Fairfield Residential phone survey
Posted by kevin on 12 Apr 2008 at 01:52 pm | Tagged as: Fairfield Residential, Kaiser
Fairfield Residential has hired a telemarketing company (Dynamics Marketing in North Dakota) to take a “survey” of residents in the area concerning their 800+ unit high-density apartment development with town homes and row houses. It is more of a binning mechanism designed to polarize resident responses and minimize Fairfield Residential’s work and outreach as it brings attention to related effects that it can claim to address while ignoring the real issues: poorly-managed community development and Fairfield Residential’s culpability thereof.
First, the question designed to determine “whose side you are on”:
Which statement do you agree with more:
A. I don’t want my neighborhood to change at all; new developments should be severely restricted and discouraged.
B. Well-planned development around my neighborhood could improve the community with increased open space, preservation of old-growth trees, and improved economic environment for local businesses.
People with no background in the Fairfield Residential project or the high-density shenanigans in our neighborhood will more likely choose B, as do I, both in general and in particular. People who know about the Fairfield Residential project and understand that it is really an in-fill development and not a planned development taking its effects on the community into account would be tempted to choose A, especially because the “survey” is about the Fairfield Residential project in particular and there is little connection other than hope linking the “increased open space, preservation of old-growth tree, and improved economic environment” to the 800+ units it proposes. Trying to make the tenuous link between Fairfield Residential’s proposal and a “well-planned” development leaves a bad taste in my mouth. Having such a narrow and severe choice as the only alternative is simply insulting.
A “well-planned development” would be tremendous, but that’s not what Fairfield Residential is proposing. It is simply adding more people at a higher density than that of the existing neighborhoods without acknowledging responsibility for any of the effects the increased population will have on the community. They haven’t done their homework to understand why our concerns are what they are, and their next “survey” question gives residents little hope that they will try any harder in the future.
What is your top concern regarding the development:
- Connecting Miles Drive cul-de-sac to the new Fairfield Residential development.
- Construction.
- Crime.
- Design and Architectural detail.
- Demand on public services like Fire and Police.
- Impacts on Central Park.
- Impacts on area schools.
- Light, glare, and shadow impacts on existing residents.
- Open space and old-growth trees.
- Street parking.
- Traffic.
- Water consumption.
This reminds me of the oft-repeated joke (not so funny in Silicon Valley):
Friends, family, career: Pick one.
Let’s look at these items one-by-one:
Construction: This too shall pass. In the worst case, we have laws to regulate how things are done.
Crime: Crime comes as a result of more people more closely packed and community unrest, which provide both motivation and opportunity. It is not just a concern for wealthy neighborhoods or single-family homes.
Design and Architectural detail: These are important to Fairfield Residential as well; the community only has to deal with it when there are no other options. Here is a quote from the movie “My Cousin Vinny“:
Vinny Gambini: What about these pants I got on? You think they’re okay?
Mona Lisa Vito: Imagine you’re a deer. You’re prancing along. You get thirsty. You spot a little brook. You put your little deer lips down to the cool, clear water - BAM. A f*****’ bullet rips off part of your head. Your brains are lying on the ground in little bloody pieces. Now I ask ya, would you give a f*** what kind of pants the son-of-a-b**** who shot you was wearing?
Demand on public services: …like the library, post office, senior center, sports areas, supermarkets, etc. which are already difficult to access. Ask anyone who actually uses these facilities. More people means more public services required, regardless of how well you design.
Impacts on Central Park: The plan that Fairfield Residential proposes does not decrease the need for parks and recreation areas. The pool areas in the middle of their apartment complexes will be largely sun-less, surrounded by four-story walls on three or four sides fewer than twenty feet away. Fairfield Residential provides no place for children to ride bikes, engage in organized sports activities, or even play ball. How does this keep people away from Central Park? Worse, with all of the former Kaiser parking spaces that were used for community events, like the Fourth of July and the Arts and Wine Festival, gone, will the city decide to move these events to other venues? How will we be compensated for that?
Impacts on local schools: More families mean more children. More children without proportionally more resources adds to the schooling problems and the urban unrest that is already visible in the higher incidence of graffiti in our areas and litter in the areas in which the children congregate after school. Impacts on local schools quickly become impacts to our neighborhood.
Light, glare, and shadow impacts on existing residents: Kaiser may be tall, but it’s mostly empty space, and at an angle with respect to the path of the sun. There is no glare off of trees, and shadows from living plants are cooling. People on Pepper Tree Lane can see Central Park and the trees there as well. Fairfield Residential’s buildings don’t even seem to allow sun for their own pool areas.
Open space and old-growth trees: If the trees really are old-growth, Fairfield Residential will have a hard time trying to cut them down. This may be another diversionary tactic: save a few trees, claim a small victory, and pave over the others that didn’t happen to be placed conveniently. Fairfield Residential currently has no plans to keep the large trees in the Kaiser parking lot that add to the general canopy of the area, and they don’t seem to understand the issues involved in moving them. But they will claim to save the trees along the south side that they aren’t allowed to cut down anyway. Other than that, what “open space” is the Fairfield Residential project proposing? The patches of land in-between buildings that act as set-backs and walkways on private property?
Street Parking: More cars mean more parking required. While having two parking spaces per unit sounds good, the lack of enforcement and the lack of driveways doesn’t bode well for the surrounding community. Most single-family homes actually have four or more parking spaces available before they need to affect street parking spaces: they have two garage spaces and two driveway spaces. Everytime you see a car parked in a driveway, consider the two parking space limit blown. Larger vehicles, like SUVs and trucks, will not easily fit side-by-side in average parking spaces (try this yourself), especially if the parking spaces are not easy to maneuver into in the first place. Fairfield Residential’s units will not have driveways. The turning radii for the parking spaces look like they will be similar to those of the Enclave on Pruneridge and Lawrence. Fairfield Residential’s laissez faire attitude of letting their residents park where they wish and their inability to enforce parking puts a large number of those cars on neighborhood streets. “You can’t prevent our residents from parking on your streets, but we can prevent you from parking at Fairfield Residential.” Are they afraid of neighborhood cars creating a nuisance on their properties?
Traffic: more cars mean more traffic, regardless of how well you design. 800+ units implies well over 1700 cars. Drive the main roads around the proposed development project and try to convince yourself that an additional 10,000 vehicular trips per day from Fairfield Residential’s residents will have no effect on your daily commute.
Water consumption: We are not saving any water by converting Kaiser into 800+ units; Kaiser moved down the street and expanded, using more water than it ever did previously. Fairfield Residential’s project will add an additional 800 families in need of water. More people means more utilities required, regardless of how well you design.
These are all largely effects of poorly-managed density: more people, disproportionate amounts of additional resources (in this case, none). Fairfield Residential has removed discussions of density from the table, effectively disabling any chance of productive solutions.
By ignoring root cause and focusing on specific effects, Fairfield Residential is digressing from the real residential issues and trying to move forward by addressing symptoms. The Miles Drive cul-de-sac issue is a red herring designed to lure residents along Marietta Drive and Miles Drive away from the other side effects of poorly-managed development. I would welcome Fairfield Residential to propose opening up the cul-de-sac to traffic; that would only awaken the sleeping community into action and point out even more succinctly Fairfield Residential’s lack of neighborhood understanding and goodwill.
Bottom line: Fairfield Residential is a business, not a community group. They make apartments complexes, not neighborhoods. They care about the people paying their expenses, not the people it comes at the expense of. Fairfield Residential is “not willing” to discuss density or the effects of the density.
They may claim differently. Let The Deed Shaw.
2 Responses to “Fairfield Residential phone survey”
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Well it’s interesting that you would post this post, because the company you mention called me on Friday. When I started pointing out to the lady who was surveying me that the questions were liking comparing apples to lemons and I questioned how the questions were written, the phone line went dead and my survey was never completed!
I guess they don’t interview people who can think for themselves.
I guess also my negative response will no longer show on the records.
Excellent survey about the need for legitimate city resident participation in this process. I will like you to my site.
James Rowen