Cochran v. The Inhabitants of the City of Portland

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedMarch 16, 2020
DocketCUMap-19-13
StatusUnpublished

This text of Cochran v. The Inhabitants of the City of Portland (Cochran v. The Inhabitants of the City of Portland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cochran v. The Inhabitants of the City of Portland, (Me. Super. Ct. 2020).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT CUMBERLAND, ss CIVIL ACTION DOCKETNO.AP-19-13 /

CYNTHIA COCHRAN, et al,

Petitioners

v.

THE INHABIT ANTS OF THE CITY ORDER AND DECISION OF PORTLAND,

Respondents

and

HAMMOND HOUSE, LLC, and KEVIN O'ROURKE

Pmties-in-Interest

Before the Court is Petitioners Cynthia Cochran, Carolyn Treat, Jessica Lockhart, Edith

Woodward, Ellen Bailey, Catherine Clay, Steven Oldford, Kerry MacDonald, Elizabeth Freeman,

and Martha Voland ("Petitioners")'s Rule 80B appeal of Respondent City of Portland's April 9,

2019 decision. Portland's Planning Board (the "Board") approved Parties-in-Interest Hammond

House, LLC and Kevin O'Rourke (the "Applicants")'s site plan to construct a new building located

on Hammond Street. For the following reasons, the Board's decision is affirmed.

I. Factual Background

Petitioners are residents and property owners in the East Bayside neighborhood in Portland,

Maine. (Compl. l/lJ 1-10.) Respondent City of Portland is a municipality located in Cumberland

County, Maine. (Compl. l/ 11.) Party-in-Interest Hammond is a Maine limited liability company

that seeks to redevelop properties on Hammond Street. (Compl. l/ 12); (R. 659.) Party-in-Interest Kevin O'Rourke is the owner of the properties at issue in this proceeding, which are located at 4,

6, 8, and 10 Hammond Street, Portland, Maine. (Compl. l) 13.)

On November 26, 2018, Acorn Engineering Inc. submitted a Level III Site Plan

Application (the "Initial Plan") on behalf of the Applicants d/b/a The Preserve at South Ridge,

LLC.• (R. 186.) The Initial Plan proposed a project that seeks to redevelop multiple parcels

totaling 15,433 square feet located in an R-6 Residential Zone (the "Proposed Project"). (R. 659.)

The Proposed Project seeks to construct a three story, sixteen unit, residential condominium with

subsmface parking. (R. 186.) The neighborhood around the Proposed Project consists of a high

proportion of single-family structures that are typically one and two stories, though there are

several three-story buildings within a block radius of the Proposed Project. (R. 659.)

Level III Site Plan reviews in Portland are required on "any new structures having a total

floor area often thousand (10,000) square feet or more in all zones except the Industrial zones and

IS-FBC zone." Portland, Me. Code§ 14-523(f)(l); (R. 51.) The Proposed Project's floor area is

planned to be well over 10,000 square feet and is located in an R-6 Residential Zone. (R. 659.)

As the project is in an R-6 Residential Zone it most comply with the standards contained in

Portland's Zoning Ordinance section 14-526(d)(9). Portland Zoning Ordinance section 14­

526(d)(9)(a) states that "certain zones ... are subject to design standards in addition to the

provisions of Section 14-526(a) in order to ensure designs that contribute to and enhance the goals

and policies for specific districts of [Portland]." Portland, Me. Code§ 14-526(d)(9)(a); (R. 95.)

Portland's R-6 Residential Zone is one of the "certain zones" that is subject to additional design

standards. Portland, Me. Code§§ 14-526(d)(9)(a)(v) & (vi)(d); (R. 97.) The additional design

standards for an R-6 Residential Zone are found in Appendix 7 of the City of Portland Design

1 Now DIBIA Party-in-Interest Hammond. (R. 695, Lines 4-12.)

2 Manual labeled, "the R-6 Infill Development Design Principles & Standards" ("R-6 Design

Standards").' (R. 169.)

The Proposed Project was reviewed under the R-6 Alternative Design Review found in

section IV of the R-6 Design Standards. (R. 176-77, 417,463 .) The R-6 Design Standards contains

seven broad Design Principles and each individual Design Principle contains more specific Design

Standards. (R. 170-77.) The R-6 Alternate Design Review, which was used by the Board for the

Proposed Project states:

The [R-6 DesignJ Standards [] are time-honored ways of achieving the Design Principles. With exceptional care, though, it is possible to apply a design approach that meets the Principles through alternatives that vary from the Standards, while maintaining and relating to the predominant character-defining architectural elements of the neighborhood, such as the building location on the site, its relationship to the street, and its mass, form, and materials. The guiding principle for new construction under the alternative design review is to be compatible with the surrounding buildings in a two block radius, in size, scale, materials and siting, as well as the general character of the established neighborhood.

(R. 176-77.) The R-6 Alternative Design Review section continues:

An applicant may propose an alternative design approach and request an Alternative Design Review. The Planning Authority under an Alternative Design Review may approve a design not meeting on or more of the individual standards provided that all of the conditions listed below are met ....

A. The proposed design is consistent with all of the Principle Statements. B. The Majority of the Standards within each Principle are met. C. The guiding principle for new construction under the alternative design review is to be compatible with the surrounding buildings in a two block radius in terms of size, scale, materials and siting, as well as the general character of the established neighborhood, thus Standards A-1 through A-3 shall be met.

2 Portland argues that the R-6 Design Standards do not apply to the Proposed Project. (Resp't's Br. 8.) Because the Court has determined that the Board's approval, which applied the R-6 Design Standards, was not an error oflaw or an abuse of discretion and that the decision was supported by substantial evidence in the record the Court declines to consider this unnecessaiy question, especially since this issue was not raised or discussed in lower proceedings.

3 D. The design plan is prepared by an architect registered in the State of Maine.

(R. 177 .) Under the R-6 Alternative Design Review, apart from Design Standards A-1, A-2, and

A-3, no single Design Standard mnst be met, yet a proposed design must be consistent with each

Design Principle, and the majority of the Design Standards contained in each Design Principle

must be met.

Specifically, at issue in this proceeding are Design Principles A and B. (See Pet'rs' Br. 30­

37 .) Design Principle A addresses the overall context of a proposed building design. (R. 170.)

The overview of Design Principle A provides that:

A building design shall contribute to and be compatible with the predominant character-defining architectural features of the neighborhood. Explanatory Note: The central idea behind good design in an established neighborhood is to reinforce positive features of the surrounding area, which provide its unique identity. To a large degree, the scale, mass, orientation, and articulation of an infill building should be compatible with that of the buildings that surround it. ... While there is no specific solution for a given setting, there are a number of building characteristics which can be used to gauge visual compatibility of new residential construction in an existing neighborhood. These characteristics include design elements such as: 1. Scale and Form ... 2. Composition of Principal Facades ... 3. Relationship to the Street.

(R. 170-71 (emphasis added).) Petitioners point to Design Principle A, Design Standard A-1:

Scale and Form, as a specific Design Standard that the Proposed Project did not meet.

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