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01-21-1999 Council Work Session
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01-21-1999 Council Work Session
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HOUSING JUNE, 1980 <br />ORONO'S LAND USE PLANS AND PROGRAMS ALLOW NEW URBAN AND RURAL DEVELOPMENTS <br />TO PROVIDE COMPARABLE COST HOUSING OPPORTUNITIES. <br />Orono has never had regulations requiring arbitrary mlnlmun square footage <br />In homes. Orono has never required such cost Increasers as garages, paved <br />driveways or mandatory landscaping. Any structure which conforms to State <br />Building Code safety requirements can be built on any residential lot In <br />the City. <br />In addition, Orono has had long experience with rural residential <br />development including a full six years of requiring at least 2.0 acres <br />of dry bulldable land for each rural dwelling. From this experience, <br />Orono has found that housing built on rural lots of 2 acres per dwelling <br />can be and Is comparably priced with housing built on typical 10,000 <br />square foot suburban lots. The difference Is on of lifestyle and <br />necessary public Improvement investment. <br />The typical suburban lot requires massive amounts of Investment for <br />Improvements necessary to allow urban density. Including sanitary <br />sewers, municipal water, storm sewers, paved streets, street lights, <br />large-scale earth moving and landscaping or erosion control measures. <br />Indirect costs include park development fees, and Increasing taxation <br />to pay for schools, police, fire and general governmental expansion. <br />Development time often exceeds a year or two from concept to reality. <br />All these costs, plus large, long-term carrying charges, are built into <br />the cost of each urban home. <br />On the other hand, rural development as practiced in Orono is relatively <br />quick and inexpensive. Small rural subdivisions have b«en completed <br />within 90 days. Each rural lot Is subject to extensive site and soil <br />evaluation to ensure adequate, permanent on-site septic system operation. <br />But, the Installation of on-slte septic systems and individual wells <br />costs considerably less per unit than municipal sewer or water systems. <br />There is no extensive land alteration and no storm sewer necessary. All <br />access is via the existing street system or by new roads privately owned <br />and maintained by the landowner. Road construction Is less expensive, <br />because of the limited use rural sections need not be built to urban <br />design standards. Municipal tax levels remain the same because the <br />development density can be accommodated within the means of the existing <br />public services and facilities. Thus Orono*s two acre lots provide a <br />vastly different lifestyle for the same market price as other city's <br />10,000 square foot urban neighborhoods. <br />CMP 5-6
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