![]() ![]() ![]() Further, as the industrial building might be built to hold storage, the height of the interior was a critical factor in whether the investment would be worth the construction costs, Amerikaner said. This is for two reasons: the change in maximum heights in the new zoning ordinance, and also a change from where it is measured - from the finished floor in the old zoning rules and from the existing grade in the new.īecause the old drive-in sits in a flood plain, explained Steve Amerikaner, the attorney for developer SyWest, a quantity of fill dirt would have to be brought in to keep any new building on dry land. It would, however, cause an 18-foot difference in the height allowed for any new building. It would not tie the hands of planning commissioners or design review board members when the time comes for the project itself to be considered, city staff explained. SyWest’s request, formalized in a Development Agreement, was broached to the Planning Commission on Monday - and ultimately goes to City Council for a final decision. Goleta’s responsibility is to keep a fish channel open one the east-side of the canal, which has turned out to be a constant effort. The widening ate up the broad median along the 217, formerly used for access. Maintained by County Flood Control, the canal was widened in 2015 to keep the creeks within its walls and stop it from flooding Goleta’s Old Town. San Jose Creek, once a flood-prone waterway, has been channeled into a concrete canal alongside State Route 217, the broad, sweeping road out to UC Santa Barbara. It’d be wide enough for two dump trucks to safely pass, which would speed up clearing the creek in flood and also during the work on the Hollister Avenue bridge, which is currently out at bid. In exchange, it would grant the city an easement for 2,082 square feet of land that would add 10 feet of width to the current road to an access ramp down into San Jose Creek. That option ends on December 31, 2021, however, and SyWest’s swap asks for an extension to December 31, 2023. SyWest has the right to be considered under the former zoning regulations it completed its project application before a cut-off date of September 1, 2019, which was a rule settled during the years-long new-zoning-ordinance process completed a year ago. Goleta’s Planning Commission was unconvinced, however. In what SyWest hopes is a winning compromise, it has offered the city a sliver of land to add a needed width of access road down to San Jose Creek in exchange for rolling back for two extra years the zoning to the earlier height limit of 45 feet. Any new building there - owner SyWest Development is considering storage units at the site - has to keep the elevation of the building pad in mind and also bumps up against Goleta’s new height limit of 35 feet. From the air, the West Wind Drive-In has visible issues with flooding, bordered as it is by the Goleta Slough and the occasionally rambunctious San Jose Creek as it drops its last half-mile to the Pacific Ocean. ![]()
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