TLDR: https://www.change.org/p/save-northgate
January 9 at 6pm, College Station City Council is meeting, in part to discuss the development of Northgate, specifically and especially the ~2 acres that is currently the parking lot on the promenade behind the Chicken/Backyard/etc.
Background
Some time ago, the city resolved to sell the Northgate parking lot. A local developer already involved in another project in the area invested significant time and resources in creating a plan for the whole of that stretch of Northgate, recruiting the time, expertise, and experience of the businesses, citizens, peacekeepers, and patrons of Northgate. They took into account the stated goals of the city, to include NOT prioritizing more student housing while providing more parking, and facilities and space for law enforcement and first responders. The result was a phenomenal plan that would have positioned Northgate - and College Station - as a year-round entertainment destination, fully embracing and preserving its history.
Current Status
When the city staff - I repeat... city staff, not city council - saw that plan, it is my belief that they saw an opportunity the scale of which they didn't see before. They walked away from the proposed plan and developer who provided it and opened the property for bids, ultimately receiving a $13,000,000 offer from a student-housing developer. Saying nothing of the fact that this bidder has yet to render a plan or meet with served parties, or that this developer has zero experience with entertainment districts, the selection of a student housing developer stands in complete opposition to the initial proposed vision to not prioritize student housing. This paints a pretty clear picture - to my interpretation - of a moving target set by city staff, with motives beyond if not in direct conflict with the preservation of Northgate.
What you can do
The city is now deciding whether or not to approve and enter into a contract with a student-housing developer, and to enter into that contract without a plan. If that doesn't make sense, you are in fact reading it correctly. What your reasoned voice can and WILL do is to cause the city to hit pause, come up with a concrete plan first, and then reopen the process to the bids and proposals of developers with demonstrated experience with respect to that plan.
A Note on City Council
That a contract (without a plan) was not already pushed through is a product of a city council that is at least in part led by individuals who value Northgate and our history - and, again, in my opinion - the spirit of propriety and fair dealing, especially by city government and its staff. Please show the council members respect. Not all see this issue the same way, but to bring them together with those that do, it would be counterproductive to attack them. The issue - again, in my opinion - informed as it may be - is with staff and city planning. We need to encourage and empower - as citizens and/or patrons - to stop and do this right.
I strongly encourage any- and everyone to make your voices heard - in a positive and solutions-minded way - directly with council members and Mayor Nichols, by email to the same, and in person at the council meeting.
I'm not much for petitions, especially online. But for anybody who can't make it to town or carve out the time to connect directly otherwise, there is an online petition here: https://www.change.org/p/save-northgate
January 9 at 6pm, College Station City Council is meeting, in part to discuss the development of Northgate, specifically and especially the ~2 acres that is currently the parking lot on the promenade behind the Chicken/Backyard/etc.
Background
Some time ago, the city resolved to sell the Northgate parking lot. A local developer already involved in another project in the area invested significant time and resources in creating a plan for the whole of that stretch of Northgate, recruiting the time, expertise, and experience of the businesses, citizens, peacekeepers, and patrons of Northgate. They took into account the stated goals of the city, to include NOT prioritizing more student housing while providing more parking, and facilities and space for law enforcement and first responders. The result was a phenomenal plan that would have positioned Northgate - and College Station - as a year-round entertainment destination, fully embracing and preserving its history.
Current Status
When the city staff - I repeat... city staff, not city council - saw that plan, it is my belief that they saw an opportunity the scale of which they didn't see before. They walked away from the proposed plan and developer who provided it and opened the property for bids, ultimately receiving a $13,000,000 offer from a student-housing developer. Saying nothing of the fact that this bidder has yet to render a plan or meet with served parties, or that this developer has zero experience with entertainment districts, the selection of a student housing developer stands in complete opposition to the initial proposed vision to not prioritize student housing. This paints a pretty clear picture - to my interpretation - of a moving target set by city staff, with motives beyond if not in direct conflict with the preservation of Northgate.
What you can do
The city is now deciding whether or not to approve and enter into a contract with a student-housing developer, and to enter into that contract without a plan. If that doesn't make sense, you are in fact reading it correctly. What your reasoned voice can and WILL do is to cause the city to hit pause, come up with a concrete plan first, and then reopen the process to the bids and proposals of developers with demonstrated experience with respect to that plan.
A Note on City Council
That a contract (without a plan) was not already pushed through is a product of a city council that is at least in part led by individuals who value Northgate and our history - and, again, in my opinion - the spirit of propriety and fair dealing, especially by city government and its staff. Please show the council members respect. Not all see this issue the same way, but to bring them together with those that do, it would be counterproductive to attack them. The issue - again, in my opinion - informed as it may be - is with staff and city planning. We need to encourage and empower - as citizens and/or patrons - to stop and do this right.
I strongly encourage any- and everyone to make your voices heard - in a positive and solutions-minded way - directly with council members and Mayor Nichols, by email to the same, and in person at the council meeting.
I'm not much for petitions, especially online. But for anybody who can't make it to town or carve out the time to connect directly otherwise, there is an online petition here: https://www.change.org/p/save-northgate