From Deseret News archives:

Draper folks vow to fight development

They say Lowe is reneging on his master plan

Published: Tuesday, Sept. 7, 2004 9:13 p.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
Many Draper residents will return to city chambers Thursday night to continue their battle with a local developer and City Hall over a housing development that the residents say will "destroy the heart and soul" of their neighborhood.

The disagreement over the development of nearly 200 townhomes and apartments at 900 E. Highland Drive was put on hold when the city's planning commission postponed its vote, disappointing the nearly 100 residents who showed up to protest the development.

Since then, resident Jeff Hodges said he and 350 other residents have banded together against the 11.6-acre project. The residential development, called Montclair Village, would replace a "walkable community" of retail and open space that residents say they were promised in the South Mountain master plan.

"When we purchased into our homes, we purchased into a lifestyle," Hodges said. "It is the nearly unanimous opinion of the neighborhoods that if the application is accepted in any part, it will quite literally destroy the heart and soul of our community."

The commission may not take a vote on the issue Thursday. Montclair developer Douglas Lowe said he has asked the planning commission for a continuance until he has more time to work with residents on a resolution that will balance the residents' desire for a town center with his high-density development.

Story continues below
"A lot of their fears are just fears of the unknown. That's always going to be there as long as that property is undeveloped," Lowe said. "There's a lot of confusion. There's a lot of emotion."

Lowe said he has met with several groups of residents since the Aug. 26 public hearing to discuss a compromise on the area. Hodges, who is leading the residents' opposition to the plan, said neither he nor anyone else living next to the proposed development has been contacted by Lowe.

Lowe said he also wants to make commercial property a part of the development, but such retail buildings are not a part of Lowe's application to the city.

Resident Wiebke Lips said she is not willing to give up the commercial intent of the area for townhomes and apartments. The area, she said, is already saturated with high-density housing and needs the walkable community to enrich the quality of life in Draper.

"Your decision will determine whether Draper city, and specifically South Mountain, will be known for its unique and diverse character and its high level of living value — or whether it will become just another bedroom community," Lips wrote in a letter to the planning commission Tuesday.

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

previousnext

Latest comments

Navajo Code Talkers break silence

We owe so such gratitude to the Navajo code talkers, for their dedication and...

Hall would rather take a hit

Howard S. wrote: Hall plays great against teams that can't pressure him and...

One of the main misperceptions of the Mormon Church in Utah is its direct...

Letters: Endless black hole

So we are going to spend $1 trillion on free health care? Actually it will...

4A All-Tournament team

no one from lehi made it? hmmm..

El Salvador flooding kills 8 Mormons

We read this story in Irkutsk, Russia. The story tells that the Mormon church...

A profoundly different standard exists between legal wrong doing and adequate...

4A football: Mustangs vs. Tbirds

and it is going to be played in the semi's... Does anybody else have a...

Matheson may face Dem challenger

"Matheson is a DINO" "He needs to be gone Long gone" "Along with the rest of...

Federal law PROHIBITS anyone EVER convicted of a domestic violence...

Advertisements
Advertisement