In re: Appeal of Ted S. Gladstone and Kathleen Hoisington (Decision and Order)

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedApril 2, 2001
Docket190-10-99 Vtec
StatusPublished

This text of In re: Appeal of Ted S. Gladstone and Kathleen Hoisington (Decision and Order) (In re: Appeal of Ted S. Gladstone and Kathleen Hoisington (Decision and Order)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Vermont Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re: Appeal of Ted S. Gladstone and Kathleen Hoisington (Decision and Order), (Vt. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

STATE OF VERMONT

ENVIRONMENTAL COURT

In re: Appeal of Ted S. } Gladstone and Kathleen } Hoisington } Docket No. 190-10-99 Vtec } }

Decision and Order

Appellants appealed from a decision of the Planning Commission of the Town of Bennington granting site plan approval to a project at a shopping center known as Monument Plaza. Two related matters, involving a subdivision and variance for the project, were resolved by the merger of the two properties, and were closed in February of 2000. Appellants are represented by John D. Hansen, Esq.; Appellee-Applicant BLS Bennington LC is represented by Alan B. George, Esq.; the Town of Bennington is represented by Robert E. Woolmington, Esq.

An evidentiary hearing was held in this matter before Merideth Wright, Environmental Judge, who also took a site visit alone, by agreement of the parties. The parties were given the opportunity to submit written requests for findings and memoranda of law, but did not do so on the original schedule. The Court issued its notice of decision in the summer and allowed the parties to file supplemental requests for findings as contemplated by V.R.C.P. 52. Instead, Appellants moved to vacate, or for a schedule for further memoranda. The Court apologizes for the delay in issuing the decision, due in part to the press of other cases, in part to the consideration that no parking lot construction or landscaping could occur during the winter season, and in part due to the motion to vacate, to which no response was filed. Appellant= s Motion to Vacate is DENIED as there is no reason to vacate the ruling. The > notice of decision= was properly issued; under Rule 52 the Court may provide for subsequent filing of requests for findings, as was done in this case. Appellee-Applicants proceeded at their own risk to construct during the hearings; the City did not seek to stop construction pending the proceedings in this Court. The present decision will conclude the matter.

Upon consideration of the evidence, the site visit, and the written memoranda and proposed findings, the Court finds and concludes as follows.

Appellee-Applicant owns an existing shopping center known as Monument Plaza, located on Northside Drive (Route 7A) in Bennington, in the Commercial-Industrial zoning district. Appellee-Applicant seeks site plan approval under ' 3.4.4 of the Zoning Bylaws for alterations and additions to the center= s retail space, parking space, landscaping and to the configuration of the intersection of the shopping center= s main access road with Route 7A. The existing shopping center consisted of approximately 105,000 square feet of building footprint, primarily in an L- shaped configuration, but including a small existing building within the parking lot closer to the street. The existing parking lot in front of the Wal-Mart building extends close to the street. Appellee-Applicant proposed to retain the existing Wal-Mart building of 60,966 square feet, consisting of the 50,966 square feet in Wal-Mart itself plus an additional 10,000 square feet of existing retail space marked as A A@ on the proposed site plan1 on the east end of the Wal-Mart building. Appellee-Applicant proposed to retain the existing retail space marked as A E@ on the site plan (a free-standing building of 6,480 square feet located in the parking lot and occupied by Western Auto) and proposed to demolish 37,554 square feet of retail space. Appellee-Applicant proposed to construct new retail space of 55,793 square feet for a new Price Chopper supermarket and attached new retail space marked as A B@ on the site plan (consisting of 15,000 square feet) and as A C@ on the site plan (consisting of 27,000 square feet), for a total of 97,793 square feet in the > Price Chopper building.= An additional 9,900 square feet of retail space to the rear of the Price Chopper building shown within dashed lines as A future= is not part of the present application2. Thus, the proposal is for a 165,239 square foot shopping center, of which 67,446 square feet is in the existing Wal-Mart and Western Auto buildings, and 97,793 square feet is in the new Price Chopper building.

In conducting site plan review, the Planning Commission and hence this court may review and impose appropriate conditions and safeguards only as to the adequacy of vehicular and pedestrian traffic access onto and from the site, on-site circulation of vehicles and pedestrians, parking, landscaping, screening, lighting, and the protection of renewable energy resources. Of these issues, Appellants do not contest screening, lighting, or the protection of renewable energy resources.

The proposed site plan shows a paved area extending to both sides of and behind the Wal-Mart building, and a paved area extending to both sides of and behind the Price Chopper building, allowing vehicular traffic to drive in a truck lane to the south (left) of the Price Chopper building, to connect with a new commercial drive or service road behind the Price Chopper that would exit the property at the intersection of Harmon Road and Morse Road at the westerly side of the property. A stop sign is proposed for that intersection, as well as signage to prohibit truck traffic from turning right onto Harmon Road. Morse Road leads to Route 67A to the northwest, while Harmon Road intersects with Route 67A close to its intersection with Route 7A.

The proposed site plan shows the following numbers of parking spaces provided as calculated for each of the buildings, on the basis of one parking space for every 300 square feet of gross floor area. For the small free-standing Retail A E@ (Western Auto) building of 6480 square feet, 22 spaces are required and 65 spaces are provided. For the Wal-Mart building (Wal-Mart plus Retail A A@ ) of 60,966 square feet, 203 spaces are required and 235 spaces are provided. For the Price Chopper building, the site plan shows a parking space calculation to accommodate the > future= building segment. Without that segment, 326 spaces are required; with that segment, 359 spaces are required. The proposed site plan provides 418 spaces. Accordingly, the parking proposed by the site plan is adequate. In this regard, however, we note testimony that from time to time Wal- Mart places outdoor display or storage of seasonal inventory in the parking lot. Any such uses on the 235 spaces of parking area allocated to the Wal-Mart building may not impede any more than a total of 32 of the designated parking spaces from being used for parking at any given time, as 203 spaces are required to be provided for that building. That is, even though there are also excess parking spaces provided for the Price Chopper building and for the Western Auto (Retail A E@ ) building, those excess spaces cannot be allocated to compensate for Wal-Mart parking spaces used instead for outdoor display. Further, with regard to parking, we note that the free-standing ATM was not shown in the site plans before the Planning Commission, and none of the calculations or assumptions regarding the uses in the shopping center accounted for the free-standing ATM. It was discussed only briefly in testimony at trial. An ATM is a use which may be included inside or in the wall of a shopping center building without changing the use category of the shopping center. However, as the ATM is free-standing it must be considered as a use which will generate some amount of its own parking demand, even if it would not increase the number of peak hour trips to or from the shopping center. The Court recognizes the security issues suggesting that it should be located in a place visible from and close to Route 7A, and that the excess parking spaces for the Western Auto building will accommodate the very brief parking associated with the nearby ATM. Accordingly, the Court has considered the ATM use as part of the amended site plan.

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In re: Appeal of Ted S. Gladstone and Kathleen Hoisington (Decision and Order), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-appeal-of-ted-s-gladstone-and-kathleen-hoisington-decision-and-vtsuperct-2001.