mm/rn Town approves townhomes, residents protest shopping center By Mary Beth Phillips Staff writer Morrisville residents who had opposed multifamily housing also opposed a 35-acre shopping center to be built at Parkside development at the town board meeting August 24, saying the land should be saved for single-family homes. Also at the meeting, the board approved site plans for the first neighborhood in Parkside, a 140- townhome development with open space for recreation, despite con cerns that the streets will be private with a different kind of “rolled” curbing and guttering. And the board considered several other plan ning and zoning matters, first speak ing against and then tabling both a request for a tower for BellSouth Mobility and a rezoning petition by Manhattan Bakery. The 35-acre shopping center would be located at the northwest corner of Davis Drive and Koppers Road. Linda Lyons of Church Street in the Shiloh community said “I am not interested in any kind of mall until the problem is solved as far as the roads.” ‘The land between Davis Drive and Church Street is about all the land we have left,” said Liz Johnson of Dallavia Court. “It would be per fect for residential neighborhoods. It would be nice to pick up a loaf of bread on the way home, but I would rather not have that convenience. I would rather have more beautiful neighborhoods like those on Morrisville Parkway.” “I’m in favor of service malls,” said Richard Elliott of Dallavia Court. “But 35 acres is too much. Why are we adding new competition when we haven’t finished the new malls that are under way?” “I wonder how we’ll ever gel across the road to gel that loaf of bread,” said Patty Cartrette of the corner of Davis, McCrimmon and Koppers Roads. “It will be moldy by the time we get it,” she said. “If Davis Drive is not widened. I’ll have to build my own bakery and cook my own bread, because I’ll never get out.” Alan Klimeck said business devel opment should also be under a moratorium until the master plan is revised fully. ‘The land between Davis Drive and Church Street is about all the land we have left. It would be perfect for residential neighbor hoods. ’ —Liz Johnson, Dallavia Court resident Developers for Seppala Corporation did not speak at the public hearing, but Mark Silver- Smith said commercial develop ments don’t generate that much traf fic, but utilize the traffic already going by, and Jan Faulkner said a shopping center will be needed for all the residents of the new 1,146- unit development. The item will be considered at the September 10 planning board meet ing. The Manor at Parkside had been proposed with no sidewalks, but board members insisted that side walks be put in on one side of the street. Charles Walker, representing the developer, said the lack of side walks was meant to give the town- home development “a single-family feel, with more gra.ss and greenway in front of the homes.” The private streets will be 25-fect back-to-back, less than the 31-foot norm for public streets. The curb and guttering is a “rolled” design with a slope that vehicles can drive over. The BellSouth tower would be located on J.F. Wilkerson’s property, about 100 feet from the proposed McCrimmon Parkway extension. Commissioner C.T. Moore original ly voted to deny the .special use per mit needed, but was cautioned by town attorney Frank Gray that there were some legal issues involved. So Moore retracted his motion and voted to table the request until after the executive session already sched uled for other legal matters. The board also tabled the Manhattan Bakery rezoning request, which would change from agricul tural to industrial management, after encouraging the spokesman for the developer to limit the rezoning to conditional use for a bakery. When he said the developer would not agree to that because he might sell the property, Moore first voted to deny the rezoning, and then changed to tabling the request so that the developer could return if he would agree to the conditional use. “I don’t plan on leaving things wide open,” he said. In other action the board: □Approved the updated personnel policy, prepared by Eleanor Poole of the League of Municipalities. □ Approved the site plan for Airtech Center, lot 7, a 79,200- square-foot building to be built on 5.59 acres located on International Drive north of Triangle Parkway. Plans include 58 parking spaces. The exterior of the building would be built of concrete panels. □Approved plans for one office building in Weston Office Park, part of a three-building subdivision that is located mostly in Cary. Morrisville will provide water, sewer and fire flow to the one, 16,375 square-foot building located on approximately two acres at the north side of Weston Parkway east of Chapel Hill Road. □Approved a rezoning for Marvin Watkins of six acres on the east side of Airport Boulevard across from Airport Boulevard community cemetery and north of Perimeter Park Drive from agricultural district to general business. □Held a public hearing for a rezoning request by Cynthia Duarte from low density residential to Village Core. She wants to put a jan itorial service in the building, locat ed on about a fifth of an acre on the east side of Church Street, about 150 feet north of Ashe Street, Ms. Duane made the only comments at the public hearing. □Presented a plaque to Finance Officer Julia Whitt Ketchum for the seventh year in a row for Excellence in Financial Reporting by the Government Finance Officers Association, based in Chicago, Illinois. Pool bubble keeps swimmers all wet By Mary Beth Phillips Staff writer Matthew Belcher and his friend, Austin Winstead, take a leap into the swimming pool at the Morrisville Community Center, while Mom, Karen, looks on. The Belchers are among those looking forward to a bub ble on the swimming pool during the colder months. Swimming in the winter, and even a year-round swim team are in the works at the Morrisville Community Center. Thanks to donations by developers in lieu of recreation for individual developments, the town plans to purchase a bubble to go over the pool, and hopes to have it up in mid- October. The bubble will cover both the large pool and the baby pool, said Alan Carroll, director of Parks and Recreation and Cultural Resources for the town. Carroll expects to choose a con tractor by the first board meeting in September. The construction should take place from mid-September to mid-October. The purchase will include a water heater and blower, which will also help hold the bubble up. A gas connection must be made which will make running the indoor pool cheaper and more effi cient, Carroll said. He said the cost of the bubble should be approxi mately $60,000. “This is something I’ve been hear ing for years people wanting,” he said. “It’s good to know we’re about to satisfy the desires of the people in Morrisville.” He said he has been approached by the New Wave swim team company, offering to provide instructors for a year-round swim team. “It’s ironic they came to me about a month or so ago before they knew we were planning this,” Carroll said. He expects the team to compete against the YMCA, and other teams in Wake, Durham and Chatham counties. Carroll has been seeking to put a bubble over the pool for years. Last summer, he applied for a matching grant from the North Carolina Parks and Recreation Trust Fund, which was turned down last fall. The grant application cited use of the pool by private groups includ ing Kindercare of Cary, Leesville and Chapel Hill; Triangle Children’s Academy of Research Triangle Park, Calvary Baptist Kindercare of Durham, Apex Elementary swim camp. Holly Springs Elementary swim camp. Town and Country (Apex) swim camp, the Little Gym of Cary swim lessons, Cary Presbyterian Church swim camp, Cary YMCA swim lessons (in a joint venture with Morrisville), Glaxo-Wellcome employee aqua-aerobics wellness program and Upward Bound groups. The bubble will be 140 feet long, 67.5 feet wide and a total of 9,450 square feet. It will be connected to the community center building by a tunnel with a revolving door to keep the cold out. C3 silicone diamond debuts Continued from page 1 Blue said. Moissanite averages about 10 percent of the cost of a comparable diamond, she said. Smith of Mike Smith jewelers said sales have been brisk. “I’ve had it for a little over two months, and it’s half of my sales right now,” he said. That’s in dol lars. “A lot of people came in at first to look at it, now they’re start ing to buy it,” he said. He added that about half of the purchases are from individuals who have bought stock in it. Few people are buying it in rings, he added. “The majority has been pendants and earrings,” he said. “I think if you put it in the right perspective—hey, this is its own gemstone, I think it’s great because its another alternative type of thing, and its very durable,,” Smith said “They’re pretty, bright and brilliant, and you can make beautiful pen dants and earrings without putting a lot of money into it. “For a solitaire, you want to put more money into it because it’s a one-time thing,” he said. Whars haapenlng In the Tiianglo's latest bnom tawn, MnrrissllleP Read ne MmlsHlle t Fresun Progress ani find nut. New police chief from Apex Continued from page 1 “I have a full plate,” he said. He said he had been unsure whether he would go back into law enforcement once the degree was completed, but had considered a teaching job at the N.C. Justice Academy. He had spent three years as an in- service training specialist at the Highway Patrol training center in Gamer, teaching supervision and management, among other subjects. He had also serviced as a district supervisor, supervising 10 to 16 people, approximately the same number of people that he will be supervising in Morrisville. He said the opportunity to apply for the $46,765 job in Morrisville was too good to pass up. “I decided I liked law enforcement so much I wanted to get back into it,” he said. “I think I can do some good,” be added. Before his 15 years at the NC Highway Patrol, Whitesell was an emergency medical technician for the Guilford County Emergency Management System. 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