HomeMy WebLinkAboutminutes.boa.19900823 CITY OF ASPEN
BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT
4 . 00 P.M.
AUGUST 23 - 1990
CITY COUNCIL CHAMBERS
A G E N D A
I. CALL TO ORDER
.ROLL CALL
II. MINUTES
MAY 3, 1990
III. CASE #90-8
HENRY PEDERSON & CAROL SOFFER
RECORD OF PROCEEDINGS
BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT AUGUST 23, 1990
Vice Chairman Charlie Paterson called meeting to order at 4: OOpm.
Answering roll call were Ron Erickson, Josephine Mann, Bill
Martin and Charlie Paterson. Remo Lavagnino, Anne Austin were
excused. Rick Head arrived shortly after roll call.
CASE #90-8
HENRY PEDERSON & CAROL SOFFER
Charlie read into record request for variance. (Attached in
record)
David Finholm, architect, representing Gerald Ketcher.
David then presented picture and affidavit of posting. (Attached
in file)
Elizabeth Altemus, 620 North 3rd Street: The sign is not
visible. It is stuck on the fence on the interior of the
building and whatever is written on the sign faces the building
rather than the street.
Mrs. Block: You can't read it.
David then demonstrated to Board members using drawings of the
house where the sign was posted.
I placed the sign right on the front part of the house right
here.
Charlie: Inside the porch facing--
David: No. It is right on the outside facing the street.
Mrs. Block: I am a neighbor. I live at 311 West North Street.
I have not seen that sign. I also have never been notified.
Charlie: Are you within a 300 foot distance?
Mrs. Block: I don't think I am.
Board members then checked the list of names. Mrs. Block's name
was not on the list.
Charlie: Mrs. Block, are you within 300 feet of that building?
Mrs. Block: I don't know.
David: Bill Stirling's secretary got the list and did the
notification.
BAM8 .23 .90
Mrs. Block: But I wouldn't have seen that sign if Mrs. Altemus
hadn't pointed it out to me that it was hanging on the fence as
it is right now.
Charlie: This is not a fence.
Altemus: I called General Martin and I called Remo and asked
them to drive by and see where that sign was.
Charlie: What about you? Have you seen it?
Bill Martin: No.
Charlie: Well this certainly shows it as a doorway here could
you, David, mind showing me this doorway location?
David: Using drawings. The sign was placed right here.
Charlie: OK. So this doorway that I see in the picture is right
here.
David: Correct.
Charlie: Well, that is not inside of a fence. That is on a
concrete/brick wall. We will go ahead and hear the case.
Block: There is a fence all around the house.
Ron: Yes. But not a very high one.
Block: That is where the sign is hanging now. On the interior
of the fence.
Bill: The problem is that there is so much shrubbery in the
front of the yard that you can't see the sign. It is not as
visible as most signs are on most houses.
Charlie: Well, the law says they have to have it posted so it is
visible from the street and it is visible from the street as it
shows in the affidavit. I don't have a problem hearing the case
unless someone else does.
Ron: The neighbors showed up to voice their opinions. They said
that they couldn't see it but they are here.
Charlie: We could still hear the case.
Altemus: I had another neighbor who telephoned who couldn't be
here.
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Jan, Secretary: That note is clipped on the inside of the file.
They called at 2 : 30 this afternoon.
Charlie: The note is here. We will come to that. If there is
no objection we will go ahead and hear this case.
Josephine: What do you mean by no objection? Are you saying
that we have accepted this as being visible from the street?
Charlie: This is an affidavit that is being sworn to and shown.
We have 2 people who have shown and sworn that it wasn't there.
Ron: What Fred used to say is "What was the material defect to
prevent people from knowing that there was a variance asked for
and showing up to make their comments known". And I would say
given the fact that there is an affidavit and the people who are
objecting to it's visibility are in the room. I would say I
don't think there was a material defect.
David: The Ketchers would like to purchase both of these houses.
Duplex. And in so doing they want to keep it as a duplex zone so
that they could have the second kitchen and what they would like
to do is be able to travel from the A into the B unit.
We have the front unit which faces the street with it's garage
and then the party wall that separates these 2 buildings. And we
have a second garage in Henry Pederson's part of the duplex.
What I am asking for is to build a hallway internally from the
front unit to the back unit. As I do that I am keeping the
garages to the legal size of a garage. I am not adding anything
to the exterior of the building. I am not making it taller. I
am not making it bigger in any situation. Unfortunately this
building is non-conforming based on old zoning and it is larger
than you could build today.
But to make this work we need to have a hallway that goes through
the center and I am taking this space a little out of the garage
and a little out of these 2 rooms.
Bill: Explain the non-conforming.
David: The zoning changed after this building was built and
received a Co.
Drueding: They are both prior to FAR limitations. It is not a
PUD.
Ron: Bill, this is a legal duplex on a single family lot?
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Drueding: Yes. It is non-conforming. This was built prior to a
FAR limit. This was 5 years ago before we had FARs.
Martin: I remember when they did this. And the City approved a
duplex lot along the lake. Now why, by changing the regulation,
do we say it is non-conforming?
Drueding: It has nothing to do with being a duplex or a single
family house. Either this structure is too large for this lot
according to floor area ratio. There wasn't any FAR when it was
-built:
Martin: OK. But when it was built, it was legal?
Drueding: Yes. Now it is non-conforming.
David: We went to the Planning Office and met with Bill Drueding
and Leslie. And this is the place we have to go to put these 2
buildings together so that we can basically have a single family
house with 2 kitchens. We are appealing to you to say that we
can have the 150 feet internally and make it that much bigger in
terms of square feet.
But realistically we really haven't changed it. And that is what
I would like you to evaluate and counsel us today, please.
Drueding: The point is he is taking an area of the garage--the
garage is exempt from FAR. By reducing the garage that area he
reduces it by becomes floor area.
Ron: So that increases the interior FAR under the code.
David, we need to consider practical difficulty or hardship.
Please state specifically for us what you consider the hardship
or practical difficulty.
David: I think that from the studies that I have done on these
plans that to put the hallway entirely within the building as it
exists now and not touch any of the garage, I make 2 rooms
unserviceable. They just don't- work.- - There is no room as a
result of that.
Secondly the other option would be to take out or basically cut
off part of the house commensurate to the change that I would
propose inside. And that is an impractical thing to do to just
cut off a living room and rebuild.
As I studied it with the hallway, gallery on it because it is a
long space to go from point A to point B--if I take it completely
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out of this little bedroom--there is just no room. We end up
with 2 rooms that are not usable. That would be my hardship.
Martin: Interior-wise you are changing rooms usage?
David: That is correct. I am keeping the same number of
bedrooms but I am doing internal modifications. Making some
rooms larger and actually eliminating a room.
Charlie: Which one did you eliminate?
David: Where we have this den/office and the bedrooms, that
becomes the--I am wrong. I did not eliminate that room. so it
is still the same number of rooms. These 2 rooms here become the
study and the kitchen.
Charlie: In other words you are eliminating the bathroom?
David: That is actually going to be a powder room.
Charlie: That is going to be moved over then?
David: Correct.
Charlie: What about this stairway? This is the stairway?
David: That is the stairway that goes to the non-FAR lower area
below.
Charlie: That is going to remain?
David: Yes.
Charlie: All the configuration is being changed.
David: Yes. I see us going in here and removing most of the
interior walls in this area and again in the bathroom area
upstairs in this unit. But nothing to the outside except the
addition of some windows that I need for egress and light and
air.
Ron then asked for elevations.
Everyone then went over elevations.
Charlie: And you are saying basically you are not changing the
exterior of the structure?
David: I am not changing the exterior.
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Charlie: These are all the elevations that will remain pretty
much as they are.
David: Pretty much the same except for windows and doors. But
there will be no additions. The bulk or the building envelope or
the footprint. None of those will increase.
Ron: Do we have a floor plan for the second floor?
David: Yes. This is a floor plan for the second floor as it
exists. Again, we have Henry Pederson's master bedroom. 2
little decks and the bath area, and the stairs going down. We
have 2 bedrooms in the front duplex and 2 baths. And their
stairs going down.
Charlie: Which half are you going to re-configurate?
David: I am going to re-configure the entire part of it. I am
going to actually have this bedroom, have this bathroom accessing
through here and have this bathroom access this bedroom by
putting a wall here. And then Henry Pederson's side we are going
to remove this bathroom and place it in where Henry now has his
hot tub and exercise room.
Ron: That is above the garage, isn't it?
David: Correct.
Ron: Are you going to have any hallway through the house on the
second floor?
David: No.
Ron: Why not?
David: It doesn't work. There are 2 stairs. I would have to
have a hallway and basically going down through here someplace
and I just couldn't do that.
Charlie: Are there any further questions? There were none.
Then I will say here that according to this note Nancy Lundy
called at 3 : 30 today to object to the granting of this variance.
I don't have any reason or--
Jan: That is all she said.
Charlie: I will open this up to the public for comments.
Block: From the conversation, I assume that you are turning this
into a duplex.
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David: It is a duplex. And no we are not. We are actually--
Block: But it has 2 kitchens. So it will be 2-family occupancy.
David: No. It is--what we are trying to do is make it a single
family occupancy. It is presently a duplex.
Block: Well, why then the 2 kitchens between 2 families that
have been using 1 kitchen?
David: No. We have the ability to have 2 kitchens with that as
an existing duplex.
Charlie: It is 2 complete separate units with 2 separate
kitchens.
Drueding: They have 2 kitchens.
Mrs. Altemus: I guess we are faced with terrible enlargements
out there on Lake Avenue anyway. You can't drive through there.
There are 2 enormous houses. I have lived through 3 people doing
Henry's house already. And my gut feeling is there is no end.
If you grant a variance with this then it escalates to other
houses. And it has already happened to me on Lake and 3rd. I
think Mrs. Block and I feel like we are the smallest houses there
and that we want this to stop somewhere. I don't think that
these people have any hardship. I am terribly sorry. I don't
see any hardship at all. I think it has deprived the community
of employee housing. I consider Henry Pederson an employee of
our community. We are getting a one-family that takes away an
employee unit.
Mrs. Block: I feel that the sign should have been visible for
the legal period of time and my objection is that we were not
aware of what was going on.
Charlie asked if there was any further public comment. There was
none and he closed the public portion of the meeting.
Ron: I want to hear what the official position of the Planning
Office is.
Drueding: The rules are that you cannot increase a non-
conformity.
Ron: You don't see any social redeeming values in that variance?
Drueding: No, I don't. That's why there is a Board of Adjustment.
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It is already too big. It is not going to show to anybody else.
They are going to do something internally that--
MEMBER COMMENTS
Rick Head: Just for the record I do have a conflict of interest
and am not going to vote on this.
David: May I have one more minute please. If we don't get to
build the hallway through the middle of the house, you can't
build it as a single family house. You would have to go outside
to go to the children's rooms. We just can't do it.
Charlie: Could I read here something that you wrote? It might
be enlightening for everybody. At the end of your letter you
wrote--"Though the existing non-conforming size is slightly
increased, there are many cumulative advantages for the
neighborhood. Less parking of autos around triangle park, less
traffic now caused by short-term rentals of both halves of the
duplex, architectural changes which will enhance the existing
neighborhood such as a shingle roof instead of metal and more
integral historic features" .
Bill Martin: I am sympathetic to the problem of size. There are
2 new houses being -built next to Jackie Wogen. There is
congestion on Lake Street. I recognize that. But as far as I
can see this was approved at a point in. time as a dwelling as a
duplex. I think by confining it into a single family unit it has
the advantages as expressed in Finholm's letter. It cuts down on
traffic. It cuts down on vehicle movement. The family I don't
know whether they plan to--I know the family. I know that they
live in Miami. They are probably going to be second home owners.
I can't see any reason why we wouldn't approve interior
modifications. They are doing everything--they are changing the
use of the house and yet we might deny them 3 foot section that
they want in order to provide them a single family unit. Now
what happens if they sell the house in 2 years and they want to
make it a duplex?
Drueding: It is a duplex. They have 2 kitchens. They have a
hallway and they can still get through but it is still a duplex.
It is a condominiumized duplex. They cannot make it a single
family house. This is one of the problems because in zoning
ordinance #1 because the demolition of a unit you can't do this.
They can't make it a single family house. It has 2 kitchens and
the configuration still keeps it a duplex.
Bill Martin: With one family usage.
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Charlie: In other words they could build a wall across the
middle of that hallway and be just the same as they were before.
Drueding: It may require a door across that hallway.
Josephine: Going down the list here. The first item presented
to us was the size of the variance requested. 75 square feet for
each unit. That is 150 square feet. This would be an addition
to the computed size FAR of the house and that is something that
would be very difficult for us to give to you--to give to a house
that is already large.
The next one--there will be no additional bulk or mass because it
is all interior alteration. That is fine.
Parking: The garages will still meet requirement. That is fine.
The dilemma is the unseen square footage. And we know that that
is interiorly.
The next item is that it is a single family owner/occupied
duplex. That has some advantages as has been pointed out. And I
am agreeing with those. I like having less traffic and less cars
and so forth. On the other hand one of our participants here
today reminded us that in effect this arrangement would eliminate
an employee housing unit. The rest of this is dealing with the
new roof and so forth.
The hang-up obviously that I have is that FAR. We have a policy
here that we can only grant a minimum variance. And that we can
only do that in a case where there is a hardship and a practical
difficulty. So that turns me to what you said about that. It
seems to me that if we are going to be strict constructionists we
would have to say that is not possible. You could cut off some
rooms and make a hallway. We try not to always be a strict
constructionist group because then there would be almost no
purpose for us to be here.
I feel uncomfortable about saying a flat "No" that I would not
give a variance for this because I would like to explore more the
idea of what the other possibilities are.
Ron: I think that the way David has approached the problem I
think is an interesting one and is one that minimizes our
problems. It would be a lot easier to go outside to do it some
other way than having to do this. However, as Josephine stated
by granting this variance we are giving the owner of the
property, whoever that may be, the benefit of an additional
150sgft over and above what they have now. What they have now is
excessive.
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Now we have heard stories before about people how they--this is
what they want to do for their family and everything like that.
But we also have a concern for the future. And I think someone
mentioned what will happen if this house is sold in the future.
It is a duplex that can be split up. If it goes back to being a
duplex--2 families--what do they have? They have this plus an
additional 75sgft of interior space which increases the non-
conforming use even further.
The hardships that were presented today I think are inherent in
structure in the way that it was remodeled. I don't think the
hardship has come about because of the code. If Remo were here I
think he would say that this structure has more than taken
advantage of any code since it is a non-conforming structure. It
is over what you would be allowed to do today.
I think there are other alternatives to solve the problem. So I
don't see a hardship or a practical difficulty in this case.
As for with the changes it is going to make in the neighborhood
under the code I think the code determines parking or off street
parking by the number of bedrooms. I don't see any changes in
the number of bedrooms, the number of people able to occupy it.
I don't see any deed restrictions saying half the people will be
under 10. They won't be driving. So I don't see any change in
parking problems by making this change. I don't think that the
parking requirements are going to be decreased because this
hallway is put in. I think it is going to decrease the size of
the car that is going to be put into the garage but I don't think
it is going to be less cars on Lake Street. The house is the
same size in terms of bedrooms.
I would be against granting this variance.
Charlie: I come from another point of view. I feel that it is a
good solution to a problem and I think there is a practical
difficulty shown. The hardship I would have a little problem
with. But a practical difficulty there is in this situation if
one family was going to use the house unless you do some sort of
link over the roof which doesn't seem practical.
I would be in favor of granting the variance.
Now, David, since there are only 4 people that are going to be
able to vote and we do have a quorum. However, when there are
only 4 people voting we give you the right to withdraw for
another meeting in case you want a 5th or 6th person voting.
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You do need 4 affirmative votes in order for your variance
application to be approved. If you don't want this to come to a
vote now we can continue the hearing to a date certain when there
are other members present.
David: What I would like to clear up is Henry Pederson as being
an employee. He rents this house for a lot money and is for sale
for a lot of money and I don't know if we are really losing an
employee housing unit by selling and getting rid of the duplex.
So if I could hear how you feel about Henry and I could get you
to vote "Yes" then I would ask for the vote.
Josephine: That wouldn't work.
Ron: You need all of us to vote and I am not on the fence.
David: Then we will not call for a vote.
MOTION
Ron: I make a motion that we continue this hearing to a date
certain of September 6, 1990.
Bill seconded the motion with all in favor.
MINUTES
MAY 3, 1990
Rick made a motion to approve these minutes.
Bill seconded the motion with all in favor.
Bill made a motion to adjourn the business portion of the
meeting.
Ron seconded the motion with all in favor.
Time was 4 : 55pm.
Ja ice M. Carn y City Deputy cTArk
11
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
CASE #90-8
HENRY PEDERSON &
CAROL SOFFER
BEFORE THE CITY OF ASPEN BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT
TO ALL PROPERTY OWNERS AFFECTED BY THE REQUESTED ZONING OR USE
VARIANCE DESCRIBED BELOW:
Pursuant to the Official Code of Aspen of June 25, 1962 , as
amended, a public hearing will be held in the Council Room, City
Hall, Aspen, Colorado, (or at such other place as the meeting may
be then adjourned) to consider an application filed with the said
Board of Adjustment requesting authority for variance from the
provisions of the Zoning Ordinance, Chapter 24 , Official Code of
Aspen. All persons affected by the proposed variance are invited
to appear and state their views, protests or objections. If you
cannot appear personally at such meeting, you are urged to state
your views by letter, particularly if you have objection to such
variance , as the Board of Adjustment will give serious
consideration to the opinions of surrounding property owners and
others affected in deciding whether to grant or deny the request
for variance.
Particulars of the hearing and requested variance are as follows:
Date and Time of Meeting:
Date: August 23 , 1990
Time: 4 : 00 p.m.
Owner for Variance: Appellant for Variance.
Name: Henry Pederson, Bx. 144 , Aspen David Finholm, Architect
Carol Soffer, 212 , Lake Ave,Aspen
Location or description of property: 212 Lake Avenue, Unit A &
B, Lot 18 . Block 103 , Aspen, Colorado
Variance Requested: Property is located in the R-6 , Zoning
category. The structure exceeds, the allowable FAR and this is a
non-conforming structure. (Sec 9-103 (C) (1) . Aspen Land Use
Code) states "A non-conforming structure shall not be extended by
an enlargement or expansion that increases the, non-conformity.
Applicant appears to be requesting a 150sgft FAR variance to
enlarge a non-conforming structure.
Will applicant be represented by counsel: Yes: No: X
The City of Aspen Board of Adjustment
130 South Galena Street, Aspen, Colorado 81611
Remo Lavagnino, Chairman Jan Carney Deputy City Clerk