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Planning and Zoning Meeting <br />June 3, 2003 <br />Page 5 <br />a Planned Development District (a) Retail shopping center (PD -a), Part <br />of lot 14, City Block 259, (See Exhibit A Attached). <br />Don Wilson, 3110 Stacy Lane, spoke in favor of the petition stating that <br />he represents a group called HW Group who have owned the property <br />for approximately 20 years. The property is directly across the street <br />from East Paris Baptist Church. It runs along Collegiate Drive from <br />the subdivision that Jack Denman put in, North Park. It runs from that <br />house South to the corner of Collegiate Drive and Pine Mill Road. <br />What the Group have as a contract is to sell the northeast property to <br />an insurance company and build a building with the same setting as a <br />residential structure. It will have brick, composition roof, no metal on <br />it, and they are looking at having a transition house, a transition <br />business that transitions from residential into a Commercial site. The <br />entire property would be deed restricted where anyone that builds there <br />would have to have a 4 sided brick exterior, no metal showing, and any <br />dumpster would have to be enclosed in brick. Further south on <br />Collegiate, there are metal buildings, and all kinds of Commercial <br />structures but this would be a transition from Residential to Heavy <br />Commercial and with the deed restriction the issued could be forced <br />where it would always look nice and in setting with the residential <br />houses that are to the North and well to the East in Springlake <br />Addition. Although, the property behind this requested zoning area <br />would be an additional street of residential left in there that zoning is <br />not being requested. Site plan in the future would address parking and <br />drainage. If anyone comes in a want to build a retail center or retail <br />building of any sort, they will have to follow the deed restriction, they <br />would have to do exactly as Norment & Landers and would have to <br />come before the Planning & Zoning Commission for approval. It is <br />enough land to have 4 or 5 lots similar to what Norment & Landers is <br />buying on the north end. <br />