HomeMy WebLinkAboutminutes.boa.19920813 CITY OF ASPEN
BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT
AUGUST 13, 1992
4.00 P.M.
SHERIFF MEETING ROOM
I. CALL MEETING TO ORDER
ROLL CALL
II. MINUTES
JULY 23, 1992
III. CASE #92-10
ED GROSSE
IV. REQUEST FOR RE-CONSIDERATION
ROBERT FINK CASE #92-8
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RECORD OF PROCEEDINGS
BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT AUGUST 13, 1992
Chairman Remo Lavagnino called meeting to order at 4 : OOpm.
Answering roll call were Bill Martin, Ron Erickson, Anne Austin-
Clapper, Charlie Paterson and Remo Lavagnino. Rick Head was
excused.
MINUTES
JULY 23, 1992
After fill-in-the-blanks:
Anne made a motion to approve these minutes.
Charlie seconded the motion with all in favor.
CASE #92-10
ED GROSSE
Remo read into record request for variance. (attached in record)
Affidavit of posting was presented. (attached in record)
There was discussion as to the posting as it was done. Decision
was made to hear the case.
Sven Alstrom, Architect for applicant: I do have photographs from
the prior application. This is a photograph from HPC which a zerox
was included in your packet materials. These were taken yesterday
and try to show the openness of the alley approach. These show the
adjacent property' s accessory buildings which encroach further into
the alley than this does. This is a fairly built up alley. The
neighbor to the east encroaches more than this does.
Remo: There is an open space in there?
Sven: There is. But other buildings actually encroach more in
this particular alley. I worked for Bill Poss when Kermit ?
property was done which is exactly on the property line at the
other end of the alley. This particular alley has quite a few out-
buildings that are more significant than this one. But this is
one of the alleys and blocks that is ripe for the Cottage Infill
Program. That is basically what this application is.
Lastly the point Ed and I wanted to make to you was we were trying
to design this with an encroachment for 2 reasons. One--just the
financial and construction realities of trying to use what is
there. Secondly HPC did feel that it is better for the building
to step back from the alley rather than have a 2-story facade on
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the alley. That was a criteria of property at 127
West Hallam and that out building essentially did the same thing.
That was a completely new structure. I just want to point out to
you that an inerrant part of the HPC preference was to use the
existing encroachment to provide something besides a vertical wall.
Don Crum: I have been in Aspen since 1961. I own a house across
the street from where Ed is planning the new addition, 105 East
Hallam. And I just would like to say that since Ed has owned this
piece of property it has been improved as witnessed by the placque
he received today from HPC. It is a very nice piece of property
and I am in favor of what he wants to do.
Remo: We have no doubt that what he is trying to do is beneficial .
We have different criteria by which we have to grant variances and
they have to do with the whole different considerations. Two of
them are practical difficulty and hardship--some kind of hardship
or some kind of practical difficulty. And if the applicant can
show that then he has good cause to be granted the variance.
Dr. Johnson: The greatest physical difficulty in the alley right
now is what the City put in--the power, TV boxes. They are
constantly being knocked over in the winter time by the snow plows,
constantly rammed into by service vehicles. Those are cable TV and
telephone boxes all up and down the alley.
Remo: Maybe those were put there because encroachment is in the
way.
Rob: When they undergrounded they put pedestals there. They took
utilities out of the air.
Remo: I understand that. But why did they place them as they are?
Rob: If they can't get easements on the properties then they have
to go into the ROW there in the alley.
Remo: All I am suggesting is that the encroachment further pushes
it into that.
Grosse: There are several factors that the Board should consider
in their decision. The present encroachment albeit minor affords
space for 2 cars. It is only 392 feet living space above. It is
imperative that storage and closet space be integrated in the
garage area. Without this valuable space a local employee would
create clutter around the surrounding area. Equally important but
of primary importance to HPC and P&Z is the breaking up of a
sterile flat wall surface with the required setback.
Lastly my contractor estimates the additional cost of 2 new walls
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at $18, 000 to $22, 000. I am not prepared to spend this much as
the entire project becomes cost ineffective. I humbly ask that you
consider the circumstances that I face.
Remo: Unfortunately the Board can't consider financial
considerations or aesthetics. HPC can do this but we are not given
those guidelines to grant variances. However that doesn't preclude
your not getting a variance. We just have different standards.
Grosse: We have had unanimous support from HPC.
Remo: I understand that. I have read the different letters.
I would like to clarify something in the letters. It says--I think
this is from Mr. Alstrom--that Planning & Zoning has a policy of
commitment to support development of accessory dwelling units such
as this one to provide more resident housing with the original
townsite.
Are you suggesting that they looked at this particular site? And
they approved of this particular site and they approved of this
particular project? Or are you talking about generalization?
Sven: Yes.
Remo: So it is not really applicable to this necessarily. Except
that their tone is to--
Sven: No, it is applicable. The .quote out of the ordinance is the
cottage infill program is meant to provide accessory dwelling
within the original townsite.
Remo: I understand that. But it is not specifically directed or
addresses this particular problem with an encroachment involved.
Anne: Except in this letter it says HPC is unanimously supportive
of this.
Remo: I am talking about Planning & Zoning.
Sven: They were considering other technicalities. They were just
saying- that--
Remo: That they generally saying that they support--I understand.
Sven: And it is your decision as to whether or not we affect other
public interests.
Anne: What is the size of this lot?
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Grosse: 30 by 100.
Remo: It is a non-conforming lot?
Grosse: Yes.
Ron: How old is the garage?
Grosse: I was told that it was a ski shop back in the early 50s.
Anne: In the letter it says 1960.
Ron: So it is not a historical structure.
Remo: No. It states that it is not.
Charlie: My question is you mentioned something about a 2 car
garage?
Grosse: Yes.
Charlie: How can you do that with a one door like that. You can't
push cars sideways.
Grosse: I put one in at an angle like that and then one right in
front of it. Because it is not really a garage.
Charlie: Because it is long.
Anne: The structure--the garage on the alley side--the north side-
-it is very low. Is that high enough to add the second story onto
or are you going to be expanding--
Sven: We are between a rock and a hard place there. The Cottage
Infill Program, although giving a break on FAR, still restricts the
height of a 2 story accessory dwelling unit to 16ft. So this is
the minimum height and the breaklines you see are just a result of
that. So even though it is unusually low they are pretty much the
same scale as other out buildings on the block.
Anne: But in order to build the second story are you going to have
to re-build that wall that is on the alley because it is so much
lower?
Sven: No. It happens to be the right height.
Remo: And that is where you are going to put the flat?
Sven: It is a lean-to type. It goes from 7 to 8 feet.
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Remo: So the flat portion is going to be from the 7 foot level or
the 8 foot level?
Sven: From the 8.
Remo: Which is at the top of the lean-to?
Sven? Yes.
Remo: So that is what she is asking. What happens to that north
wall? You will have to build up to that 8 foot level? Since you
are on a--
Sven: Yes. We will just add just a row of studs on that wall.
The main cost is mainly foundations and utility walls and then it
also may give him some problems with HPC to move the whole building
closer to the main house. They supported us in a dimensional
variation for separation between buildings to 3 feet. But we don't
want to put it any closer. So that is the other reason we are
asking for help on the encroachment is we don't want to go any
closer to the existing house.
Anne: The south wall--the wall between the 2--the garage and the
structure looks like you have moved that because it is wider than
what we have--
Sven: We didn't move it. We were just adding the concrete slab
on grade there and leaving the existing foundation in place. We
are just adding a slab on grade 3 feet wide where it says "work
bench" .
Anne: But then you do have a new wall there. Because you are
moving that wall out.
Sven: There is a new wall and a new foundation. Yes.
Grosse: The purpose of that extension was to make room for the
stairway and still retain the space in the garage.
Sven: Roxanne didn't like the stairway on the outside of the
building. That is another thing.
Anne: When we look at this footprint though on here--am I looking
at the existing structure or is it showing me where the new
structure is going to be?
Sven: There is a line that says "Line of existing garage"--what
is on the print is the new structure. So there is a line on the
north side of the stair--
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There was then discussion over the plans.
Remo: You are also increasing the south wall.
Charlie: But that is inside his property line.
Remo: I understand that but they are building a wall so I am
suggesting--
Charlie: For the stairway, yes.
Anne: But the other 3 walls technically stay there.
Sven: Yes. We are really just adding onto the south to enclose
the stairs. Originally we had an exterior stair and a balcony.
The HPC felt that was inappropriate--that it looks more like a
tenement stair. So we enclosed it.
Ron: May I ask how this structure got originally built to be an
encroachment structure in the first place?
Grosse: That has to go back to the time they put the ski shop up.
I wasn't the owner at that time.
Ron: It was an existing structure that was there before the codes
and before the City took over the alleys and before we even had any
codes to cover any of this information. That might be your
hardship right there as a pre-existing structure.
I would like to get information as to why it is there. If it is
not an historical structure--a lot of these accessory buildings in
the west end are original structures that were built with the house
and they were encroaching only because they were built before the
alley was put in. Or before the City said what the ROW is going
to be.
Grosse: I couldn't answer that question. I don't know. The only
information I can give you is what was told to me about a ski shop
being there in the 50s and/or 60s.
Ron: How long have you owned the house?
Grosse: Since 182 .
Bill: Did you make the present modifications to the front house?
Grosse: Yes sir. In 182, 3 and 4 .
Bill: At that time was it pointed out that this structure was in
the public ROW?
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Grosse: No. It was not pointed out.
Remo: When was the fence put in?
Grosse: I would say 183 .
Remo: It was after you purchased it that you put in the fence?
Grosse: Yes.
Remo: Did you get an encroachment license then?
Grosse: No, I did not.
Sven: He did have approval for it.
Grosse: Nobody ever asked me to record it. I didn't know--all I
had to go on was the approval given to me by the City Council.
Remo: But not in 1983 when you put it in.
Grosse: No.
Remo: Why did you put it in in 1983?
Grosse: My tenant put it in to contain the dogs.
Anne: I seem to recall this fence was built about 6 foot 5 and
then they had you cut it back down. What was the basis there?
Grosse: Drueding maintained that the fence impeded the site for
traffic making a turn and so therefore it should come down. I
didn't particularly like the height anyway.
Anne: So the existing house is--in sections it looks like it is
right up against the property line or very close to it.
Grosse: Yes.
Anne: Did you get some relief back then when you remodeled the
house or were they not concerned with that at that time?
Grosse: Well, I built the back bedroom if that is what you are
referring to as relief as far as extending the square footage of
the house.
Ron: But looks like it is in conformance.
Grosse: It is.
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Ron: The front part of the house has no side yard and doesn't look
it has any side yard setback or lot line setbacks. I am wondering
if you came to get a building permit did you enlarge the exterior
walls of the house?
Grosse: No.
Sven: This portion from here back it was an addition.
Anne: But there was never a variance granted or--
MPT
Grosse: When we put the boards back on we reduced the square
footage by taking the enclosed parts and opening it up. I hated
to give up any square foot of space that I had because the house
is quite small.
Anne: I think we should explain about the FAR. What is the
current FAR for this lot and are we looking at additional FAR over
and above what is allowed.
Remo: That is not part of the variance request.
Anne: But is this variance going to be put in their FAR over and
above--
Remo: We are not giving them an FAR variance. We are giving them
an encroachment variance. We don't care--unless it comes back to
us that they have exceeded their FAR.
Sven: The total FAR allowable is 2 ,400. And the total FAR with
the proposed ADU is 1,889 .
Remo: Why do you think this is an opportune time to have them--
Rob Thomson, Engineering Dept: Because typically we do not enforce
encroachments. There are encroachments like this all over the City
of various types, shapes and sizes. What happens is because that
is what we have been directed--the same as zoning enforced by
complaint. Or when someone comes in for a Landuse Review which
this is and so now we see through the survey that there is an
encroachment. We feel that that is private use of the public ROW
isn't proper use of the ROW.
Remo: Well, it isn't in any of the cases. So why don't you get
all of them?
Thomson: We haven't been directed to go around and do that.
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Remo: Why this one? They are keeping the structure the way it is.
If we deny them their variance that thing is going to stay there.
Thomson: Let's say he wasn't doing anything to the house itself
and he wanted to do something to the main house. We would still
require them to license the building itself as an encroachment and
it would stay the same. But because he is coming in and doing
substantial improvements to the structure itself we feel that then
it is time to move it out of the ROW.
Remo: They are not expanding on the same encroachment.
Thomson: No.
Remo: He is not putting a second story on that same encroachment.
He is stepping in from that.
Thomson: That is correct. But he is not correcting the
encroachment either.
Remo: Well, he is not but neither is anybody else. And if we deny
him this variance that encroachment is going to stay. I would
think the Engineering Dept is concerned about the safety and
welfare of the citizens, the 20 foot ROW, here you have a telephone
pole coming out a foot beyond the encroachment. It seems to me you
are even narrowing--the City government is narrowing what their
minimum requirements themselves. Why do they allow that pole to
even be there?
Thomson: Because we didn't have an easement on the property to put
it down.
Remo: On what property?
Thomson: On his property.
Remo: But you had an easement within that--you could have put it
before the garage. Right?
Thomson: I wasn't there when they put the pole down.
Remo: Well, I am just saying--
Thomson: When somebody comes in for a landuse review we also ask
for pedestal and utility easements to get those out of the ROW.
Remo: But the reason for getting them out of the ROW is for what
purpose?
Thomson: To maintain 20 foot clear access.
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Remo: So what I am saying again is that since it is prevalent all
over town and since if we don't give them the variance it is going
to be there anyway, what are we gaining by correcting this one
thing? That telephone pole is going to be out there anyway. I
would agree with you if they were building on top of this and
enhancing this encroachment. I wouldn't accept that at all.
Thomson: But now the part of it is he will go in--they are
building it and then there will never be an opportunity to get it
removed. When he is done with the structure we will never go and
say "OK we are coming through and clean everybody up. Move
everything over" .
Remo: Well, if you do it blanket with the whole City, I don't see
why they--you take an individual out there and are using him as an
example, then I don't think it is--
Thomson: We are not trying to make an example of it. That is our
opportunity to get it corrected. And that is just the way we look
at it.
There were no further questions from the Board.
Remo asked for public comment.
Dr. and Mrs. Richard Johnson, 123 East Hallam: We are neighbors
and we simply wanted to know what is the encroachment value of
this? Is it a problem with the snow plow? Is it a problem with
the pedestal standard? It is no problem for us at all. We want
to know what does it cause the City? Is it a problem when the
garbage trucks come through there? It is a small alley. But on
the other hand I don't see that as that big an encroachment unless
the City can tell us something which we did not know.
I don't know their variance requirement. They are building a very
nice addition with your Cottage Infill Program. And if this would
be the same kind of look we are willing for it. I think that this
is what we are looking for in the west end.
Thomson: I can't say that if he moved it back over there is
another foot more that we have that the utility that is there that
we will come over and move it over another foot. There is no
guarantee for that. Other than we look at 20 feet of public ROW
and we try and keep that wherever we can.
Remo: Do you always keep a trash can back in the alley? I know
it is not going to stop an emergency vehicle. And neither are the
utility poles. But it seems to me another kind of encroachment on
the availability of space for just utility people to get in there.
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Grosse: There are times I put the trash can on the west. There
is a pad there. How it got to the back I think I was cutting some
of the high grass in the back. I can move them.
Johnson: All of us have trash cans for the BFI.
Remo: I understand that. But when it is in an alley and when he
is encroaching on that alley, it further exacerbates the problem
of getting people in there. Nobody is going to go out there and
check you out at all. But it seems to me like it would be best to
maybe put it out on trash day.
Bill: There is room between the structure and the garage to move
this 18 inches. In other words if the garage is moved over, they
will be within the setback.
Remo: That is right.
Anne: Well, they won't be within the setback. They will be on
their property line. They are still not within the setback.
Sven: Well, there is no rear setback.
Anne: Yes there is for garages. There is a 5 foot. It is not
supposed to be right on the property line if somebody is building
a new one.
Charlie: If it is a new one, they have to set it back 5 feet.
Bill: If this were moved, would it have to be moved 6.8 feet?
Remo: That's right.
Anne: We could grant them that variance too. We could say "Move
it to the property line out of the encroachment" .
Bill: My point is the concern that the Engineer has that it is in
the ROW. I agree with the City that there should be an effort made
to get structures out of the ROW.
Remo: So do you think if we don't grant this variance now do you
think that is going to be alleviated?
Bill: I don't know whether the gentleman is going to build it
based on--
Remo: But they can't build it if we don't grant them the variance.
Bill: We can deny them the variance and then he can come back and
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ask for a variance of so many feet into the property.
Remo: We could do that now. We could modify the request so that
we could grant them a variance. But the point is that they are not
here for that. If he has to go back 6 feet he doesn't have any
room on that lot to do anything as far as cottage infill is
concerned.
Anne: We could modify it.
Bill: And give him a 3 foot into his property line. Eliminate the
distance into the ROW and give him 3 feet or 2 feet--whatever is
necessary for him to be able to build. That would solve the ROW
problem. I agree with the ROW problem--that the encroachment into
the ROW should be improved. We should correct it.
Remo: But it won't be corrected if we deny him this variance and
they don't come in for request. So are we alleviating the problem?
Bill: No. But that is his problem.
Remo: No. It is the City's problem. The problem is still going
to be there. That is my concern.
Anne: You don't know that though. They might say let us move this
back to within the property line. We want a variance. And then
there isn't a problem.
Grosse: As I had pointed out in my comment, the cost of 2 new
walls between $18, 000 and $22 , 000 plus what you just brought up
would kill the whole project. So I wouldn't come back. That is
not a threat. It is just that I can't do that.
Sven: According to my zoning summary accessory buildings are not
required to have a rear setback. The front and rear setbacks for
the principal building do total the required setbacks. But the ADU
according to the Cottage Infill in R-6 can be right on the property
line. That is Ord. #60.
Anne: It is not in R-6. I live in R-6 and I know that you have
to have 5 feet from the alley--the setback when you are building
a garage.
Sven: We approach this as a Cottage Infill project. There is a
City and P&Z and HPC public policy that says in the Cottage Infill
Ordinance the purpose is to convert existing buildings into
accessory dwelling units. It doesn't address the encroachment
issue. But I am sure this is going to come up again.
Remo: But you have to direct your comments to us in terms of why
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this would be a hardship or a practical difficulty for you that you
haven't created yourself.
Sven: It is a hardship because if you move it over we are at the
limits of separation between buildings. There is also an ADU
minimum size of 300sgft. And we are going to go below that so we
are not going to have a legal ADU.
Anne: Rob, to your knowledge on these accessory dwelling units-
-there is one of these that I know of down the same alley--have
none of the others encroached in the ROW? - - - -
Thomson: I can't say. From the pictures I would have to say that
they were. Whether they are licensed or not I don't know if Chuck
researched that.
Normally what would happen here is this would be before City
Council. Then Council got tired of dealing with them and threw it
back to you all. Quite frankly when we had other encroachments we
went to them and they had the same discussions that you are having
here. And they got tired of that and they threw them back on staff
and so they set this new process and the review process came back
to you.
Anne: I know it used to come to us. I remember there was a request
from the property at 5th and Hallam where they were remodeling and
the garage was right on the alley. It was not encroaching. We
denied their variance and made them tear it down because their
addition was--
My concern is that we are going through all of these different
cycles where we were so strict at one point that we made them tear
it down. Then HPC and City Council basically had a hand in it and
they granted variances left and right. They weren't granting
variances. They were allowing them to build within the setback
left and right. So those people had the benefit of that window.
Now all of a sudden it is coming back to us.
Remo: No. It is not. I just remembered now. They don't even have
to come to us for a 5 foot setback variance because this is on a
HPC jurisdiction and they don't require any setbacks.
Anne: But that is not a historic structure.
Remo: It is in the historic district. And the only reason it is
coming to us is just the encroachment. Not the property line.
Thomson: Not the property line. We look at nothing inside the
property line. Setbacks we do not deal with.
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Anne: So we could say we don't want this to be within the
encroachment.
Remo: All we care is whether we are going to give them the
encroachment or not. Now personally I don't see any validity as
far as safety or welfare or emergency vehicles going in with the
encroachment on Garmish St. even though it is on City property.
And if it would save them any money or something I can't see that
that encroachment has anything to do with the reasons for
eliminating--on Garmish. Whereas the other one that the reason
given- was -a 20foot minimum -ROW.
Remo asked if there was any further comment from the public. There
was none and he closed the public portion of the hearing.
Anne: I guess I would like to know how many other structures are
encroaching that have been given the ability to increase--to add
on--what the Council ruled on these. Because based on our
guidelines that we use I don't think this should encroach into the
ROW. I can see your point on this one side. But to me looking at
this structure first of all I don't see a whole lot worth saving
there. I know there is some cost. That is not in our purview.
I see the new building sitting right within the property line
without encroaching into the ROW being very feasible and I don't
see why they couldn't do that. So I am leaning towards not
granting the variance. I need to hear something stronger from one
of you to convince me otherwise.
Remo: I would have thought that maybe the structure is going to
stay there anyway.
Anne: I would say that is fine.
Remo: But then what are we alleviating?
Anne: What is his given right to increase his square footage and
do all of this extra stuff--just the fact that he is an historic
structure?
Remo: They give a lot of extra bonus from HPC.
Anne: But it is a very small lot. He bought it knowing he had a
small lot. At the time he bought it he wasn't allowed to put any
more there.
Bill: Why is HPC dealing with this in the first place?
Ron: Because it is within the historical overlay and the Cottage
Infill Program is their purview. They have responsibility to that.
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Anne: My other concern is that all of a sudden this density that
we have been trying to reduce in the west end--the big buildings
and volume and everything--you look down this particular alley, you
have got quite a few other structures--the one directly across the
alley and actually 2 owners on that structure across the alley,
sort of divided, it is one building on 2 lots. I can see them
coming next and wanting to do a 2 story structure. I can just see
this whole alley getting boxed in.
Remo: I would agree except this whole thing is the Cottage Infill
which Council and Planning & Zoning have directed that they want.
Ron: You can say therefore that in keeping with the spirit of the
code--and in keeping with the desires of the community as a whole.
We are going to run into a lot of cases with the Cottage Infill
Program. We ran into one on the ? cottage over on the corner
of Original St and Hyman. We had all the problems with how we were
going to put a fence so they don't--and that structure, the garage
is not a historical structure. But it became part of the Cottage
Infill Program and as such we had to deal with that criteria
whether it made sense or not. I think that if we want the Cottage
Infill Program to succeed and work, these are the places where we
are going to see it working.
Anne: Are these garages required to remain garages once we grant
these variances?
Ron: No.
Anne: Once City Council has allowed someone to do a Cottage
Infill, do we know that those garages are remaining garages?
Ron: Then they get restricted.
Thomson: You don't know that if the City doesn't they are going
to turn that into one anyway.
Sven: You have to deal with parking requirements.
Ron: They are deed restricted so--
Remo: Well if he is going to put a closet downstairs he is going
to get rid of at least one more space for a car.
Ron: Interesting case. I am going to be slightly facetious here.
If I were on HPC I would consider this pre-existing structure from
our new baroque period--or neo renascence period. As such HPC
would come into responsibility for determining what we can do with
this structure. I think as a pre-existing structure encroaching
on public ROW it has a right to exist. It is going to continue to
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exist. We can't get rid of it.
I think that the addition they are trying to make on this is one
that is in conformance with the code, setbacks etc. Therefore I
would approve that. I think additionally that this property owner-
-if we don't grant the variance will be denied a right that is
currently enjoyed by his neighbors who currently encroach to a
greater degree than he does if you want to consider encroachment
a right. I think that since the Cottage Infill Program is being
pushed by Council, HPC, P&Z and a lot of other people in town they
are in keeping with the spirit of the code and therefore we have
every right to grant the variance in that regard.
I think the utility pole and the boxes that exist in some of these
alleyways are in greater violation than the structures that
encroach. I would like to tie a variance into the removal of that
box to the west side of the structure so that it is not encroaching
any more than the structure is at this point.
Remo: I don't' know if we can do that.
Anne: That is the City's.
Ron: If we put it on the property owner's property and he agrees
to allow us to do that--
Anne: We can't require--
Ron: I am not requiring the owner to do it. I am going to say "As
a condition of the variance I am going to ask the property owner
to agree to allow that box to be moved" . Not at his cost. If the
City doesn't want to do it then what I am saying is we should grant
the variance in any case since the City is encroaching more than
the homeowner or the applicant.
Thomson: He doesn't have to agree. They can come in and move it.
Ron: But not onto his property.
Thomson: No.
Ron: It is a really simple little easement to grant to move that
box right around to the left side right next to where the garbage
can is supposed to be. I think that the utilities are encroaching
more than the applicant is. And therefore I think that is a bigger
danger than the current encroaching. So I would grant the variance
since I think it is a minimal variance. But I would do it with the
condition that the applicant would allow that box to be moved
around the corner to the west side onto his property so it doesn't
encroach any more than his structure does.
16
BAM8. 13 . 92
Remo: You said something about their right by code. They don't
have any right by code.
Ron: I didn't say he had right by code. I said it was in the
spirit of the code.
Remo: You did say we were infringing on a right that they would
have by code if the encroachment wasn't there.
Ron: I said "Other property owners have greater encroachments than
they have so the other property owners appear to be enjoying a
greater property right than the applicant. I think that the
additions that they are making are being made observing the current
code. The addition isn't in the encroachment at all.
Remo: Yes it is. It is not by code. It is by HPC because they
are on the property line. If it were by code they would have to
be back 5 feet.
Ron: As part of the Infill Program. That is what I am talking
about. As part of the HPC Infill Program. It is their set of
rules--not our set of rules.
Remo: Outside of HPC the Cottage Infill still has to require the
5 foot setback. You are just talking about HPC having control
setback requirements. If they are outside of HPC's jurisdiction
Cottage Infill still applies. But they have to meet code.
Ron: Isn't this under HPC?
Remo: This is under HPC. It doesn't require any kind of
consideration for setbacks. So when you say by code, it is not by
code. It is by HPC discretion.
Ron: It would be the Cottage Infill Ordinance that governs HPC' s
actions. It is law. Whether it is the Landuse Code or an
Ordinance, it is law. They are conforming to the law in the
addition that they are adding. What I am trying to get across it
conforms in as many ways as possible to the existing law with this
addition without removing the original structure.
Thomson: Related to the utility--it is nice if we can get utility
pedestal easements on property to get those out of there. But if
need be we can move that around the corner. It would still be in
the ROW and not be on his property.
Remo: What he is saying is that the condition would be that the
owner would have to put it on his property.
17
BAM8. 13 . 92
Ron: No. Not "have" to put it on--to "allow" it.
Thomson: To do that you would have to do a whole pedestal easement
and there just isn't room to do that.
If we were to force utilities to clean up the alley, not only this
pedestal but also the other ones further down that . people keep
hitting there is room to move it around here. It is not on his
property and it is out of the way.
Remo: Would the Engineering Dept like that?
Thomson: Well--yes but we would have to go to the utilities and
they would say they have to have money to do it. It would screw
the whole--just to get them underground was a major effort.
Ron: What you are saying is that the caveat that I was trying to
add to my ? makes any difference.
Thomson: And also if it does get moved off the fact of the matter
is you may have a foot ? and that pedestal may still be
sitting there.
Bill: I don't quite agree. Because I think the City starts
sponsoring programs and they begin to violate their own rules. If
this was a request to add this amount of square footage to the
house, we wouldn't even be discussing it. We would turn it down.
Remo: No. They would be allowed because they have their FAR. We
wouldn't hear it because they would be allowed to do it.
Bill: Wouldn't they have to move that garage?
Remo: No. Not at all. That is the whole thing is that the
problem is and with the garage when you add FAR to the house the
problem is when you start embellishing something--I think that was
Rob' s point is that once they start putting the second story on it
is a little more difficult to have them then say "We want you back
from that encroachment" . I really feel like they can put a wall
underneath the second story if the City were adamant about having
them remove it, they can just say "that thing underneath was a
garage and just move that wall back" . I don't see where that would
be a problem.
In this particular case I don't see anything being accomplished
because that thing is going to stay there. They are not going to
take that down.
Bill: Isn't there a law that says that you will have to remove the
property that is in an encroachment?
18
BAM8 . 13 .92
Ron: Nope.
Bill: Well, I have an encroachment on my house. But if I were to
modify my house I am going to have to move the house.
Thomson: It would be the same if you were to come for your parking
area and that was encroaching. When you were talking about raising
your--putting a basement underneath there--we would go through--
it would be the same thing as trying to correct the encroachment.
Remo: That is because it is your house. But this is a garage and
not the house. So when they add things onto the house--the house
doesn't have the encroachment on the City property.
Anne: But why does the garage have the right?
Thomson: What would happen is if it still came through a Landuse
Review and the Planning turned it over to the Engineering, what we
would be saying right now is "That needs to be licensed just as
the fence would be" . We would not approve it unless that was
licensed. So then what happens is we go through and we get the
license and it goes in and then we have an agreement. They have
to have insurance for it and if then he wanted to come back and do
the ADU it would be brought back here again. Because then we are
saying "You are making a substantial improvement to--it is easier
to move it during those improvements than it is to come on down the
road after those improvements are made.
Remo: But the improvement isn't in the encroachment. That is the
whole thing.
Thomson: But with this we are looking at the overall structure.
Remo: But they can improve it internally.
Thomson: Right.
Remo: They could really do something wonderful in there and it
would be very difficult for you to deny them an encroachment
license when . they come to you and say "Look we have got all this
equipment in here. It is permanent. Whatever it is" I am trying
to satisfy the argument that you are making but I see--
Thomson: The same thing happened over on East Cooper. Somebody
came in and they had a garage that was just sitting there and it
was 6 feet into the ROW. And that went to Council but they were
going in and turning it into an accessory dwelling unit. And we
had the same argument there. We were saying that they were
improving the condition of it and turning it into living quarters.
19
BAM8. 13 . 92
Here is somebody living in the public ROW.
Anne: And did they give it to them?
Thomson: Yes. That was on the historic list.
Bill: That is where I disagree.
Anne: I disagree with that. At what point do you stop it?
Remo: This was in interior change. This was not an exterior
change. It was already there. All they changed was the use
inside. So no one would have really known about it. That is what
I am saying about this.
Thomson: Exactly. And that is what I am saying. They are like
this all over town. And we are not directed to go through and
license every encroachment until the opportunity comes through like
this.
One other thing I would like to add is that these neighbors are-
-everybody is happy in this area where we get a lot of conditions
where people aren't. "I can't back my car up" etc. I think
overall what the Council needed to look at and possibly you do too
in the future these are going to come back to you as what you
picture as the town as a whole. Do you want to see these alleys
like this? I don't think, the nature of the town, you are going
to want to see a black and white straight strip thing. This is not
the last thing in this alley block to clean it up and give
everybody clear access.
Remo: We can't look at it the way you look at it.
Thomson: We are trying to be so black that we just look between
property line to property line. But we are here to present--we
have to do it by code. That is our position, our job. It is kind
of up to you- to decide--
Remo: Well, you can either deny or allow. You are telling me that
you are going to deny every one that comes to you now?
Thomson: If they want to embellish it in some way.
Bill: If they want to clean up the alleys, they have to do it.
Thomson: Somewhere--it is the magnitude--is a foot more, is 3
inches too much?
Anne: It is interesting. I can see the houses that are on the
register now that have the public right to do the Cottage Infill
and expand and everything. And then I can see someone with a 50s
house that all of a sudden says "Hey, wait a minute, I don't have-
Ron: Yes they do. If it is in the historical overlay they have
20
BAM8 . 13 . 92
every right. They don't' have to have a historically designated
structure.
Anne: Every house in the west end can come and say "I want to do
an accessory dwelling unit" .
Ron: Sure. And it can be the biggest piece of garbage built in
1965. Absolutely.
Charlie: It is very simple. The whole thing boils down to this.
Mr. Grosse will do nothing if we don't grant him the variance. And
you will still have an encroachment because he wants to keep the
garage. - Now- if you want to agree with-City Council- and the wishes-
of the citizens and have an infill program we should grant this
variance.
Remo: There are specific guidelines that we have to grant
variances. And I want you to address them. I am in full agreement
with you, Charlie. Here are the three things and you haven't
addressed those.
Charlie: I told you that I agree to grant this variance and that
is what base my agreement on. There is a special circumstance of
condition that the denial would cause the applicant unnecessary
hardship or practical difficulty to build the infill on the Infill
Program and their requested encroachment is the minimum
encroachment possible. I don't have to tell you that. That is
what I agree with. Those are the points I base my decision on.
You are either grant it and agree with the Infill Program or you
are going to deny it and it will stay there.
Remo: Unfortunately the Infill Program isn't within our purview
here. That is unfortunate. So we have to grant this variance on
a different set of criteria. I want to see the Infill Program work
too. But that is not why I am going to grant the variance. I am
going to grant it because of other considerations that direct
themselves towards these guidelines which allow us to grant or deny
variances.
I would grant this variance. And the reason for it is that I don't
feel like the City will accomplish what they want to accomplish on
this particular case. And that is to get rid of that structure in
the first place. My feeling is that the City should take it upon
themselves to do this and blanket the whole City with a more
specific ordinance that just says "You want to do anything with
that you get rid of that problem" . This is the gray area that we
have to work within. And I think that by not granting this
variance the problem is still going to exist. It is not going to
be a 20 foot ROW. That telephone utility pole is going to be there
21
BAM8 . 13 . 92
and nothing will have been accomplished.
In the meantime as an aside and not a reason for granting a
variance we would be losing that Cottage Infill Program which the
City and the Planning & Zoning Commission desperately wants to
achieve. So in this particular case I can see no alleviation of
a problem by not granting this variance. I can't see anyone taking
down that structure. Why would they take down that structure?
Anne: You don't know that. He can move it back. He has got room
to bring it back 1. 8 feet. That is what Bill was pointing out.
He still has room to bring it back in here.
Bill: I will tell you a reason. This gentleman may sell this
house next month. Then somebody else comes in here and he may have
to remove it.
Anne: To me this structure isn't significant enough to warrant
saving it where it is. If we are trying to get rid of these
encroachments, let's get them to move it back if they want to do
the addition. If they don't, fine. They can leave it the way it
is. The next owner--we have gone through this so many times. We
grant a variance and then they sell it to somebody else. I am not
saying that Mr. Grosse is going to do that.
I think we have to look at it as "John Doe" . If we give this
variance to John Doe he is gaining a tremendous amount in every
respect. He is planning on keeping his family in there. His
family might be a City employee. The next person that comes along
unless somebody is monitoring that constantly, they don't know that
their house guests aren't living in there. There are so many
different obstacles to make them conform. This whole property is
so non-conforming. If it was a 9, OOOsgft property and there was
a tenant space on it I might look at it a little differently. But
we are just boxing in every little lot so that there is no open
space left.
MOTION
Ron: I make a motion that we approve request for a variance in
Case #92-10.
Charlie seconded the motion.
Roll call vote:
Bill, no, Ron, yes, Anne, no, Charlie, yes, Remo, yes.
variance denied.
Meeting was adjourned. Time was 5: 25pm.
I
Jan ce M. Carney, City Deput Clerk
22
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
CASE #92-10
ED GROSSE
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 13 , 1992
Time: 4 : 00 p.m.
Owner for Variance: Appellant for Variance:
Name: ED GROSSE SVEN ALSTROM, ARCHITECT
Address: 100 EAST BLEEKER
Location or description of property:
100 EAST BLEEKER
Variance Requested: APPLICANT HAS REQUESTED ENCROACHMENT LICENSE
FOR EXISTING GARAGE WHICH ENCROACHES 1 FOOT 10 INCHES INTO ALLEY
RIGHT-OF-WAY AND 1 FOOT 5 INCHES INTO GARMISCH STREET RIGHT-OF-
WAY. - ORDINANCE #11 (SERIES OF 1992) REVISED SECTION 19-5 OF
MUNICIPAL CODE TO ASSIGN ENCROACHMENT LICENSING TO CITY ENGINEER
WITH APPEAL TO BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT. THE CITY ENGINEER DECLINED TO
LICENSE THE ENCROACHMENTS. THE APPLICANT IS APPEALING THAT
DECISION.
Will applicant be represented by counsel: Yes: X No:
The City of Aspen Board of Adjustment
130 South Galena Street, Aspen, Colorado 81611
Remo Lavagnino, Chairman Jan Carney Deputy City Clerk
AUG i 2
AFFIDAVIT OF MAILING
I have complied with the notice requirements of Section 6-
205 (E) (3) (C) of the Aspen Land Use Regulations of the Aspen
Municipal Code by mailing of notice, a copy of which is attached
hereto by first class, postage prepaid, U.S. Mail to all owners of
property within three hundred (300) feet of the subject property
on
STATE OF COLORADO )
SS
COUNTY OF PITRIN )
The foregoing fidavit of mailing was signed before me this
day of
WITNESS my hand and official seal.
My commission expires:
Nol Publi Botty Rodman/Notary Public
PitWn County Bank&Truet
PO.0ox 3677,Aspen,CO 81612
My Comrrussion expires 9116192
AFFIDAVIT OF NOTICE BY POSTING OF A
County of Pitkin } VARIANCE HEARING BEFORE THE CITY OF
} ss. ASPEN BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT (Pursuant
State of Colorado } to Section 6-205(E) (b) of the Muni-
cipal Code)
The undersigned, being first duly sworn, deposes and says as
follows:
I, '� «'�� being or
representing an Applicant before the Pitkin County Board of
Adjustment, personally certify that the attached photograph
{
fairly and accurately represents the sign posted as Notice of the
variance hearing on this matter in a conspicuous place on the
subject property (as it could be seen from the nearest public
way) and that the said sign was posted and visible continuously
from the day of _� 7lJG y' �-�� , ly-��� ,
to the Ag day of � , 19z
r
(Must be posted for at least ten ( ) full days before the
hearing date) . ,
pp 'ca is Signature
Subscribed and sworn o before me
this day of ,
19 by !!52) E� '
(Attach photograph here)
WITNESS MY HAND AND OFFICIAL SEAL.
My Commission expires:
tary lies Signature
Betty RodmanMotarry Public
Pftkin County Bank&Trust
Address My Comrnission expire 2
s GV 6/92
I
om of
� tiu
PUBLIC NOTICE
DATE
—
PURPOS s"