Orange County NC Website
38 <br /> 1624 to share the knowledge that our engineers have provided to help others keep their power on. That's just an example <br /> 1625 that came to mind. <br /> 1626 <br /> 1627 Whitney Watson: Okay. What for me was missing in the narrative are ways in which public transportation or <br /> 1628 other kinds of transportation will be addressed or provided for the residents. I get that it's only a few miles down 54 <br /> 1629 to Chapel Hill and Carrboro, but if somebody's got a medical appointment it can be tricky, and they're still shopping, <br /> 1630 so I guess I'm sort of questioning perhaps the assumptions of the traffic analysis in saying,oh no,there won't be any <br /> 1631 increase in traffic or virtually none. <br /> 1632 <br /> 1633 Scott Radway As I heard the question before about what Fiddlehead might add to or support within the rural node <br /> 1634 is there is existing gas station and mini mart and the nursery, Piedmont, and other things that are in there, and I know <br /> 1635 for a fact that already we do that as we individually and as other members. So I think what you're doing is putting <br /> 1636 purchasing power in for some of the neighborhood's things that frankly you don't find anyplace else in the county <br /> 1637 within a half a mile of where you live. So if that was the question about what might be the impact on those <br /> 1638 businesses I would think it would be positive. The transportation piece,we had conversations with NCDOT and we <br /> 1639 had conversations with the County and with the transportation department and other things like that. We are very <br /> 1640 interested in being able to have bus service out this far in the county. What we don't have yet is a route structure and <br /> 1641 a number of other things that don't usually happen unless there's actually people there to do something for, and so <br /> 1642 one of the reasons that we are excited about that, there's an opportunity out here that with 285 or 300 people over <br /> 1643 the time of the project,that will provide enough mass at one location, and specifically we've talked about having a <br /> 1644 bus entrance or a bus stop that would be in location right at the entrance point which then is accessible to other <br /> 1645 people. We've talked about how to do a park and ride when there would be a demand and an opportunity within the <br /> 1646 bus system to get there, how to do a supportive use like a park and ride. There's a minimal impact around there. <br /> 1647 The other part of it is we have designed a location within the center of the development as specifically designed <br /> 1648 around the dimensions and requirements of what the County now has as the busses that are used for a call in and <br /> 1649 pickup dial-a-ride and things like that,so this is just one of the many things that you got to ask the questions to us <br /> 1650 because the information is, it's in there, but it's buried pretty far. Not because we want it to be buried but because <br /> 1651 there is so many different things. <br /> 1652 <br /> 1653 Whitney Watson: So one of the things that showed up often in the narrative was this comment about affordable <br /> 1654 housing, and we've heard a project budget, but what do you anticipate an individual dwelling unit might go for? <br /> 1655 <br /> 1656 Scott Radway: Well I guess the best answer for that is 2 years ago, if I had guessed the answer it would be <br /> 1657 wrong. But what we're looking for in the process is a dwelling unit's about 1,200 to 1,500 square feet, two bedrooms, <br /> 1658 small footprint, single floor as possible and other things like that and so all of those are pieces that are to reduce the <br /> 1659 cost of development in what we now see from national builders which are two stories, and they want four bedrooms, <br /> 1660 so they've got to have so many feet on the ground floor to support four bedrooms and that kind of stuff, so we're <br /> 1661 looking at a housing product that can be downsized into and it can be done with not all of the extra corners and <br /> 1662 windows and all of the other things that go into houses that are two and three stories and are$600,000. That's not <br /> 1663 an answer. The answer is we don't know for sure what it will be because we're looking at being out there about 2 <br /> 1664 years if the project gets approved, getting the wells approved, getting the wastewater treatment approved, going <br /> 1665 through all of the preliminary site work which includes identifying—we have to do the tree survey and doing a lot of <br /> 1666 other things. I'm not trying to avoid the question or avoid the answer. It's just not quite possible to do that, but we do <br /> 1667 know that two-bedroom houses on one floor are going to be more affordable than four bedroom houses and two <br /> 1668 bathrooms on two floors, and so we're aiming at that piece. We've talked with the County about affordable housing <br /> 1669 and how that mechanism can come into place or not,and we have not figured out if it can be done through the <br /> 1670 budget process and through the funding of affordable housing. So, it's two pieces. One is how to reduce the cost for <br /> 1671 the people who are going to move there,which is one aspect, and the other is in a broader sense of what's affordable <br /> 1672 housing, and we don't have an answer for that yet. <br /> 1673 <br />