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HomeMy WebLinkAboutComp Plan Section IX, Revised Oct 1987SECTION IX. MASTER PLANS FOR AREA DEVELOPMENT Section IX. Title Page SECTION IX. MASTER PLANS FOR AREA DEVELOPMENT A. Wheat Ridge Town Center Master Plan 1. Description and Purpose 2. General Goals & Objectives 3. Urban Design Goals 4. Implementation Program 5. Design Guidelines 6. Use Areas B. Kipling Activity Center Master Plan 1. Description and Purpose 2. General Goals & Objectives 3. Design and Capital Improvement Concepts 4. Implementation Program IX - 1 IX - 5 IX - 6 IX - 7 IX - 7 IX - 9 IX - 10 Section IX. Contents Wheat Ridge Town Center Master Plan OCTOBER 12, 1987 A. WHEAT RIDGE TOWN CENTER - Master Plan /Upended 10/12/81 1. Description and Pur ose The area generally bound by, and including the right- of-ways thereof, Wadsworth Blvd., West 44th Avenue, West 38th Avenue, and Upham Street are included within the Wheat Ridge Town Center Master Plan area. An Urban Renewal Plan for a portion of this area has been approved and adopted by City Council which describes the area, sets forth purpose, and identifies project activities and financing proposals. Expansion of the Urban Renewal Area to coincide fully with the Master Plan area is anticipated. In order to strengthen the ability to implement the Wheat Ridge Town Center Urban Renewal Plan, this Master Plan is made a part of the Wheat Ridge Comprehensive Development Plan so the major goals, objectives and urban design concepts are officially recognized through the master planning process.of the City. The area covered by this Plan is found to have eminent public interest and therefor should be developed and used in accordance with the adopted Master Plan, and in furtherance of the stated goals and objectives' of the Wheat Ridge Comprehensive Development Plan. The goals of the Development Plan being used in this Master Plan are: "SECTION II. GOALS & OBJECTIVES FOR THE CITY OF WHEAT RIDGE. II. LAND USE. GOALS: GENERAL A. To recognize land as a valuable and limited resource, which should be used in the best interest of all citizens. (Page II-1) F. To provide for a moderate growth rate which will allow the City to provide an adequate level of services. (Page II-2) OBJECTIVES: 1• By enacting performance standards for all development and redevelopment to ensure positive impact upon the environment, the society and the economy. (Page II-2) L. By making extensive use of the PUD zoning concept to encourage innovation, design excellence and conservation of land. (Page II-2) 8. By beautifying the City, using methods such as development of parkways, burying utility lines, enforcement of sign and building codes, and requiring more landscaping on new projects. (Page II-2) GOALS: Commercial and Industrial C. To provide for additional commercial, office and service uses provided that they are conveniently located, attractively developed and meet the demonstrated needs of the City. (Page II-4) OBJECTIVES: 1• By encouraging the development of community activity centers encompassing a broad range of land uses, each complementing the other. These centers must be pedestrian oriented and be unified architecturally. (Page II-4) 2. By promoting concepts such as shared parking or parking structures within commercial areas or activity centers so as to encourage pedestrian activity, thereby reducing use of the automobile. (Page II-4) 4. By providing the amount of land required for the community activity centers, by redevelopment of existing commercial areas, if necessary. (Page II-4) GOALS: Open Space (Page II-4) A. To provide cultural and recreational opportunities for all citizens. B. To provide psychological visual relief from the effects of urbanization. OBJECTIVES: By encouraging the use of plazas, landscaped areas, parkways, open space and buffer within new developments and redevelopments. (Page II-4) 2 III. TRANSPORTATION GOALS: (Page II-6) A. To participate in the development. of a well- balanced regional transportation system to move people and goods in a safe, expeditious and economic manner. C. To ensure public safety for pedestrians, bicyclists and motorists. G. To promote the development of community activity centers which will decrease the use of the automobile. H. To increase the attractiveness of the City's streets. (Page II-6) OBJECTIVES: (Page II-7) 5. By controlling access from businesses along major streets - by decreasing the number of curb cuts. 7. By providing more sidewalks, pedestrian crossings, bikeways and pedestrian bridges. 8. By improving and adding where necessary, traffic controls and synchronized signs. 10. By promoting and providing incentives for shared parking and parking structures to decrease the amount of land devoted to the automobile, and encourage pedestrian activity. 11., By provision of additional landscaping along major streets, which will improve the street visually, and also buffer adjoining uses from the effects of traffic. 12. By encouraging screening of parking areas by use of grade separation, landscaping or walls. (Page 11-7) IV. ECONOMIC BASE (PAGE II-9) GOALS: A. To encourage a strong diversified economic base, which will enable the City to provide quality services at a reasonable tax rate. 3 B. To utilize the limited developable commercial land in a responsible manner. C. To provide a full range of retail shopping with special emphasis upon increasing furniture, clothing and dry goods sales. D. To provide a pleasant shopping environment which will make shopping in comfort, safety and convenience possible. E. To provide incentive for the development of community activity centers the best method of achieving the above goals. These centers will provide a unified shopping environment, and contain diverse but compatible uses. Pedestrian activity will be emphasized and hopefully the design elements will include shared parking or parking structures, extensive landscaping, plazas, malls, and a unified sign program. The result should be an atmosphere conducive to browsing and comparison shopping, higher sales volume, and increase feasibility of mass transit. OBJECTIVES: (PAGE II-9) 2. By Providing incentives for business to relocate to the activity centers and by channeling appropriate new development to the activity centers. (Page II-9) 3. By including within the zoning ordinance, bonuses in lot coverage for such elements as excellent design of commercial areas. (Page II-10) VI. PARKS AND OPEN SPACE GOALS: (PAGE II-11) B. To provide an aesthetic asset to the community and to provide visual and psychological relief from the effects of urbanizations. C. To provide open space that functions as part of the structural framework of the City. D. To provide diverse cultural facilities and activities. (Page II-il) G. To include historic preservation efforts within the park program. (Page II-12) 4 OBJECTIVES: 2. By acquiring parks and open space as a part of land development proposals. (Page 1I-12) 9. By encouraging the inclusion of plazas, malls, buffers and landscaping in proposed development. (Page II-13)" In addition to the goals and objectives stated in the Comprehensive Development Plan, the following section illuminates the need for a Master Plan to further define and delineate each of the various commercial activity centers. "SECTION IV. LAND USE PLAN FOR THE CITY OF WHEAT RIDGE. The Land Use Plan (Page IV-18) _Concepts: The Land Use Plan concept calls for the development of three planned commercial centers for the City . Each center will provide a variety of the needed goods and services with easy access from the neighborhood in which it is located. Instead of providing a collection of activities with no direct interactions, and separated by parking lots and other barriers, these centers will be designed to give a sense of wholeness. Each center will accommodate a diversification or blend of activities. Each activity would be a compliment and therefore a contribution to all other activities. These centers could be approached easily by automobiles along the major arterials. However, within these centers, circulation would be restricted to pedestrian scale with well-landscaped malls and sidewalks. Activities in each center would include retail trade, offices, service establishments, restaurants, recreational and amusement establishments, and public transportation stations.... The proposed planned commercial centers are to be located: 1. Along Wadsworth Boulevard between approximately West 38th Avenue and West 45th Avenue. This center world serve the community generally described as south of Clear Creek and east of Dover,Street. (Page IV-18).... Although this is a sound concept, one it requires a lot of cooperation businessmen and the City for success. based upon this concept, it is quite parties involved begin in the near fut and plan strategies that best suit the all concerned. (Page II-20)" disadvantage is that from developers, The Land Use Plan is important that all ire to open dialogue desires and needs of 5 2. General Goals and Objectives o Master Plan f Wheat Ridge Town Center GOAL: Improve or eliminate conditions of blight. OBJECTIVES: *Upgrade the physical conditions of deteriorated structures, parking areas, interior circulation routes, and general grounds appearance. *Improve vehicular and pedestrian circulation connection, and access opportunities throughout the Town Center. *Provide a more efficient use of land and functional design. *Promote attractive design in new development and redevelopment which unifies the entire Town Center. GOAL: Improve safety for vehicular and pedestrian circulation and access. OBJECTIVES: *Provide for defined interior circulation routes as differentiated from parking lot circulation. *Provide for designated pedestrian walks and crossings. *Reduce conflict between vehicles entering and exiting the Town Center and other vehicles traveling on bordering streets. *Provide for improved mass transit service and facilities. *Upgrade parking lot and exterior building lighting to increase night time safety and crime prevention. GOAL: Stabilize and improve the business environment while providing for a sound and increasing tax base. OBJECTIVES: *Encourage increased patronage of existing businesses, and construction and patronage of new businesses through improvements in circulation, access, attractiveness and identity. 6 *Promote a balanced mix of commercial uses, however preserve the ground floor of all structures for retail sales and service uses to create a strong retail center. 3. Urban Design Goals for the Wheat Ridge Town Center. a. Turn two underdeveloped commercial nodes into a unique 45 acre unified shopping center with a greatly increased sales tax base. b. Create a TOWN CENTER for Wheat Ridge. C. Concepts. (1) Name of the total project: THE WHEAT RIDGE TOWN CENTER. (2) Strengthen tree city designation with tree planting on edge. (3) Create a heritage park as the central focal point of the promenade. (4) Strong use of color in the plantings to last the full growing seasons. (5)' Create a safer more attractive parking lot and circulation area for shoppers as they drive and walk. (6) Create strong visual and sound barriers, through use of substantial landscaping, berms, fences or walls and grade separation, in order to provide maximum protection to residential uses which abut new commercial .development. 4. Implementation Program. The Plan calls for a combination of financing methods including tax increment financing for the Urban Renewal Project, tax increment bond financing and industrial revenue bond financing for the private development projects. To augment the financial implementation program, it will be necessary to regulate land use and design in order to achieve all the stated goals and objectives of this Master Plan. The use of Planned Development zoning or site plans and overlay zoning will be required where needed to protect the public interest. 7 5. Conceptual Plan. Figure 1 shows the total Project area and illustrates the urban design concepts in a generalized fashion. This Figure shall serve as a general guide for future rezonings, site development plan review, and building permit review. The Director of Planning and Development shall review all future development proposals and building permits to assure compliance with the conceptual plan as shown in Figure 1 and as further specified herein. Recognizing that Figure 1 is a design concept and lacks detail and specificity, it does provide guidance for future approval decision on general vehicular circulation and access, and on building layout and location. 6. Use Areas. Figure 1 details use categories for various areas within the Project area. This shall serve as a guide for future rezonings, site plan reviews, and building permit reviews. Prior to any development within the area covered by this plan, the developer shall submit a site plan which details site design and layout, and proposed uses. Such site plan and uses shall be reviewed at public hearings held before Planning Commission and City Council, for consistency with the Master Plan, goals and objectives, conceptual plan and general intent. The public hearings shall be advertised and posted for public hearing in advance and shall be decided upon by Council motion. 8 G) m 2 m D ~o O G) 0 z m 4 0 CO Tm Tom/ V D z 0 0 z 0 m m Mi c r -o r z d • a n o m b N A y a ~ O_ O = ~ -1 r N N 1'l~rrrr 1~ - t - 1 j ~lui ell 1 Ili 1 all 1 : WN 0111 1 01111 Mill 1 . @IIIII ~,NI . if V 9 >y rm CM N MO N -i Z Om 9y > m O 2 1 O. Nw i,w 1 " ollllo 1 y~ ~ QIIIIIpD 1 ~ INIIII QUIIIII~ ~~11 1 uu 11111111D 1 ~IIII~111111111® 1 ~111111~~11111111nD 1 IIII~ 1 = ' into 1 Illl~ i'il'I.Qn 111118 ■ ■r/QA 81,,1 I M a. tt ttt ~ 1 ~ . f _ OIIIIIIIUluII1QD 1 ~ ~ - ~IIIIIIIIIIIIiI~ _ 1 ID IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIfID ~ _ ' 1 m i I~ 1 D- D: E I t; 1 i i C m . ~ 1 1 1 1 m 1 9 > -1 a l 1 Kipling Activity Center Master Plan B. KIPLING ACTIVITY CENTER - Master Plan 1. Description and Purpose The area generally bound by West 51st Avenue on the north, Garrison Street on the east, Clear Creek on the south, and Miller Street on the west, has been designated by the Wheat Ridge City Council as an Urban Renewal Area. An Urban Renewal Plan for this area has been approved and adopted by City Council which describes the area, sets forth purpose, and identifies project activities and financing proposals. It is the intent of this Master Plan and of the adopted Urban Renewal Plan to create two thriving commercial centers; one being oriented to the intersection of Kipling and interstate 70 and filling the needs of the interstate family traveler, mountain bound tourist, S business person, conventioners, and other interstate i9 oriented businesses. The other commercial center would be oriented to the intersection of Kipling and West 44th Avenue and would serve the retail, service, and office needs of both local and pass through traffic. Each such center should be integrated and unified to the extent that access to and circulation between individual developments is both convenient and safe. Although the Comprehensive Plan - Future Land Use Map currently illustrates the Kipling Activity Center land use designation only south of I-70, this plan recognizes the interface and integration of the land north of I-70 and thus the commercial Activity Center land use category has been extended north of I-70. In order to strengthen the ability to implement the Kipling Activity Center Urban Renewal Plan, this Master Plan is made a part of the Wheat Ridge Comprehensive Development Plan so the major goals, objectives and urban design concepts are officially recognized through the master planning process of the City. The area covered by this Plan is found to have eminent public interest and therefore should be developed and used in accordance with the adopted master Plan, and in furtherance of the stated goals and objectives of the Wheat Ridge Comprehensive Development Plan. The goals of the Wheat Ridge Comprehensive Development Plan bein used in this master Plan are: IX- 13 "SECTION II. GOALS & OBJECTIVES FOR THE CITY OF WHEAT RIDGE. II. LAND USE. GOALS: GENERAL A. To recognize land as a valuable and limited resource, which should be used in the best interest of all citizens. (page II-1) F. To provide for a moderate growth rate which will allow the City to provide an adequate level of services. (Page II-2) OBJECTIVES: 1. By enacting performance standards for all development and redevelopment to ensure positive impact upon the environment, the society and the economy. (Page II-2) 2. By making extensive use of the PUD zoning concept to encourage innovation, design excellence and conservation of land. (Page II-2) 8. By beautifying the City, using methods such as development of parkways, burying utility lines, enforcement of sign and building codes, and requiring more landscaping on new projects. (Page II-2) GOALS: Commercial and Industrial C. To provide for additional commercial, office and service uses provided that they are conveniently located, attractively developed and meet the demonstrated needs of the City. (Page 11-4) - OBJECTIVES: 1., By encouraging the development of community activity centers encompassing a broad range of land uses, each complementing the other. These centers must be pedestrian oriented and be unified architecturally. (Page II-4) 2. By promoting concepts such as shared parking or parking structures within commercial areas or activity centers so as to encourage pedestrian activity, thereby reducing use of the automobile. (Page II-4) 1X-13 r ) 4. By providing the amount of land required for I the community activity centers, by redevelopment f i o ex sting commercial areas, if necessary. (Page II-4) GOALS: Open Space OBJECTIVES: 2. By encouraging the use of plazas, landscaped areas, parkways, open space and buffer areas ithi w n new developments and redevelopments . (Page II-4) III. TRANSPORTATION GOALS: (Page II-6) A. To participate in the development of a well-balanced regional transportation system to move people and goods in a safe, expeditious and economic manner. C. To ensure public safety for pedestrians , bicyclists and motorists. G. To promote the development of community } activity centers which will decrease the use of. th e automobile. i H. To increase the attractiveness of the City's ( streets. ,(Page II-6) OBJECTIVES: (Page II-7) 5. By controlling access from businesses along major streets - by decreasing the number of curb cuts. 7. By providing more sidewalks, pedestrian crossings, bikeways and pedestrian bridges. 8. By improving and adding where necessary, traffic controls and synchronized signs. 10. By promoting and providing incentives for shared parking and parking structures to decrease the amount of land devoted to the automobile, and encourage pedestrian activity. 11. By provision of additional landscaping along major streets, which will improve the - street visually, and also buffer adjoining uses from th ( 1 e effects of traffic. IX-14 12. By encouraging screening of parking areas by use of grade separation, landscaping or walls. (Page II-7) "IV. ECONOMIC BASE (Page II-9) GOALS: A. To encourage a strong diversified economic base, which will enable the City to provide quality services at a reasonable tax rate. B. To utilize the limited developable commercial land in a responsible manner. C. To provide a full range of retail shopping with special emphasis upon increasing furniture, clothing and dry good sales. D. To provide a pleasant shopping environment which will make shopping in comfort, safety and convenience possible. E. To provide incentive for the development of community activity centers the best method of achieving the above goals. These centers will provide a unified shopping environment, and contain diverse but compatible uses. Pedestrian activity will be emphasized and hopefully the design elements will include shared parking or parking structures, extensive landscaping, plazas, malls, and a unified sign program. The result should be an atmosphere conducive to browsing and comparison shopping, higher sales volume, and increased feasibility of mass transit. OBJECTIVES: _ 2., By providing incentives for business to relocate to the activity centers and by channeling - appropriate new development to the activity centers. (Page II-9) 3. By including within the zoning ordinance, bonuses in lot coverage for such elements as excellent design of commercial areas. (Page II-10)" In addition to the goals and objectives stated in the Comprehensive Development Plan, the following section illuminates the need for a Master Plan to further define and eliminate each of the various commercial activity centers. IX-15 "SECTION IV. LAND USE PLAN FOR THE CITY OF WHEAT RIDGE. The Land Use Plan (Page IV-18) Concepts: The Land Use Plan concept calls for the development of three planned commercial centers for the City. Each center will provide a variety of the needed goods and services with easy access from the neighborhood in which it is located. Instead of providing a collection of activities with no direct r interactions, and separated by parking lots and other 11 barriers, these centers will be designed to give a sense of wholeness. Each center will accommodate a diversification or blend of activities. Each activity would be a compliment and therefore a contribution to all other activities. These centers could be approached easily by automobiles along the major arterials. However, within these centers, circulation would be restricted to pedestrian scale with well-landscaped malls and sidewalks. Activities in each center would include retail trade, offices, service establishments, restaurants, recreational and amusement establishments, and public transportation stations. Medium and high density residences could be integrated into the center or appropriately located on the fringes of these activity centers. i I i 1 ( 1 The proposed planned commercial centers are to be located: In the vicinity of Kipling street between Clear Creek and Highway I-70. This center would serve roughly the northern portion of the City. There is still quite a lot of vacant land here for all types of development. (Page IV-18) . . . Although this is a sound concept, one disadvantage is that it requires a lot of cooperation from developers, businessmen and the City for success. The Land Use Plan is based upon this concept, it is quite important that all parties involved begin in the near future to open dialogue and plan strategies that best suit the desires and needs of all concerned. (Page II=20) 2. General Goals and Objectives of Kiplinq Activity Center Master Plan A. GOAL: ( Improve or eliminate conditions of blight. IX-IG OBJECTIVES: (1) Upgrade the physical conditions of deteriorated structures, parking areas, interior circulation routes, and general grounds appearance. (2) Improve vehicular and pedestrian circulation connection, and access opportunities throughout the Center. (3) Provide a more efficient use of land and functional design. (4) Promote attractive design in new development and redevelopment which unifies the entire Center. B. GOAL: Establish a unified commercial activity center from the northern boundary of the City, approximately 51st Avenue extended, to. Clear Creek on the south, which focuses on two Development Centers: The Kipling/I-70 Interchange and the Kipling and 44th Avenue Intersection. OBJECTIVES: (1) Encourage increased patronage of existing businesses, and construction and patronage of new businesses through improvements in circulation, access, attractiveness and identity. (2) Unify, rehabilitate, strengthen, and develop the I-70 and Kipling Development Center to gain maximum retail sales tax generation and optimize other tax revenue sources from the Development Center. The customers to be encouraged because they support and stimulate each other are: (a) interstate family traveler, (b) mountain bound tourist, business person, conventioners, and other interstate oriented businesses. The needs of the interstate trucking business, which focuses on the semi-tractor trailer, is provided for at the I-70 and Ward Road interchange with the truck stop. This objective of the I-70 and Kipling Development Center will be diminished if truck stop activities are allowed within either the I-70 and Kipling Development Center or the Kipling and 44th Avenue Development Center. IX-I7 (3) unify, rehabilitate, strengthen, and develop the Kipling and 44th Avenue Development Center to gain maximum retail sales tax generation and optimize other tax revenue sources from the Development Center Th . e businesses to be encouraged should be oriented to serve the interstate activates listed above in #(1), the Kipling arterial/state highway north-south through traffic and the City wide and neighborhood traffic that uses the east-west collector street system. Retail sales businesses should be the first priority, followed by service and office uses. (4) North and east of I-70 and Kipling there are areas of office and business park uses, which should be integrated with the overall center. Retail uses related to those sales, wholesale, assembly and storage uses should be encouraged in addition to retail uses such as restaurants which serve the business community and surrounding areas. C. GOAL: ! Improve safety for vehicular and pedestrian circulation and access. OBJECTIVES: ( (1) Provide for defined interior circulation routes as differ.Gntiated from parking lot circulation. (2) Provide for designated pedestrian walks and crossings. (3) Reduce conflict between vehicles entering and exiting the public street system by i requiring accel-decel lanes where necessary with new development or redevelopment. (4) Provide for improved mass transit service t and facilities. (5) Minimize the negative impacts created by semi-trucks and trailers by discouraging their use of this Center, and/or by properly providing for them, where they occur, through proper design of parking areas and circulation routes. 3. DesirIn and Capital Improvement Concepts for the Kiplinq Activity Center. In order to achieve the above stated goals, land use i control and capital improvement planning will be _ essential elements contained within this Master Plan. IX-l8 Figure 3 illustrates proposed land use areas. This shall serve as a guide for future rezonings, site plan reviews, and building permit reviews. Figure 4 illustrates the vehicular traffic circulation routes and control facilities both existing and proposed, which serve, or are necessary to serve, these centers. This shall serve as a guide to future public and private capital facility planning. 4. Implementation Program. The Urban Renewal Plan calls for a combination of financing methods including tax increment financing for the Urban Renewal Project, Industrial Revenue Bonds, and Special Improvement District bond financing for the private development projects. To augment the financial implementation program, it will be necessary to regulate land use and design in order to achieve all the stated goals and objectives of this Master Plan. The use where needed to protect the public interest. All future rezonings in the area shall be either Planned Commercial Developments or straight zoning with conditional site plan approval. Figure 3 details use categories for various areas within the Project Area. Those use categories are described as follows: Business Park: A mix of retail, office, service, commercial, and/or light industrial uses. Retail/Highway Business: Retail commercial uses primarily Oriented to the interstate or highway traffic. Office/Retail: A mix of retail, service, and/or office uses. Public: Pennington Elementary School. Multi-Family: Camelot Club and Ptarmigan multi-Eamily developments. Church: United Methodist Church. Retail: Primarily retail uses. Office: Primarily office uses. Shoppinq Center: A planned development with major emphasis on retail sales uses. IX-19 T Both Figures 3 and 4 shall serve as guides for future 1 rezonings, site plan reviews, and building permit reviews. Prior to any development within the area covered by this plan, the developer shall submit a site plan which details site design and layout, and proposed uses. Such site plan and uses shall be reviewed and approved by City Council after a public hearing. The public hearing shall be advertised and posted for public hearing fifteen (15) days in advance and shall be decided upon by Council motion. i l t ix-1-n . ( :I~1 r .l[_s~; P7iiJ Lr:".--1-1.1-•1-1 I_ . 1-1 1 1 1 Yin I wln , KIPLING PROJECT AREA r I FUTURE LAND USE MAP n ca 5"PF J MASTER PLAN 41 ' ~ •J ✓a~•r FAMILY RES. ~ S U B qy~ ✓ BUSINESS PARK ✓ 4 • 4 ••-•ttt• % V.10 111 A~M ! . •'i[ •y~`•:C~;tri~v«jkrr BUSINESS PARK. •6. • • v+^<': r ':f•:~ RETAILIH I.1 I l lIOHWAY BUSINESS •11 ' I" I•I,aul4+ r - rrt OFFICE /RETAIL' L .1 - I ` r I I - • f OFFICE / RETAIL 11:10 1 RETAIL I 1 OFFICE 1 RETAILygflp~~il~`N HIGHWAY BUSINESS rry 118;:IIMPp~l~ln YI y =f OR 16 BAgS ' • J STS Id I . '[~'1 ~ 1 • ~ sL•sl r.r ••iti .t';: H E I T M ER 2:5;: : PU9LIC 1 ly r Mfr. i y • w +ei?!•:::ia; ",.::<.+.:E ;,gfvjw~s'Y~}F•r- 5-fr r: f'i7 r Ir•r - IS U a. ( y MULTI FAMILY RES_-' 'fr' 11 ! I - fii.4•'{•}y;tv,.•yxtn, ,~fr f r,. h i G ii•'iiiil\'iiii1iiiilif 11111 ii 0 1v:'V:4::: i iA\i•iii iii ~i : a R o, ..G a„+r~l... 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A I , a4.r: I i ~ I Q•Q1■I■l.I~II :am 4.{7101 1 ~t ~ i I` ~tUB rn z y :at I SR 5 ' d ST i Q SVS 1 4 I ..il.cl TER.. - . ~ CAIAEIOT ' I r ~ CwD Ei s u a. , - !a ROr ` 1'RI ' 0G S Ua. 2 I UC HE Ws I~ UYHEA 'S - E P L GAR D. AT I _ ILA EN PLACE T'~1 I 4 th. 0 I■ 1,.• ■ 1 ~~7 ~ihlahl~..4tl~J,JI.J~LRLt4 ~ NEWGATE IN x n 1 ~ ¢ ~ Y WHEAT RIDGE } ,I L rsb TRAFFIC SIGNAL ARTERIAL ST. COLLECTOR ST. ■IMIWI= No LSG "G R ET~vr A I1L E ,EI'~ INTERNAL CIRCULATION - I r-Fv: l FIGURE 4 i IX-22 l NORTH Clly of wheat RWas, Colorado D.ourlmrnl of Community Dcvolo?Woos I