Marketplace at Augusta looks for zone change

AUGUSTA– A founding partner of the Marketplace at Augusta desires the city to make zoning modifications to allow more methods for space to be used at the retail shopping center.Local entrepreneur

Roger Pomerleau, a partner and creator of the shopping mall advancement that includes Walmart, House Depot, Kohl’s and other major nationwide retail chains, composed a letter to the city seeking zoning modifications. The modifications would allow, following a conditional use review by the Preparation Board, warehousing and light manufacturing services, and little distilleries, breweries and pastry shops in the Civic Center District where the Market is situated. Those are all utilizes not presently permitted in that zone. An individual strolls towards a row of stores in the Marketplace at Augusta in 2014. The Planning Board will think about a proposition to change zoning for the area to develop more methods area could be used there. Personnel file photo by Joe Phelan Browse images readily available for purchase:

Photo Shop → Pomerleau stated Monday the doing well in retail, with just a number of small areas vacant. There is, nevertheless, 10,000 square feet of” back room area”that might be utilized as a storage facility or for light manufacturing, for which the Market has actually received queries from prospective businesses.”We’re aiming to get more multi-use, to assist keep us at One Hundred Percent,”of its space filled, Pomerleau stated.” We’re constantly attempting to keep one dive ahead, expecting some shops will come and go,”he said. “We ‘d like to have a more complete mix.”Pomerleau, in his letter to Augusta Development Director Matt Nazar, stated the retail scene

is constantly developing and success is specified as survival by those who can anticipate changes and adjust in time to grow. He composed that modifications are needed”to add to the flexibility that the Market have to keep our areas full and efficient.”Area is readily available behind the previous Linens ‘n Things place next to Home Depot, the front part of which is now inhabited by several smaller merchants consisting of Dressbarn, the Paper Shop and Dreams Bridal Boutique. Pomerleau said the space has loading docks, 12-foot-high-ceilings and a parking area to the rear of the building.He stated Marketplace’s owners would also like city zoning to be changed to permit breweries and brew pubs, small distilleries and pastry shops in the zoning district encompassing the Marketplace. They likewise would like an increase in the allowed size of such services– from the current 5,000 square feet now in city ordinance to 10,000 square feet.Bigger brew pubs have seating for more than 200 people, Pomerleau stated, which would likely need more than 5,000 square feet of area to accommodate.The Preparation Board is anticipated to examine the demand at

its Tuesday conference, at which board members are likewise scheduled to examine a proposition for a 250-unit apartment building on Civic Center Drive just north of the Marketplace.The proposal from Saxon Partners LLC, owned by YaYa’s Yard Inc. and landowners George and Shirley Ezzy, requires building of two three-story structures that would include a total of 250 studio and one-bedroom houses. The new rentals, according to application

products filed with the city for the proposition, would offer housing choices for staff members of the neighboring MaineGeneral Medical Center and other surrounding medical facilities. Saxon, inning accordance with the application products, recently started a program establishing home structures targeting staff members of major hospitals indicated to supply housing within easy commutes of medical facilities.The residential or commercial property, with addresses of 375, 377, 379 and 391 Civic Center Drive, would be simply south of the Augusta Elks Club. They would be accessed from a brand-new entrance to be constructed at the Civic Center Drive and Leighton Road crossway, where there is already a traffic signal.The 15-acre website is in the Planned Advancement District, where multiple-family houses are not allowed. Deputy City Coordinator Betsy Poulin noted in an evaluation of the proposal, however, the home remains in an area recognized as a financial growth location in the 2007 Comprehensive Strategy, which encourages mixed usages consisting of some domestic development.The Planning Board satisfies at 7 p.m. Tuesday in council chambers at Augusta City Center.Keith Edwards– 621-5647 Send out questions/comments to the editors. Returning skill for Black Bears This iframe includes the logic required to manage Ajax powered Gravity Kinds.

Be the first to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.


*