Latest Guides

Government

Design Commission Seeks Comments on Lincoln Avenue Specific Plan

Published on Sunday, December 20, 2020 | 5:00 pm
 

As part of the city’s community engagement process, the Design Commission will review the draft design, development standards and guidelines of the Lincoln Avenue Specific Plan at 4:30 p.m. Tuesday.

After this review, the plan will be presented to the Planning Commission and City Council.

“During this phase of the community engagement process, the program team will present drafts of the development and design standards for each of the Specific Plans to the Design Commission for feedback,” according to a memo contained in Tuesday’s agenda.

Through the Our Pasadena program, launched in 2018 as a step toward the implementation of the General Plan, which guides future growth and development, the city is updating all eight of Pasadena’s specific plans.

The Central District, East Colorado, East Pasadena, Fair Oaks/Orange Grove, Lamanda Park, Lincoln Avenue, North Lake and South Fair Oaks all have specific plans.

This plan would change the Lincoln Avenue corridor from an industrial and limited commercial area to a more vibrant neighborhood-oriented district, with new housing options, local-serving retail and service businesses, office spaces, and community uses.

The specific plan lays out the actions to be taken to recreate the corridor as one that better serves surrounding neighborhoods and creates an attractive gateway into Pasadena, consistent with General Plan goals, policies, and guiding principles. 

Key specific plan objectives include:

  • Creating a neighborhood “main street” that will serve as the focal point for the neighborhoods surrounding Lincoln Avenue. 
  • Preserving and enhancing existing residential areas. Providing new opportunities for all types of housing along the corridor. Facilitate opportunities for catalytic developments that provide desired neighborhood-oriented retail and service businesses, local employment opportunities, and a link to the community. 
  • Providing for the gradual phasing out of industrial uses that create conflicts with surrounding neighborhoods. 
  • Supporting design that contributes to the enhanced character of the city and Northwest Pasadena in particular. 
  • Enriching the pedestrian environment along Lincoln Avenue through well designed and appropriately scaled projects and pleasing streetscapes. 
  • Inviting pedestrian activity through a cohesive and improved streetscape corridor.
  •  Encouraging investment, maintenance, and pride in the Lincoln Avenue Specific Plan area. 
  • Enhance public safety. 

According to the plan, Lincoln Avenue has been the location of small-scale industrial businesses ? many with outdoor operations for decades.

“While Pasadena certainly supports a vibrant local industrial sector, districts in the city other than the Lincoln Avenue corridor are better suited and have been designated for such purposes,” the plan states.

The goal is to create a framework for change and to inspire private reinvestment along the corridor that includes rehabilitation of aging buildings and establishment of new buildings and new uses that can achieve the goals stated above. 

The updates will result in new development standards and guidelines that will help shape the city’s major commercial and mixed-use areas for generations to come.

Get our daily Pasadena newspaper in your email box. Free.

Get all the latest Pasadena news, more than 10 fresh stories daily, 7 days a week at 7 a.m.

Make a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

 

 

 

 

buy ivermectin online
buy modafinil online
buy clomid online
buy ivermectin online