Orange County NC Website
<br />6 <br /> 269 <br />Kim Piracci: And do you still have to go in front of the commissions if you use a convention design option? 270 <br /> 271 <br />Patrick Mallett: Yeah. So if you wanted to do a conventional subdivision with 8 lots and you have no open space, 272 <br />you didn’t meet the flexible design criteria then that would be a major subdivision. You’d have to go to the BOCC. 273 <br /> 274 <br />Kim Piracci: Ok. And so these flexible development types of subdivisions aren’t.. This is only when they’re using 275 <br />their own septic, it’s not city water? 276 <br /> 277 <br />Patrick Mallett: Well, environmental health regulates the wells and you can do that in an individual well, a shared 278 <br />well, a community well, different specials that they allow for. They basically stay to the state guidelines. 279 <br /> 280 <br />Kim Piracci: No, but I mean like if this development was going to use city water. 281 <br /> 282 <br />Patrick Mallet: Yeah, they could do that and that would be the easier way to deal with the water part of it. 283 <br /> 284 <br />Lisa Stuckey: How many subdivisions come to the County that have any form of city water? 285 <br /> 286 <br />Patrick Mallett: They’re rare but I would say 90% of the time it’s going to be a well system that may or may not be 287 <br />provided that two owners are sharing together. That’s almost always a “families” type scenario or you’ve got a well 288 <br />provider that’s meeting the states standard. 289 <br /> 290 <br />Tony Blake: The important thing is that this doesn’t allow you to bypass any of the health regulations, building 291 <br />codes, or any of the other things that are associated with the subdivision. This is a yearly dividing of the lots in a 292 <br />more logical versus physical way. 293 <br /> 294 <br />Kim Piracci: That does seem like it increases density so if you had 50 acres you could do 5 lots, right? 295 <br /> 296 <br />Patrick Mallett: You could do 5 10-acre lots. 297 <br /> 298 <br />Tony Blake: Or you could do more. 299 <br /> 300 <br />Kim Piracci: You could do 12 lots. 301 <br /> 302 <br />Patrick Mallett: Or you can do 5 and 5. You can do 2 minor subdivisions and 5 lots each. 303 <br /> 304 <br />Kim Piracci: So the same sets of neighbors you have now more houses on 50 acres. 305 <br /> 306 <br />Tony Blake: The minimum acreage for a house for Orange County 3 acres, isn’t it? 307 <br /> 308 <br />Patrick Mallett: .It’s dependent on the watershed. A lot of the watersheds allow 1 unit per acre, some 2. 309 <br /> 310 <br />Kim Piracci: The result will probably be more density. 311 <br /> 312 <br />Patrick Mallett: I’m going to give you a biased answer. 313 <br /> 314 <br />Kim Piracci: I mean, it’s going to feel less dense because you’re going to have all this open space but in fact there’ll 315 <br />be more houses. 316 <br /> 317 <br />Patrick Mallett: That’s right. I see it as kicking the can to some extent. I’ve come to Orange County from a private 318 <br />sector world and having dealt with developments of all shapes and sizes for 15 years. All over. In high-density 319 <br />areas like Cary and rural areas of the County. If there’s a market for 10 houses then 10 houses are going to get 320 <br />built in that area because they’re honing in on a school or an address or something that’s driving the price point in 321 <br />that market. And it’s a matter of do you put all of those together or do you spread them out and kick the can 322 <br /> 10