Aesthetics
It is not just a question of changing zoning, but a question of aesthetics and fitting in to the neighborhood. As planned, the building is 45 feet tall, 3 stories, and only 10 feet from the Tremont sidewalk. The adjacent building on Tremont is only single story, and no buildings in the area are more than 2 stories high. Six foot high concrete block walls are planned right at the sidewalks of both Tremont and Fair Oaks. All parking is visible from the street, only 6 spaces covered, and not even 1 parking place is provided for every two units, even though each unit can have up to two licenced drivers. This does not meet any of the current zoning codes.
In the early 80's this area was re-zoned due to a high saturation of Institutional Living Facilities - 13 are located within the Washington Revitalization Area, varying in density from 6 units per acre to 55 units per acre. None of them have densities anywhere close to the 72 units per acre planned for this site. We have building codes for good reasons - we should not be changing the laws just to accomodate a "pet-project". The Fair Oaks/Orange Grove specific plan is not even completed yet - we should not be making "piece-meal" decisions on changes in the area, but should develop the plan first and fit projects to the city and area plans rather than fitting the city plans to a specific project.
A project of this type will not encourage economic development or activity, but it would substantially affect the view of the mountains as one exits Pasadena by this major corridor.
By Robert Wittry