Newspaper Page Text
Wednesday, July 27,2022
dawsonnews.com I DAWSON COUNTY NEWS I 7A
FROM 1A
Rezoning
turn it down and let me
withdraw, because I
couldn’t do it,” said lead
developer Bill Evans. “If
what we’ve done is not
good enough, I under
stand.”
During their July 21
voting session, the board
voted unanimously to
table a decision on the
rezoning application for
Fox Creek’s proposed
mixed-use development at
Lumpkin Campground
Rd. and Ga. 400 until the
Aug. 18 voting session,
which will also be held in
the Dawson County
Government Center’s
assembly room. There will
not be a public hearing at
that time, since one was
held during the May 19
BOC voting session.
The board tabled a vote
to ultimately approve or
deny the rezone of 518
acres from five different
classifications to better
define in the project stipu
lations what would consti
tute imbalance between
the development’s PODs.
The tabling gives Fox
Creek a month to meet
with the Development
Authority of Dawson
County (DADC) and firm
up a forthcoming agree
ment as to the latter’s role
in securing an industrial
occupant. Further talks
would also allow for con-
versations to clarify
restricted uses as to medi
cal device manufacturing,
in which the development
authority has expressed an
interest. That way, clearly
allowing that particular
use would make the pro
posed industrial space
more marketable.
As part of the stipula
tions, non-residential
space can be a maximum
of 84,000 square feet gen
eral office, medical and
dental space; a maximum
of 50,000 square feet retail
and restaurant space; and
a maximum of 250,000
square feet or about 35
acres of warehouse, logis
tics and flex space.
The residential PODS
will include the following
986 units: 465 single-fam
ily detached homes; 121
active adult detached
homes; 300 multifamily
apartments; and 100
attached residences.
Each residential POD
will have an amenity area
comprising five percent of
its section, according to
the stipulations. Overall
density will be 1.9 units
an acre.
Tentative site plans
show the multifamily and
senior units closer to the
front and the single-family
detached lots extending
toward the back of the
property.
“I think we’d want to
have a max on the residen
tial side because that’s an
expense to the county but
a minimum on the com
mercial side because it’s a
revenue generating aspect
of the project,” Gaines
said.
County attorney Angela
Davis with Jarrard &
Davis explained that the
comprehensive plan code
does provide for “some
minimums” but suggested
adding more such lan
guage if that wording
wasn’t enough for the
board.
The comprehensive plan
considered employment
uses as inclusive of office,
retail, service, restaurant,
civic or institutional in
multi-use or free-standing
buildings. Between
150,000-250,000 square
feet with a general land
area range of 7-20 acres
would be needed.
Additionally, an activity
center comprising 1-2 per
cent of the non-residential
area would need to be
included. Parking struc
tures, parks, open space
and roads would have to
be carved out separately,
Davis added.
Part of the language at
issue were some of the
triggers for residential per
mits mentioned in the cur
rent stipulations.
As it was worded, resi
2022
SITE PLAN RENDERING
Planners S Engineers
Collaborative*
Photo submitted to DCN
Julia Fechter Dawson County News
dential permits would not
be issued until the indus
trial POD is deeded to the
development authority;
there’s a grand green in
the commercial center;
and 3.5 acres is dedicated
to the county for future
civic uses.
Dedication of land
would have to happen
prior to the earliest devel
opment for the office
industrial and industrial
flex PODs.
Davis suggested that if
the board wanted to con
vey POD C and do noth
ing else, then that needed
to be specified in the stip
ulations.
Both Gaines and
District 4 Commissioner
Emory Dooley took issue
with the tenth stipulation,
which would allow a por
tion of residential housing
to go forward and put the
onus to ensure the indus
trial aspect on to the
development authority.
Gaines mentioned the
key cash flow that com
mercial or non-residential
aspects would bring and
how those parts would
help offset the cost of ser
vicing the residential
parts. What he “wanted to
avoid” was a repeat of
smaller-scale multi-use
efforts in Dawson County
before 2007.
“What wound up hap
pening is there wasn’t any
teeth into it, and they start
ed [building] residential,
and then it went defunct...
and commercial didn’t
come to fruition,” Gaines
said. “The whole point is
the concurrency of both of
them.”
Speaking on behalf of
Fox Creek, Jim Bowersox
replied that that approach
“is not how it works,” say
ing the developer’s
approach is “an economic
thing.”
“It’s an economic thing
for us too,” Gaines said.
BOC Chairman Billy
Thurmond clarified that
the board wasn’t ruling
out any residential at first,
just desiring for concur
rent development.
Dooley said he hadn’t
seen “anything thus far
that spelled out concur
rent,” but Thurmond
pointed out that such a
provision was already stat
ed in the comprehensive
plan regulations.
Angela Davis said the
addition of an eleventh
condition also took care of
that ambiguity.
“Development of each
POD must be phased so
that within the first phas
es. Both residential and
non-residential spaces are
provided at the same time,
as opposed to one or the
other being built first,” she
said, reading from her
notes.
She and Thurmond also
hammered out an addi
tional sentence before the
voting session.
“In the event the propor
tion of residential, com
mercial and industrial
development becomes
imbalanced, permits will
not be issued until devel
opment comes into com
pliance with this condi
tion,” she added.
Project phases
Tentative project plans
detail a two-phase plan to
build out Fox Creek’s
mixed-use village.
Bowersox clarified that
there would likely be four
to five phases overall.
In the first phase, pad
ding and grading would be
done for POD A, which
encompasses the town
center. Entrances and
roads would be done for
the town center and up to
the first residential POD.
The industrial flex area or
POD C would be made
“pad ready” for an occu
pant, to include improve
ments proposed along
Lumpkin Campground
Road.
The office industrial and
medical office spaces,
PODs B and D, would not
be done. Pendler, who’s
handling the apartments in
POD E, would be doing
that part on their own, but
Fox Creek would be
responsible for bringing
the utilities and roads to
that portion of the project,
so there may be a lag on
the multifamily part,
Bowersox said.
“The only way it works
for us and the reason
we’re willing to move for
ward is because of what
we keep hearing from the
development authority and
the industrial developer
we’re working with,” he
added, reiterating that it’d
be the DADC’s responsi
bility to ensure an indus
trial vendor.
Bowersox clarified that
he doesn’t think it’d take
longer for the industrial
component “to go verti
cal” but said “they [Fox
Creek] couldn’t afford to
stop the project.”
DADC member Tony
Passarello agreed with
others’ sentiments that the
costs for an industrial
component would have to
be agreed to before pro
ceeding further with POD
C.
Bowersox explained
that the contract in ques
tion would be “more of an
agreement.” Once there’s
a set price for the land and
the space goes through
engineering, that part of
the project would be bid
out, and then the DADC
would see and presumably
agree on the numbers.
The DADC would then
turn around and sell the
industrial space for a set
cost, ensuring the develop
er gets paid for that part of
the mixed-use village,
Bowersox said.
Additionally, Planning
and Development Director
Above, Fox Creek
Properties has applied
to rezone 518 acres for
a mixed-use village
along Dawson County's
bustling Ga. 400 corri
dor. At left, land devel
oper Jim Bowersox
tells the board why he
thinks an approach of
simultaneous residen
tial and commercial
building would not
work for Fox Creek's
proposed mixed-use
village.
Sharon Farrell did state
that making medical
devices could be allowed
despite the listing under
prohibited uses, since it’d
be more akin to research
efforts and actually allow
able under the list and
NAICS land use code.
District 1 Commissioner
Sharon Fausett also
inquired about the price
points for the active adult
single-family units, which
would be some of the first
residential ones being
built. Bowersox gave a
tentative quote of “mid-
$300,000s” for those resi
dences.
Gaines followed by ask
ing if Fox Creek was con
fident in the local market
that they’d have an
absorption period to take
those prices down quickly.
“No,” said Bowersox.
“If it (the rezoning) is
passed, our next stage is to
go into engineering, which
would take us until the
end of this year, and we’d
start development closer
to the beginning of next
year. This type of develop
ment is going to take a
minimum of 12 months.”
The commissioners reit
erated their concerns
about balancing commer
cial and residential
aspects, which Bill Evans
acknowledged.
“You can do anything
you want,” Evans said.
“You’ve been very clear
that the concurrency thing
was important to you from
the beginning.”
Evans elaborated that as
residential developers, his
area of expertise was not
in the development of
industrial or office spaces,
so “promising to do some
thing I don’t know how to
do is the problem.”
He clarified that that
being the case, the DADC
owning the industrial space
would prevent that land’s
changing to another use
later and added the “prob
lem with going vertical” is
the market’s current vola
tility and tying residential
to commercial develop
ment.
Evans reiterated his
stance, explaining that the
desire for industrial space
is the “hottest it’s ever been
in my lifetime” and shar
ing that Dawson County is
“sorely in need of industri
al development.”
Emory Dooley reaf
firmed his agreement with
Gaines as to balancing
development, stating that
it’s “hinging so much on
POD C” to offset residen
tial costs, making it hard to
make a decision without
having more details.
“I think there’s definitely
room for ... needing more
information and getting it
worked out [before] actual
ly going to go forward
with that,” Dooley said.
Start earning with
Bank OZK today!
135 %
| t V)l APY*
8 month CD or IRA CD** Special
1 70 %
13 month CD or IRA CD** Special
2.00%
21 month CD or IRA CD ^Special
Visit our Dawsonville location or open
an account online at ozk.com.
<> Bank OZK
ozk.com I Member FDIC
'Annual Percentage Yield (APY) effective as of the publication date. Offer applies
to new CDs only. $1,000 minimum deposit to open and is required to earn stated
APY. Penalty for early withdrawal. IRA CD is subject to eligibility requirements.
Offer not available to brokers, dealers and other financial institutions. Fees could
reduce earnings. Offer subject to change without notice. Offer good at location in
Dawsonville, GA only.
”IRA CD must be opened in person and cannot be opened online.