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Suburban Plaza Walmart parking plan approved

It was neighbor against neighbor and residents against developers during a Dec. 14 public hearing before a decision was made to give Walmart the parking variance it needed for its proposed Suburban Plaza location.

DeKalb County’s Zoning Board of Appeals approved Selig Enterprises’ request for a parking variance allowing the developer to have 3.91 parking spaces per 1,000 square feet of floor space, instead of the required 5.5 spaces per 1,000 square feet.

Selig Enterprises developed the 290,000-square-foot Suburban Plaza, located at the junction of North Decatur Road, Church Street and Scott Boulevard, in 1959. New plans would increase the shopping center to 324,614 square feet.

That variance reduced the required spaces for the development by 517 spaces, from 1,786 spaces to 1,269 spaces.

A report by a traffic engineer hired by Selig Enterprises, who conducted an occupied parking space analysis on Dec. 3 between 2-3:30 p.m., showed that the additional spaces are not needed, according to Steve Rothman, an attorney representing Selig Enterprises.

The 235,000-square-foot Chamblee Village shopping center used 2.23 spaces per 1,000 square feet. The District at Howell Mill required a 2.8 ratio. Both shopping centers have a Walmart Supercenter.

“We’re above what is actually needed,” Rothman said. “Nobody needs 5.5 parking spaces [per 1,000 square feet] for a shopping center. There really is no need to have a huge sea of concrete or more parking out there.”

Melanie White, who had a petition with 378 signatures, asked for a 90-day extension so a study on the impact of the development on the community could be performed.

“In our view, you cannot decide on parking until you know enough [about] how limited parking will affect the traffic,” Parker said.

Studies should be conducted on the impact of traffic on the six-way intersection at North Decatur Road, Medlock Road and Scott Boulevard and the effect of emergency vehicle traffic between DeKalb Medical Center, Emory Hospital and Egleston Children’s Hospital.

“We are not against development, but we are against [inconvenience to] our neighbors that can result in danger both to individuals transferred in emergency vehicles as well as those who potentially will be parking and driving in the area,” Parker said.

Resident Jan Hubbard asked the zoning board “not to change the rules for Selig.”

“I’m not here to debate the merits or the demerits of Walmart,” Hubbard said. “I’m here because I believe that this Walmart … is the wrong land use for this location.”

Other residents said they welcomed a Walmart to the struggling shopping center.

Sharon Johnson, president of the Medlock Area Neighborhood Association (MANA), said the group’s board was very excited about the parking variance.

“We like less parking,” said Johnson, adding that the MANA board is pleased that there will be underground parking and no parking deck in the shopping center.

Charles Pursley, vice chairman of the church council for North Decatur United Methodist Church, said his church welcomes the proposed development.

“We believe that his development and parking required for it…is beneficial to our church and the people we serve,” Pursley said.

Pursley, who lives near Suburban Plaza, said the additional traffic would be beneficial to the community.

“I drive this all the time,” Pursley said. “I am aware of the traffic and I think the development and what it brings to the neighborhood is worth the extra traffic that it may bring.”

Before the vote, zoning board member Bonnie Jackson urged her fellow board members to set aside personal feelings about Walmart and concerns about traffic.

“We are not here to say whether a Walmart can be here,” Jackson said. “Traffic is going to be traffic regardless of what goes in on that corner. What we’re here for only is for the parking.”

Scott Selig, of Selig Enterprises, said the decision by the zoning board upheld the property rights of commercial developers.

“I am in favor of individuals expressing themselves,” Selig said. “But there comes a point where we have a constitutional right to operate a company.”

 


Comments (13)

Said this on 12/1/12 At 04:04 pm
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Said this on 11/30/12 At 12:06 pm
Thanks Gracie. I probably miessd this analysis somewhere else as I quit reading the DC Libarary soap. Did anybody do the total math on the cost of the Parking Lot -Demo plus lost property taxes on3 homes? (I'm not a City Manger expert so just guessing here).S0 Home Values let's call it Three houses at @120k = $360kThree House Demo/Engineer-Analysis/Mangement/ etc etc $100kPut up a parking lot blacktop/eqpt/architect/Mangement .$250k?Conservative $3350 prop tax per house = $10k lost ANNUALLY FOREVER, (unless the Funeral Home is picking some of that up.)$360k 3 houses + 100K demo + $250k blacktop = $710k plus $10k in lost property tax annually FOREVER.And THAT might be the cheapest way to Put up a Parking Lot h/t Joni Mitchell. Didn't the brick one cost $1 mil?Looks like the Haish Memorial Library just might make that 100 years in 2031? (and by then it will be all Ipads:)
Donald King
Said this on 2/24/12 At 08:15 pm
Suburban Plaza in it's present stage is a dump of a shopping center. I've lived my 57 years of existence within 10 minutes of the location. I used to go with my parents to watch fireworks on July 4th before Lenox Square got involved. Traffic? How about getting the county to correctly time the lights and pave N. Decatur road? All those opposed to Wal Mart will be the first in line when the store opens.
Said this on 1/14/12 At 01:24 pm
If you're interested in learning more or working to defeat this development, please join us at
decaturwalmart-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
www.facebook.com/NoWMinDecatur
Said this on 12/20/11 At 01:38 pm
We need better quality jobs though.

There should be something that fosters innovation or growth - not another dumpy wal-mart.
M Thomas
Said this on 12/16/11 At 08:15 pm
Perhaps Scott Selig was thinking of the Declaration of Independence's statement that people have a right to the pursuit of happiness, which in his case might mean helping to run his family's business. While I appreciate accuracy, I have no problem with the general meaning of Selig's statment. I am more concerned that someone would use what he said as a reason to oppose his family's business decision.

The person who lives near the Walmart in Avondale Estates might or might not have the correct facts. It seems that a great many people who are opposed to Walmart on philosophical grounds find other reasons to oppose the store's existence. Perhaps Walmart does not do an adequate job returning shopping carts to the store and picking up trash. But the people leaving shopping carts in the parking lot and dropping trash are not the ones who run Walmart or Selig Enterprises. Those are just your everyday neighbors in Avondale who lack respect.
NIMBY
Said this on 12/16/11 At 12:43 pm
You just don't understand. WalMart is like coyotes--it's ok for. you know, some people, but it doesn't belong in a place where we pay high property taxes to sip out lattes without having to mingle with, you know, some people.
decnole
Said this on 12/16/11 At 11:00 am
I can't believe anybody would be against the redevelopment of the eyesore that Suburban Plaza has become. Not only will it add a significant commercial tax base but it will also add badly needed jobs. If you don't like Walmart exercise your right and don't shop there!
ddona stwert
Said this on 12/16/11 At 01:55 am
People need jobs, in all sectors, construction, managers and most of all the sale associates. We know about all the traffic but we also need most to feed our families and have some kind of healthcare. Any job market is welcome in this economy. Georgia have the highest unemployment rate in the nation.
JerryMyer Jackson Jr
Said this on 12/16/11 At 12:35 am
We Must Stop This WalMart Saturation of East & South DeKalb ?

Organize !

Organize !

Organize !

And the DeKalb Zoning Board, OMG ! One person with good sense ! On the bright side that's better than The BOC !
Telkonequi
Said this on 12/15/11 At 10:57 pm
A constitutional right to operate a company ?????????????? I am reading the Constitution. I don't see that language in there.
Todd
Said this on 12/15/11 At 10:31 pm
I live near the Walmart in Avondale Estates. Before Walmart was approved to be built, Walmart made a lot of promises about how it would maintain the store and store grounds. Unfortunately, and not to my surprise, it has not kept up its promise. Although they agreed to have an employee constantly keeping the shopping carts together and trash picked up, there always are both shopping carts and garbage strewn about the parking lot. The store often has half-stocked shelves containing empty boxes. Be mindful what Walmart promises to do, since it probably will not live up to the agreement.

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