Council hears update on downtown master plan public feedback

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Rendering courtesy of Heart of Homewood Plan.

The Regional Planning Commission of Greater Birmingham presented feedback they have received from Homewood residents so far, as part of the "Heart of Homewood" master planning process for the downtown area, at tonight's city council planning and development committee meeting.

Lindsay Puckett of the RPCGB said there have been more than 3,000 unique visitors on the Heart of Homewood website since the master planning began in September 2017. Additionally, there were 460 respondents to their visioning survey in the fall, 225 people who submitted comments via their online interactive map and two public forums.

There is also a visual preferences survey open through the end of the month on the Heart of Homewood website, which you can take here. The survey asks residents to rate the types of developments they would like to see, such as multi-use or townhomes, and choose between sample pictures of what those types of developments would look like. The pictures are not associated with definite plans for the area, but rather are representations that will help the committee gauge what residents do and do not want to see.

The downtown area being studied for the master plan includes businesses from Rosedale Drive and Vulcan Park on the north side to Oxmoor Road on the south, with U.S. 31 and Central Avenue as the eastern and western borders, respectively.

Puckett said she found the following results from public feedback so far:

Puckett said the survey that is currently open will be the first of three to "get a little bit deeper feedback” on what residents want to see. About 350 people have already taken the visual preferences survey, she said. More public meetings will also be organized.

The Heart of Homewood committee intends to draft an initial master plan from March to June, with adoption of the final plan and beginning of the zoning update process by September. The timeline projects drafting the zoning update by November, with public adoption and approval in December.

While making Reese Street a one-way road came up in the Heart of Homewood process, the city council has also been considering it. At tonight's city council meeting, council members voted to fund up to $4,000 for Skipper Consulting to study how traffic would be affected by making Reese Street one-way from Central Avenue to Linden Avenue, especially after recent traffic pattern changes on Central.

There were concerns about the possibility of cars cutting through the parking lot that serves Little Donkey in order to get around the one-way restriction, as well as afternoon traffic flow. However, turning the road into a one-way would potentially increase pedestrian access and add a small amount of parking.

Council members noted several important upcoming dates:

The council also:

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