
ENLARGE
Roger Wittenberg, owner of Boulder Bay LLC, wants to redevelop the Tahoe Biltmore and its adjacent former Tahoe Mariner property on the North Shore into a desitnation resort.
Bonanza Photo - Jen Schmidt
County, TRPA: Impacts of project will be scrutinized
When Washoe County and Tahoe Regional Planning Agency planners review the Boulder Bay project proposed for the Tahoe Biltmore and former Tahoe Mariner site in Crystal Bay, they see a bevy of studies and analysis to be undertaken before the plan can become a reality.
“We don’t rubber stamp projects here,” said TRPA Spokesman Dennis Oliver. “The application is at its starting gate.”
Boulder Bay submitted its project March 18 to the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency’s Community Enhancement Program, which is designed to encourage ecologically friendly development in Lake Tahoe.
The application outlines a project with 366 hotel, fractional units or hotel-condominium units, another 21 market-rate condominiums and 34 on-site workforce housing units at Boulder Bay. The 22,400-gross-square-foot casino of the Tahoe Biltmore floor will shrink to 10,000 gross square feet. Parking will move underground instead of covering more than 60,000 square feet with asphalt. Eleven structures will anchor the site, including 28,250 square feet of retail and dining, 12,500 square feet of meeting areas and a 20,000-square-foot spa.
The project has not yet been approved by TRPA or Washoe County, and an extensive review process is ahead of the developers, which includes public meetings and hearings. The first request for an approval is before the Washoe County Planning Commission for a proposed road abandonment and slope variance. At Tuesday’s meeting at 6:30 p.m. at 1001 East Ninth Street in Reno, the planning commission will only be considering the road abandonment and how it affects the current state of the property — not the entire proposed project.
“We are not even reviewing the project,” said Eva Krause, a Washoe County planner who is studying the road abandonment.
Although the project remains in the early stages of development and approval, a group of citizens called the Friends of Crystal Bay/Brockway have e-mailed various officials and the media with their concerns. In response, Boulder Bay offered its own clarifications to the issues, providing a fact sheet to those who are interested. In the end, the TRPA and Washoe County will determine if Boulder Bay’s plan is feasible. That process could consist of a number of public meetings and hearings, said Brenda Hunt, a land use manager for TRPA.
The planning commission is only the first in a series of public meetings necessary for the project to go forward.
“We are in the very early stages and we are hopeful that once we get all the information and more time to review we will be able to answer more clearly if what they are proposing is feasible,” Hunt said. “We don’t know an answer at this stage.”
Abandoning Reservoir Road and Realigning Wassou Road
Wassou and Reservoir Roads cut through Boulder Bay LLC’s property, which surrounds both roads. To avoid splicing its land, Boulder Bay is applying to Washoe County to abandon Reservoir Road and realign Wassou Road so that it would run into Lakeview Avenue, said Brian Helm, project manager.
In addition, Lakeview Avenue would be extended to reach Stateline Avenue, which intersects Highway 28 near the Nevada-California state line. Boulder Bay is also asking for a slope variance because this would create a 12.7 percent proposed slope on Lakeview Avenue. This is above the required 10 percent or less slope for a southward facing street, according to Washoe County Planner Krause.
Washoe County planning staff is recommending an approval for the variance and abandonment, Krause said. Even though the 12.7 percent slope is above code, the current road is graded at 13 percent to 14 percent above code.
Friends of Crystal Bay/Brockway said they think eliminating Reservoir Road and realigning Wassou Road will disturb safe entrances and exits to and from their neighborhoods. They are also concerned about possible congestion in the community, said Ann Nichols, a Brockway resident and Crystal Bay Realtor who is spearheading the group. An online petition organized by Friends of Crystal Bay/Brockway asking government officials to scrutinize the project and the road abandonment has 290 signatures. Of those signatures 28 are listed as “anonymous” and four are duplicates.
“We don’t want our options halved for exiting the neighborhood,” Nichols said.
Neither the Nevada Department of Transportation nor Washoe County has exact traffic numbers for Wassou or Reservoir roads.
“We do look at the traffic impact of the existing uses and they are not increasing traffic by abandoning the roads,” Krause said. “It does not direct any traffic into the subdivisions.”
In previous interviews with the Bonanza, Tom Smith, fire marshal with the North Lake Tahoe Fire Protection District said firefighters do not usually use Reservoir Road because of the stopping conditions on its steep slope.
The land from the abandoned roads would return to Boulder Bay at no cost according to Nevada state law. NRS 278.480 states “if the street was acquired by dedication from the abutting property owners or their predecessors in interest, no payment is required for title to the proportionate part of the street reverted to each abutting property owner.”
Washoe County Planner Eva Krause said she has dealt with the value of land in a road abandonments a number of times in different scenarios. In Boulder Bay’s case, Krause said she believes the county is receiving more benefits because Boulder Bay is proposing to construct new roads and then give them back to the county.
“We’re asking for some other things out of this,” Krause said. “It’s not worth anything to the county in a monetary way. We are going to get something back in return, the cost to build a road.”
More information on Boulder Bay
For more coverage of the Boulder Bay development check out the Bonanza's other stories:
http://www.tahoebonanza.com/article/20080504/NEWS/952980871
http://www.tahoebonanza.com/article/20080504/NEWS/368204757
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