I’m told by Ed Wolverton of Downtown Greensboro Inc. that the dress code for new downtown buildings and renovations will be discussed further by the public before going to the City Council for approval.
The design manual, as revised, now includes not one mandatory requirement, only guidelines and a nonbinding grading system based on the guidelines.
If a developer satisfies 75 percent of the guidelines (in the journalism classes I teach, that equates to a C) he or she gets fast-tracked approval.
Even if a developer went before a committee for evaluation of his or her project, that committee’s recommendations would be nonbinding.
The developer still could do whatever he or she wants to do.
It’s almost like taking a pass-fail class in which you grade yourself.
In my view, that’s far too lax.
If — and only if — a project goes before the City Council for a rezoning vote or incentives request, are there any teeth at all in the rule book.
But let’s give the new guidelines the benefit the doubt. Is the grading system tough enough?
David Wharton applied the grading scales to some recent downtown projects and here’s what his report card looked like:
• Carolina Bank: F
• Arbor House: F
• Bryan YMCA: F
• Center Pointe: B-
• 324 South Elm: D+
I’d say these are what I’d expect, though I thought the South Elm project would grade higher.
Read all of David's thoughts here.
City staff also are supposed to score some projects; I’d like to see how the grades compare.
I also hope they get tougher and make some guidelines mandatory and non-negotiable.
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