Orange County NC Website
Cedar Ridge High School is located on a +/-69.58-acre property at the intersec�ons of Orange <br />Grove and New Grady Brown School Roads in Orange County, North Carolina. Orange County <br />Schools is applying for a condi�onal zoning district to immediately allow for a new structure on <br />the property to support an Agricultural Laboratory, and is reques�ng a condi�on to allow for <br />further development of the property as a by-right zoning regula�on. The school was constructed <br />in 2001 and has a building footprint of approximately 270,022 square feet (6.20 acres), not <br />accoun�ng for the paved parking areas and walking paths. It was constructed prior to the <br />regula�on of stormwater runoff or nutrient management was required in this watershed by <br />Orange County, the regulatory authority. Over half of the property is ac�vely used for school <br />purposes and, outside of the buffered areas on its perimeters and perennial streams, is generally <br />managed and maintained as a lawn of fescue or Bermuda grass with ornamental shrubs. <br />The property is located in the Lower Eno River Unprotected watershed, flowing into the Lower <br />Eno River and, eventually, the Eno River and Falls Lake. There are no NC Department of <br />Environmental Quality-iden�fied “impaired” waters on site or downstream of the property. The <br />property has two perennial streams on it: one iden�fied in a 2000 site plan as Sand Branch, which <br />defines the property’s western perimeter; and an unnamed tributary (“UT”) that transects the <br />property east-west and feeds into Sand Branch. The UT was displayed by the US Geological Survey <br />(USGS) as crossing the en�re property but a Surface Water Iden�fica�on conducted by Orange <br />County Erosion Control and Stormwater staff iden�fied an origin point immediately west of the <br />high school’s football stadium. It is possible that the construc�on of the campus in 2000 impacted <br />the loca�on and flow status of this stream. <br />No wetlands are documented on site. The only possible wetland soils loca�on is a band of <br />Chewacla, a predominantly nonhydric soil, collocated with Sand Branch and its immediate area. <br />No known Natural Heritage Elements or Element Occurrences have been documented on the <br />property by the North Carolina Natural Heritage Program (NHP). Sand Branch and its riparian <br />buffer zone are iden�fied in the 2019 Eno-New Hope Wildlife Habitat Connec�vity (Triangle <br />Connec�vity Collabora�ve) Network as a “Higher”-ranked habitat patch and corridor (this is the <br />second-highest classifica�on). The stream and its buffer are protected by Orange County Schools <br />by restric�ng access with an eight-foot chain-link fence. A site visit iden�fied numerous exo�c <br />invasive species within the buffer but the canopy and undergrowth could largely be characterized <br />as mature secondary successional growth. <br />Orange County’s 2030 Comprehensive Plan iden�fies “Resource Protec�on Areas” (RPAs) as <br />“[l]and designated as Primary Conserva�on Area which contains sensi�ve environmental <br />resources, historically significant sites, and features considered unbuildable because of their <br />limita�ons or unsuitability for development ”. Two RPAs are iden�fied on the Cedar Ridge High <br />School property: one that is the same Sand Branch corridor that is iden�fied by NHP; and another <br />patch on the southeastern corner of the property that appears to be a legacy mixed hardwood <br />24