beach Blvd Staff Report
COUS 21-001 /MSPM 21-001
Page 5
9. Height of building and structures, with reference to compatibility and harmony with adjacent
and nearby properties, and the city as a whole.
The drive-through restaurant is designed as a one-story structure, with the typical parapet
wall designed at a height of 18' - 2" with the top of the accent parapets built at 19' — 10",
which is compatible with the structures on the same and adjacent properties, and under the
maximum allowable height of 45' in the PCD zoning district.
10. Economic effects on adjacent and nearby properties, and the city as a whole.
The overall economic effects of the proposed use on adjacent and nearby properties, and
the City as a whole, will be enhanced with the increased activity on this property and the
development of the partially vacant site. The City will also benefit from the collection of
permit fees, certificate of use fees, and increased assessable value of the property.
11. Conformance to the standards and requirements, which apply to site plans, as set forth in
Part lll, Chapter 4. Site Plan Review, of the City's Land Development Regulations.
Relative to concurrency requirements, a traffic statement for the proposed project was sent
to the Palm Beach County Engineering Traffic Division for concurrency review in order to
ensure an adequate level of service. A traffic concurrency approval letter from Palm Beach
County has been received stating the proposed project meets traffic concurrency
requirements, will generate 246 new daily trips, and has a build out deadline date of
December 31, 2026 for traffic concurrency. School concurrency is not required for this type
of project. As for the City's water and sewer concurrency review, the City's water capacity
would meet the projected potable water demand for this project. Sufficient sanitary sewer
and wastewater treatment capacity is also currently available to serve the project, subject to
the applicant making a firm reservation of capacity, following site plan approval. Solid Waste
disposal capacity has been confirmed through the issuance of a certificate of availability by
Palm Beach County Solid Waste Authority. Staff reviewed the site plan and determined that
current staffing levels would be sufficient to meet the expected demand for services.
Conceptual drainage information was provided for the City's review. The Engineering
Division has found the conceptual information to be adequate and is recommending that the
review of specific drainage solutions be deferred until time of permit review.
12. Compliance with, and abatement of nuisances and hazards in accordance with, the
performance standards of Chapter 2, Section 4.N. of the City's Land Development
Regulations and conformance to the City of Boynton Beach Noise Control Ordinance.
The project would not create smoke, odors, fumes, or toxic matter that would negatively
impact the neighboring properties. As noted above, with the distance to residential units,
and the buffer wall and intervening landscaping, noise associated with operation should not
be an issue. With incorporation of all conditions and staff recommendations contained
herein, the proposed use would exist in a manner that is in compliance with the above-
referenced codes and ordinances of the City of Boynton Beach.
RECOMMENDATION
Based on the information contained herein, compliance with development regulations and
conditional use standards, staff recommends APPROVAL of this request for conditional use and
major site plan modification, subject to satisfying all conditions of approval recommended by
Page 75 of 91
Raising Cane's— 1550 W Boynton Beach Blvd Staff Report
COUS 21-001 /MSPM 21-001
Page 6
staff as contained in Exhibit "D" — Conditions of Approval. Any additional conditions of approval
recommended by the Board and required by the City Commission will be placed in Exhibit "D"
accordingly. Furthermore, pursuant to Chapter 2, Article II, Section 2.0 Conditional Uses, a
time limit is to be set within which the proposed project is to be developed. Staff recommends
that a period of 18 months be allowed to receive the necessary building permits.
S:\Planning\SHARED\WP\PROJECTS\Raising Cane's Restaurant\COUS 21-001 MSPM 21-001\Staff Report.doc
Page 76 of 91
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EXHIBIT "D"
Conditions of Approval
Project Name: Raising Cane's Restaurant
File number: COUS 21-001 /MSPM 21-001
Reference: 3rd review-plans identified as a Major Site Plan Modification with a Januar+ 06. 2022
Planning and Zoning Department date stall marking.
DEPARTMENTS INCLUDE REJECT
ENGINEERING/ PUBLIC WORKS/FORESTRY/ UTILITIES
Comments: None, all previous comments addressed at DART meeting.
FIRE
Comments:
1. Please understand this review is for the Site Plan only. The Floor
Plan will be reviewed in detail at time of permit submittal.
POLICE
Comments: None, all previous comments addressed at DART meeting.
BUILDING DIVISION
Comments: None, all previous comments addressed at DART meeting.
PARKS AND RECREATION
Comments: None
PLANNING AND ZONING
Comments:
2. It is the applicant's responsibility to ensure that the application
requests are publicly advertised in accordance with Ordinance 04-
007 and Ordinance 05-004, and an affidavit with attachments
(ownership list, radius map, and copy of mailing labels) is required to
be provided to the City Clerk and Planning & Zoning one (1) week
prior to the first public hearing.
3. At time of permit submittal, please ensure downspouts are internal or
Page 90 of 91
Raising Cane's Restaurant(COUS 21-001 /MSPM 21-001)
Conditions of Approval
Page 2 of 2
DEPARTMENTS INCLUDE ]:�REJECT
encased in architectural elements.
4. At time of permit submittal, please provide documentation that all
customer areas will have vision glass, and said glass will only have a
light tint for visibility into the restaurant. Also, any faux, non-
transparent glass shall be designed to mimic the color of the vision
glass.
5. At time of permit submittal, correct building elevation directions and
label front/north, side/east, side/west, and rear/south.
6. At time of permit submittal, revise sign package to comply with the
sign regulations of the LDR.
COMMUNITY REDEVELOPMENT AGENCY
Comments: N/A
PLANNING & DEVELOPMENT BOARD CONDITIONS
Comments: To be determined.
CITY COMMISSION CONDITIONS
Comments: To be determined.
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