Loading...
GiblinCarolyn Misch <cmisch@northamptonma.gov> Storm Water Concerns on Proposed Plan 107 Williams St. 1 message Bernadette Giblin <beingiblin@gmail.com>Thu, Mar 10, 2022 at 5:50 PM To: cmisch@northamptonma.gov Bernadette Giblin 110 Williams St Northampton MA 01060 Carolyn Misch, AICP Northampton Planning Board RE: 107 Williams St Proposed Development To Whom It May Concern, I have lived at 110 William St. Northampton for 35 years. I worked for two decades as an organic landscaping professional. I helped Joanne Campbell of the Valley CDC to gain support for the Lumber Yard affordable housing development. I wholeheartedly support the City’s effort to create more market value housing opportunities in Ward 3. My primary concern is that the proposed development plan will have an adverse storm water runoff impact on our neighborhood. I live in close proximity to the condominium project on Hockanum Rd. I witnessed firsthand an increased amount of street flooding and personally experienced greater basement flooding. Many of my neighbors reported similar increases. It took well over a decade for the trees planted there to reach the necessary maturity to properly minimize the offsite discharge that resulted from that development. As a result, I’m advocating that the nearly Century old tree at the northeast corner of the site be saved. Conifers intercept more rainfall than deciduous broadleaf trees. A mature Conifer of this size will be effective at minimizing offsite discharge of approximately 65% while the immature plantings take a decade to mature and increase in efficiency hopefully resulting in 100% remediation onsite. Integrating this valuable existing canopy into the storm water management plan may prove advantageous to the developers and result in lower construction and stormwater costs for the project. Additionally, it will disturb less wildlife and bird habitat. The only way I propose to save the tree would be to flip the parking lot and the building, basically have the parking lot at the front of the lot along Williams Street and the building towards the rear. That may require waiving some setback distances to comply with Zoning requirements; I can’t be sure. The slightly reduced construction costs and reduced drainage impacts result as the access roadway would theoretically be shorter since it wouldn’t have to run all the way past the building. Instead, a smaller walkway could serve to bring people from the lot to the units. I believe this alternative allows the tree to be saved and the storm water management benefits in the immediate as opposed to a distant future. I’d like the Planning Board to please consider the following: 1. Parking with more than 5 spaces is supposed to be spread out to multiple locations onsite. As designed, there’s just a single parking lot. Not sure if there’s space for 2 parking lots. It would possibly work better to allow for 2 so that the nearly Century old conifer tree may be saved to maximize the permeability of this site situated in this floodplain. 2. I echo my neighbor’s concerns that the proposed plan for 3+ story building modeled in a contemporary manner doesn’t fit in with a neighborhood of 2 story buildings generally constructed over 50 years ago. Yet, I am sympathetic that this design provides for the maximum amount of solar arrays and a vision of greater energy sustainability. Moreover, by making the exception for parking closer to the street with this building lacking the character for our street scape setback further from the road and the tree allowed to remain doing the work of stormwater management and providing a natural visual screen. Honestly, this keystone species value is limitless. Please keep it rooted here on Williams St. for another Century. Thank You for Your Consideration, Bernadette Giblin, AOLCP Reply Forward Bernadette Giblin, CEO Emeritus of Safeground Organic Analytics There is more to life than increasing its speed. ~ Gandhi