COMMUNITY PROCESS General Plan Infill Policies (workshops and hearings) Stockton Greater Downtown Housing Strategy (2007-2008) Housing Action Team Property owner meetings Community workshop Planning Commission and City Council presentations Waterfront and Fremont Park Neighborhood Master Plan (2008-2009) Housing Action Team Property owner meetings Community workshop Planning Commission and City Council presentations Ongoing Coordination Redevelopment Project Areas Merger Settlement Agreement (AB32 and Climate Action Plan) Neighborhood Renaissance Program Individual projects Rights of Way designs and utilities Zoning standards update Waterfront and Fremont Park Neighborhoods
Overall Planning Framework Approach Greater Downtown District - - implementing the General Plan, Settlement Agreement, Housing Strategies and neighborhood revitalization efforts Overall framework of neighborhood strategies Policy-based dashboard for City Council to measure progress and gauge appropriateness of development proposals Infrastructure, funding incentives and fee strategies
Evolution of the Waterfront
Evolution of the Waterfront
Evolution of the Waterfront
Stockton Waterfront and Fremont Park Neighborhoods Master Plan Implementing Stockton s General Plan Policies Strategic measures to implement AB32 Settle Agreement Revitalization of Downtown and Neighborhoods
Creating Addresses Neighborhood Places
Living on the Water Partial - -buildings to be added - - Mixed-use and Mixed-mode Neighborhoods
Living on the Water North Shore Fremont Street Live-work Townhouses Program Summary (as illustrated) Iron Works Apartments, Townhouses and Studios Lindsey Street Live-work and Townhouses Residential Program Townhouses Flats/Apartments Nonresidential Program Commercial/Office Conference Center Hotel 230 DUs 96 DUs 326 DUs 292,000 SF (1,500 jobs) 25,000 SF 200 Rooms North Shore
Living on the Water North Shore Walkable neighborhood with cultural amenities
Living on the Water South Shore Weber Institute Site Live-work and Mews Townhouses Warehouse Loft Conversions Existing Apartments South Pointe Townhouses Program Summary (as illustrated) Residential Program Townhouses Nonresidential Program Commercial/Office Hotel 248 DUs 372,000 SF (1,500 jobs) 100 Rooms South Shore
Living in Fremont Park Neighborhood Infill Townhouses/Live-work Mixed-use apartments facing park Post Office/School Loft conversions/new housing Program Summary (as illustrated) Commercial mixed-use facing MLK Plaza Residential Program Townhouses 85 Flats 80 Lofts 54 214 DUS Nonresidential Program Ground Floor Commercial Office 15,000 SF 100,000SF 115,000 SF (460 jobs) Fremont Park
Living in Fremont Park Neighborhood Walk to work, watering holes, shade and friends
Civic Auditorium Conference Center Hotel Arena Ports Ball Park Iron Works Arts Center Miner Levee Green waterfront park and commercial Recreation on the Water Weber Point Pop Fountain Event center Hotel, restaurants, guest boats and promenade Plaza Marina, promenade and waterfront commercial Colberg Boat Works Restaurant Overlook Promenade and overlook park
Recreation on the Water On the water, in the park and an extension of the community
Civic Auditorium, City Hall and MLK Plaza Neighborhood Conservation Iron Works industrial complex Historic and Cultural Resources 146 Regent Building Waterfront Warehouse Colberg Boatyards Gatehouse Complex Maritime activities Promenade overlook of traditional maritime activities
Historic and Cultural Resources Integrating Stockton s authentic waterfront into the future
Historic and Cultural Resources St. Charles, MO Alexanderia, VA Detroit, MI Other examples: Globe Mills in Sacramento Foundry Hotel in Napa
Historic and Cultural Resources Warehouse Iron Works
Historic and Cultural Resources Colberg boatyard gatehouse and dry dock Shipyard Brewery, Portland, Maine The Ramp in San Francisco
Open Space Boatworks Overlook Water Tower Park Miners Levee Midtown Park Fremont Paseo MLK Plaza Fremont Park South Pointe Overlook Park Promenade and Visitor Marina Webers Point Channelhead Plaza Hunters Square
Open Space Views, natural edge and a cool delta breeze
Mixed-Mode Access
Mixed-Mode Access Walkable, bikeable and transit-friendly neighborhoods
Neighborhood Planning Making it Happen Overall planning framework Land use Circulation Urban design Infrastructure Implementation strategies Administrative - - setting the table Development and Financial Regulatory
Merger and Greater Downtown District
Greater Downtown Planning Framework Policy framework to: Implementing Stockton s General Plan Policies Strategic measures to implement AB32/AG Settlement Agreement Revitalization of Downtown and Neighborhoods
Design Framework Neighborhood Places
Land Use Framework
Additional Parking
New and Improved Streets
Infrastructure New and Improved Streets South Shore URS
Infrastructure New and Improved Streets North Shore URS
Infrastructure Utilities URS
Infrastructure Water Quality BMPs
Case Studies
Case Studies Waterfront Neighborhood
Case Study 1: Fremont Street Live-work Townhouses Mix of 1,200 SF, 16,000 SF and 2,400 SF units, and retail spaces Retail/Commercial 2,400 SF Unit and Retail Space Fremont Street Elevation 1,600 SFD Units
Case Study 2/3: Iron Works and Office Office 60,000 SF Townhouse/Duplex 14 DUs Adaptive Reuse of Iron Works 40,000 SF Residential Mixed-use Apts. 96 DUs 10,000 SF Retail View from Southwest
Live-work Townhouses -Duplex Case Study 4: Weber Institute Redevelopment Waterfront Hotel, Retail and Restaurant View from Northwest Mews Townhouse- Duplex
Case Study 5: Fremont Park Neighborhood Park-facing Mixeduse Apartments Fremont Park
Case Study Fremont Park Mixed-use Fremont Park Retail/Commercial Frontage Live-work Frontage
Implementation Regulatory Actions Greater Downtown Policy Framework Common flexible development standards and guidelines Specialty - - neighborhood specific standards and guidelines for unique conditions
Urban Standards Flexible standards that evolve with the neighborhoods Min. and Max. requirements Street-oriented pedestrian friendly development Assumes open space and parking can happen outside the lot line in the neighborhood
Qualitative Guidelines Common guidelines for urban projects and specific guidelines for neighborhoods All about private and public investment supporting neighborhood-building objectives Tiered from principles, design goals and guidelines
Implementation - Public Actions ( Setting the Table ) Acquiring/assembling property Creating site suitability for development Installing public infrastructure Extending public parking program Providing public safety and security
Implementation - Planning & Predevelopment Actions Complete environmental review process for Plan Prepare street right-of-way designs (e.g. Weber Avenue) Prepare Waterfront connections plan Establish expedited development project review
Implementation - Redevelopment Actions Create additional Master Development Areas Create financial capacity (Merged Waterfront Redevelopment Project Area) Pursue development of Agency-owned properties Assist (financially) public/private infill development
Implementation - Financial Incentive Actions Consider reduction of development fees Consider reduction of Public Facility Fees Pursue various federal/state funding programs Pursue expansion of Central Parking District Allocate CIP funding for infill development
Summary and Next Steps Community Presentation 6:30PM at Civic Auditorium Update report based on City Council and community input Coordinate with General Plan and Settlement Agreement implementation Publish report and bring it back to City Council in August