Item 7A - 2035 Corridor Committee Meeting Report
Southlake 2035 Corridor Planning Committee Meeting Report
Meeting 33 – August 23, 2021
MEETING
LOCATION: 1400 Main St., Southlake, Texas 76092
City Council Chambers
IN
ATTENDANCE:
• City Council Members: Kathy Talley, Amy Torres-Lepp, Randy Robbins
• Planning & Zoning Commission Members: Daniel Kubiak, Gina Phalen,
Michael Springer, Austin Reynolds
• Park Board Member: Frances Scharli
• Ex-Officio Member: Shawn McCaskill
• City Staff: Ken Baker, Dennis Killough, Madeline Oujesky
AGENDA
ITEMS:
1. Call to Order.
2. Administrative Comments.
3. Review, discuss and make recommendations on the Learning Experience
for a proposed 10,000 square foot day care facility building on
approximately 1.136 acres located at 100 River Oaks Drive.
4. Review, discuss and make recommendations on Pecan Creek Offices
proposing 2 medical/general office buildings totaling approximately 23,658
square feet on 2.31 acres located at 731 Zena Rucker Road .
5. Review, discuss and make recommendations on Carillon Parc located at
the northeast intersection of E. SH 114 and N. White Chapel Boulevard and
south of E. Kirkwood Boulevard.
6. Adjournment.
MEETING
OVERVIEW:
On August 23, 2021 the Southlake 2035 Corridor Planning Committee
held their thirty-third meeting. The Committee was sent a packet of
materials prior to the meeting that were to be discussed during the
session. A meeting agenda was posted, and the meeting time was
advertised on the City’s website. The following meeting report focuses on
discussion points made during the meeting by members of the
Committee, public and City staff. This report is neither verbatim nor does
it represent official meeting minutes; rather it serves to inform elected and
appointed officials, City staff, and the public of the issues and questions
raised by the Committee, City staff, and any attendees of the meeting .
Interested parties are strongly encouraged to follow development cases
through the process. Please visit CityofSouthlake.com/Planning for more
information.
Southlake 2035 Corridor Planning Committee Item #5 – Carillon Parc
Meeting #33 – August 23, 2021 Page 3
ITEM #5 DISCUSSION – Review, discuss and make recommendations on Carillon
Parc located at the northeast intersection of E. SH 114 and N. White Chapel
Boulevard and south of E. Kirkwood Boulevard.
Staff presentation: Ken Baker
N/A
Questions for staff by the Committee:
N/A
Applicant presentation: John Terrell
• Carillon Parc History
o Joint Meeting – June 28, 2017
o Original City Approval – June 19, 2018
o Last City Presentation – September 17, 2019
• Carillon Parc Status Update
o Impacts of COVID – retail, restaurants, and hospitality
o Residential loft issues
▪ Construction, insurance, and political concerns
o Found local, enthusiastic JV partner
o Letter of Intent contingent upon zoning
o Terminated for sale listing agreement with JLL
o Carillon Resident Presentations – 8/10/2021 – very supportive and
appreciative
• Zoning Change Request +/- 42-acre tract
o Reduce Residential Luxury Lofts by over 52% from approved plan and
75% from supported plan
▪ Approved 50 Luxury Lofts + 70 hotel rooms in building + 12
Residential units = 132 Total
▪ Supported plan 97 Luxury Lofts and 12 single family residential
units = 109 Total
▪ Proposed plan 22 Luxury Lofts and 75 single family residential units
= 97 Total
o Replaces Lofts with Single Family Residential
o Single Family residences under the identical zoning guidelines as the
previously approved and existing adjacent Villa District Plan. (Part of
HOA)
o Retains the mixed-use environment for this development
o Increases Park Dedication Area to over 12 acres (from 10.2 ac)
▪ Conservatively $10M in Value to the City
▪ Aligns with vision to acquire more open space
Southlake 2035 Corridor Planning Committee Item #5 – Carillon Parc
Meeting #33 – August 23, 2021 Page 4
▪ 29% of site is dedicated park
▪ Developer maintains 50%
o Remains obvious choice for Library location w amenities and park (new
study)
o Remains pedestrian-friendly, experiential environment with a unique
“sense of place” and retains trees
o The balance of the site remains consistent with previously approved
zoning
o Eliminates commercial traffic on Kirkwood
• 2035 Plan Recommendations
o Retain the existing underlying Mixed Use designation and add the
Restaurant and Retail Specialty Overlay
o Develop a unique “customer experience” and “sense of place” that is
pedestrian rather than automobile focused.”
o Desire for “a chef-driven restaurant cluster… along with specialty retail
and health and wellness uses…”
o Office is an appropriate use if properly integrated into the environment
o “Focus on preserving natural tree stands and utilizing existing trees to
create inviting open spaces” and incorporating a “central park or
greenspace [which] may include public facilities.”
o The plan is to develop the property being “sensitive to potential impacts on
adjacent residential areas, particularly as related to noise, traffic, building
heights, lighting and views.”
o All these components continue to be addressed in the revised plan.
• Proposed Modifications to 2018 Concept Plan
o Retail/Residential
▪ Replaced Boutique Hotel (70 Rooms)
▪ Hotel Study Finding – Single Hotel on Hwy 114
▪ Retains look and feel of original plan
▪ Corner Architecture Feature
• Restaurant
• Pool/Club House
▪ Replacement Retail and Residential Units
▪ Min. 1,600 SF
o Paseo
▪ Expanded area into courtyard space
▪ Additional residential above retail
▪ Grand staircase and elevator entrance from the Piazza
▪ Min. 1,600 SF
o Elevated Park
Southlake 2035 Corridor Planning Committee Item #5 – Carillon Parc
Meeting #33 – August 23, 2021 Page 5
▪ Library – lower elevation with no underground parking
▪ Library – higher elevation with underground parking
o Park
▪ Included Amenities
• Bell Towers
• City information booths/signage
• Sidewalks – design TBD
• Water Feature
• Trolley/Uber/Lift Stops
• Bridge (connecting the park to the Library)
• Now bridge will be elevated park
▪ Expansion from 8.5 acres to 10.2 acres
▪ Includes Piazza
• Opportunities for festivals
▪ Water Feature Enhancements
• OTL Design
• Water Movement
• Lighting/Color Changes
• Synchronized to Music
• Destination
• Maintainable
Questions for applicant by the Committee:
Daniel Kubiak: Quite an update and exactly what we needed, thank you. City staff can
make this information available to the public.
Applicant: It is available now.
Daniel Kubiak: I remember the first time through this development was certainly an
ambitious design. This concept feels more scalable and achievable in terms of getting
something built there.
Applicant: These two buildings - this is where the hotel was. Because of COVID and
the new Delta Hotel, we are not sure if we can make that a hotel concept. We have
talked to them and there is still interest for a hotel. When we come back with the zoning
booklet, we would like to make this either hotel or office in case we do not have a
market for hotel.
Shawn McCaskill: Single-family residential component is hot right now in the market.
Single-family residential makes sense. Any time we have a chance to down-size or
make something less dense/less intense, that is what the city is interested in. Replacing
the lofts with single-family residential is a win/win in that regard and makes sense. What
are your plans for phasing?
Southlake 2035 Corridor Planning Committee Item #5 – Carillon Parc
Meeting #33 – August 23, 2021 Page 6
Applicant: Since we do not know what this will be the first phase will not include this
infrastructure. We are planning to phase utilities, roadways, etc. to lock-in the plan with
infrastructure. We will also do the park in conjunction with the city. The first vertical
construction will be these buildings inside the park and one restaurant.
Shawn McCaskill: One other thing – the structure parking. I liked the way you did the
covered parking and hid some of the structured parking within the topography.
Applicant: Instead of amending the old one, we will just create a brand new one. There
are enough differences in the structures themselves and in terms of the amount of
parking needed. It will significantly reduce what we asked for previously, because of the
reduction in cost.
Daniel Kubiak: Keyed in on phasing - no potential delays or staggered start times. If
the hotel use goes through, are there usual stipulations that require a full-service type of
hotel?
Applicant: Absolutely.
Shawn McCaskill: It will be a re-zoning?
Applicant: The way we plan on doing this is the large zoning packet. All we are going to
do is take that old one and redlining/updating it with the changes now. Nothing will
change in the requirements for types of construction, etc.
Daniel Kubiak: One of the things that helped the process was the consensus and
support you had from the surrounding neighbors.
Frances Scharli: For the parks, are you saying that 50% maintenance is on the city and
50% is on the developer?
Applicant: Yes, even though we are dedicating the full park we are keeping 50% of the
maintenance costs.
Frances Scharli: Currently, in the neighborhoods when you dedicate a park the HOA
pays for the park.
Applicant: We can look at that, but the only part that will be the HOA piece is this.
Frances Scharli: So, the parks in Town Square, how does the maintenance on those
work?
Ken Baker: RPI maintains most of it. The city does have a small portion left. As this
goes through the process, those conversations can be negotiated. Depends on how
City Council wants to structure that agreement to allow flexibility. That will also be a
recommendation from the Parks Board.
Frances Scharli: Do we have any idea where the library stands with the city?
Applicant: The Library recently sent out a survey or study. Maybe one of the City
Council members can speak to it?
Randy Robbins: TBD
Southlake 2035 Corridor Planning Committee Item #5 – Carillon Parc
Meeting #33 – August 23, 2021 Page 7
Kathy Talley: Yes, TBD. Obviously, we want a Library that serves all our residents.
Applicant: Library at this location is a critical component for this development. If the city
decides the library cannot be placed here, then its off the table for what we are doing
here. The library is a driver and a public use that draws people to this location.
Kathy Talley: I was at the initial presentation, which was ambitious but exciting. I love
the residences and I’m sure the Carillon folks are excited. From my memory, the
previous development talked about more local and "mom/pop" shop retail. Is this still
included?
Applicant: This building still has retail on the first floor. This building has turned 90
degrees to buffer the highway and service road. If this turns out to be a food hall, we
might move these buildings to create more open space for retail components. There
could be at-grade retail along the backside of the office building. We still plan on having
the unique, small kind of retail options – bakeries, coffee shops, wine stores, etc.
Kathy Talley: Traffic studies will be provided later?
Applicant: This will be less traffic than before because the amount of retail and
restaurant space has decreased significantly. So, traffic will be much better.
Amy Torres-Lepp: What are the lot sizes on new residential? And how many?
Applicant: 75 single-family residential lots and 22 lofts. I believe the lots are around
9,000 sq. ft. Lots will not be smaller than across the street.
Amy Torres-Lepp: I like rendering #2 will at-level parking and the raised nature. I like
the Klyde-Warren Park analogy with the topography change – very creative.
Randy Robbins: You mentioned if the city elects to not place the library there, this
could change or end the development?
Applicant: Yes, this is a huge driver for this development.
Shawn McCaskill: When is this going to be filed? And what is the timeframe for project
submittal?
Applicant: Our estimate is to submit the application around mid-September. City
Council public hearing will be around mid-November. Trying to get it to the last meeting
before the holiday season.
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STAFF PRESENTATION SHOWN TO COMMITTEE:
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