Fairhope, Alabama
CALLED 'THE HIGHLANDS AT FLY CREEK'
The planning commission approved multi-occupancy project plans for 77 town homes on just over 10 acres adjacent to the controversial 240 unit Retreat At Fly Creek Village apartment complex now under construction as part of the overall 214 acre Fly Creek Village PUD off of US 98 on Parker Road (behind Publix grocery) that was approved in 2006.
Drainage will be incorporated into the overall drainage plan for the entire site (apartments et al).
AAC Realty Llc. is the owner (Angelo Corte); the project is to be developed in three phases.
(Pouring concrete for apartment foundations will be occurring overnight in coming weeks according to the building department.)
Site behind Publix |
CALLED 'THE HIGHLANDS AT FLY CREEK'
The planning commission approved multi-occupancy project plans for 77 town homes on just over 10 acres adjacent to the controversial 240 unit Retreat At Fly Creek Village apartment complex now under construction as part of the overall 214 acre Fly Creek Village PUD off of US 98 on Parker Road (behind Publix grocery) that was approved in 2006.
Drainage will be incorporated into the overall drainage plan for the entire site (apartments et al).
AAC Realty Llc. is the owner (Angelo Corte); the project is to be developed in three phases.
(Pouring concrete for apartment foundations will be occurring overnight in coming weeks according to the building department.)
townhomes at upper left |
north is up |
Comments
I say that developers need to start paying impact fees on their developments. Their projects are crowding the schools, roads, and sewers. These elements of the infrastructure we have been paying and maintaining for all these years. Now a developer comes in, puts additional burden on the infrastructure and we the same citizens have to pay for capital upgrades when we were doing fine with the existing.
You know why the developers donot have to pay impact fees? It is because the campaign donors are the very same developers that contribute to the politicians who never bring up impact fees. Just look up campaign contributions on the Secretary of State site, look up a sitting politician who gets money from the developers, and then ask about impact fees. Now watch that politician say why he or she is against impact fees.
Yep, the politicians have been bought and owned by the developers.
wilson was elected to stop this thing?