HomeMy WebLinkAboutPUBLIC HEARING - 2019-10-02 - REZONING -TISEO - PET. 2019-07-01-06
CITY OF LIVONIA
PUBLIC HEARING
Minutes of Meeting Held on Wednesday, October 2, 2019
______________________________________________________________________
A Public Hearing of the Council of the City of Livonia was held at the City Hall
Auditorium on Wednesday, October 2, 2019.
MEMBERS PRESENT: Laura Toy, President
Jim Jolly, Vice President
Scott Bahr
Brian Meakin
Kathleen McIntyre
Cathy White
MEMBERS ABSENT: Brandon Kritzman
OTHERS PRESENT: Mark Taormina, Director of Economic Development
Todd Zilincik, City Engineer
Leo Neville, Assistant City Attorney
Sara Kasprowicz, Recording Secretary
The Public Hearing was called to order at 7:10 p.m. with President Laura Toy presiding.
This is a Public Hearing relative to the PETITION 2019-07-01-06 submitted by Tiseo
Architects, Inc., to rezone a portion of the shopping center located on the west side of
Middlebelt Road between Clarita Avenue and Seven Mile Road (19043-19053
Middlebelt Road) in the Northeast ¼ of Section 11, from P (Parking) to C-1 (Local
Business). This will be heard at the Regular Council Meeting of October 21, 2019.
The Public Hearing is now open. There were twenty-seven people in the audience.
Toy: Mr. Taormina?
Taormina: Thank you. This is a rezoning of Petition involving property located at the
southwest corner of Middlebelt and Seven Mile Roads. This shopping
center is referred to as Mid-Seven Plaza. It is roughly 5.36 acres in area.
The shopping complex contains roughly 7,000 square feet of leasable
floor space. As you can see from this aerial photograph, most of the
parking is located between the building and Middlebelt Road. Main tenants
in the complex include Pet Supplies Plus, which is located near the North
end of the plaza and Planet Fitness, located near the center. The site
presently consists of three zoning classifications, C-1, C-2 and P. The
North ½ of the plaza is zoned C-2, whereas, the South end is zoned C-1,
and then the main parking lot in front of the building is zoned P for parking.
2
The request is to rezone the southernly 65 feet of the site from P, the
parking district to C-1, local business. This is anticipation of constructing a
free-standing drive-up ATM kiosk for Citizens Bank. So, the proposed C-1
zoning would extend the existing C-1 zoning along the South side of the
property in order to accommodate this kiosk. The parking district is not
allowed for buildings or structures, that is the main reason for the
rezoning. If the zoning is approved, Petitioner intends to submit a waiver
use application for the drive-up banking kiosk. This area would occupy a
space roughly 20 feet by 90 feet along the South side of the property and
would require the removal of nine (9) parking spaces. This shows you,
conceptually, what that would look like along the South side of the
property. Even with the reduction of nine (9) parking spaces for the kiosk
and the drive-up area, the plaza would still have sufficient parking. The
drive-up services do require stacking. In this case, he’s showing for three
(3) vehicles, which is slightly deficient to what we normally require for any
drive-up operations, however, this may be a case where the additional
spaces are not warranted. Other requirements are that the drive-up lane
be at least twelve (12) feet in width, have proper turning radiuses.
Looking at the plan, it would appear to comply with those requirements.
The recently adopted future land-use map for the City shows this area as
mixed-development centers so it is consistent with the future land-use
plan. Planning Commission, in reviewing this matter, is recommending
approval of rezoning. Thank you.
Toy: Thank you, Mr. Taormina. Any questions for Mr. Taormina before we go to
the Petitioner? Hearing and seeing none, good evening. Can you please
state your name and address please?
Tiseo: Ben Tiseo, Tiseo Architects, 19815 Farmington Road. Is this mic on? Ok,
excuse me. I did take a chance and I copied some information to be
presented at the Planning Commission meeting, so if I may, I can hand
those out to the City Council. As was stated, we started this project for
awhile. This a result, frankly, of the Citizens branch on Middlebelt just
North of Seven Mile Road. It will be closing its doors at that location on
th
October 16 I believe it is. What they still have a customer need for, that’s
why they’re looking for another location for this drive-up ATM. I know that
the Planning Commission, it was asked why we need it, given the
technology today. So many people are using their phones to make
deposits and they can go to Wal-Mart, any place else and get some cash
if they need cash. At that time, Drew Krissman, he’s the real estate
transaction manager for Citizens. I asked him to look at the data for the
two locations in Livonia. The one at Middlebelt that will be closing down
and the one at Five Mile Road, which is Livonia East. The Citizen’s at
Middlebelt has a walk-up ATM and that walk-up ATM does a total of about
$5.5 million in deposits in twelve (12) months. It also has a history in the
past twelve (12) months of $4.9 million in withdrawals. So, it’s a pretty
3
active site for a walk-up. Drive-up ATMs do considerably more. By
example, the one on Five Mile does $7.2 million in the past twelve (12)
months in deposits and $6.8 million in withdrawals. The biggest issue is
the fact that people at the location at Middlebelt, the majority will not drive
down to Five Mile Road, because it’s too far of a distance for them to do
that. They’ve had enough studies to know they’ll lose a considerable
amount of business by doing that. So, the branch doesn’t warrant keeping
open because the interior is not generating efficient funds. I don’t know
what the numbers are, I know back in the day, fifteen (15) years ago,
branches require about thirty-five (35) million transactions a year. I don’t
believe this one is doing that. So, they want to still capture and keep the
customers they have by finding them a new location. This one is close
enough, in my opinion, it fits well into the Center. We did quite an
extensive study on the location of it so that as you are going South in front
of the stores, you can continue to the end and simply turn left and you’ll be
right there at the ATM, rather than doing some jogging here or there. As
Mr. Taormina lead to, that we have indicated three (3) stacking instead of
the four (4) required. Again, I’ve had Citizens look at their data and
throughout their stores, they never have four (4) stacking. Occasionally,
during the year, they might have three (3) in the que. Sometimes they will
have two (2), the majority of the time, they will have one (1). That’s a
matter of just tracking their transactions. They have a start time on the
transactions and an end time, so they know if the customers are there. So,
again, we are, on one issue that came up again at the Planning
Commission is security. Well, what happens if somebody gets robbed?
Well, again, I ask Citizens to look into that and Citizens has 3,000 ATMs in
their portfolio. Three hundred (300) of them are remote ATMs. In the past
year, they have not had one (1) hold up. They’ve had two (2) instances of
what they call a, oh shoot, um, skimming, where they had two (2)
instances where somebody was in a remote area, near the ATM, was
trying to skim the PIN numbers off of the users. So, there’s not a concern
of somebody coming up and holding a gun and trying to get your money
out. We feel that given the $10.4 million that’s being done at the current
location, that that will increase because people will feel safer being in their
car rather than walking from their car to a walk-up ATM. Again, I’m here if
they ask any questions and we hope for your approval. Thank you.
Toy: Thank you very much. Councilwoman McIntyre.
Jolly: Madam President? Professor has provided his notes and his lecture here
and I think it’s a good use of space in current existence, so I’ll offer an
approving.
Toy: Thank you, OK. We’re going to let the Council go first and then we’ll go to
the audience, is that good? Ok, Councilman Bahr.
4
Bahr: Did you say the Five Mile Citizens is closing also?
Tiseo: No, no, no, just the Middlebelt one.
Bahr: Ok.
Tiseo: There was a discussion, will we have another, again, no other
demographics. The people that go to the one on Middlebelt will not drive.
Bahr: This is replacing the Middlebelt one, basically?
Tiseo: Yes.
Bahr: Either for you or for Mark, do we have other stand-alone kiosks like this in
the City? I can’t off-hand think of any, but it’s a big city, so maybe there’s
one I missed.
Tiseo: Not that I recall.
Bahr: Ok.
Toy: Are you all set?
Bahr: I think I’m all set, thanks.
Toy: Councilman Meakin?
Meakin: This is actually an old idea that they are regurgitating because my office
used to be a, basically a bank drive-through. The bank was three (3)
blocks down the street. So, it’s not a new idea, they’ve had this one tucked
in their back files for a while. I’m glad Councilman Bahr mentioned that the
Five Mile store was remaining, because if they weren’t remaining, then I
wouldn’t give them this. Since they are keeping the presence in Livonia, I
have no problem with this issue.
Toy: Councilwoman, go right ahead.
McIntyre: I think that this is a, I never feel like I’m in a position to tell a business what
they need to do, if Citizens feels that this is appropriate and its going to
have the business, then I think it’s a good idea. I usually won’t argue
against a company’s business plan, they know what their needs are, they
know, and as far as the stacking, same thing, thank you for addressing,
Mr. Tiseo, that there’s not average of five (5) cars and we’re only providing
space for three (3). I think where this is located, too, should there on
occasion be an extra car, right, we’re not impeding traffic or ingress or
egress to this plaza. The most important thing for me in looking at these, is
5
that they conform with the future land-use because we put a lot of time we
put a lot of time and effort into our planning and our future land-use, and
sometimes we’ll say well its is requested of us and it doesn’t fit with the
future land-use. So, we’re really going against what we think is the best
use. This conforms, which is always important to me and one of the key
factors in deciding whether something makes sense. If the business feels
that there is a need for it, I think a drive-up bank is a convenience that
people like, I think many people would rather use a drive-up than a walk-
up, especially this time of year when it starts getting dark earlier, so I think
this looks like a great use of space, great plan, I fully support Mr. Jolly’s
idea for offering an approving resolution.
Toy: Thank you, certainly.
Bahr: Madam President?
Toy: Councilman Bahr?
Bahr: I’m sorry to ask for the floor again, but its kind on the stream of
consciousness tonight. Who own this, once we rezone this, is this just
going to be space leased from the shopping center owner or I guess I’ll
leave it to Mark or either one.
Taormina: That’s my understanding, it’s probably a ground lease.
Tiseo: It’s a ground pitch, it’s a ground lease for that portion. They’re paid X-
dollars a month.
Bahr: The same owner (inaudible)?
Tiseo: Same owner, that’s right, we gotten his approval. Matter of fact, we were
talking today about how we could get power to the Center, should we get
approval.
Bahr: Ok, then finally, and I have no problem with the approving resolution, I
think this is a good thing overall. I’m curious, do you know what their plans
are for the bank that they are closing on Middlebelt.
Tiseo: If they know, they haven’t shared it with me, I asked them and nothing
comes forth. My gut tells me they might try and sell it. It’s a small site and I
think that’s the problem. We do a lot of Citizen’s work. We’ve done about
80 branches for them over the past few years and the site is just too small
to warrant a renovation and expansion.
6
Bahr: I’m just thinking out loud for a moment and I’ll be done. That site is right in
front of that Livonia Pavilion building, which has been a struggle, I know,
for the owners for a long time and I have no end solution behind it. This,
long term could actually be a good thing for the City. The fact that, now
you have frontage for that entire thing, there are opportunities for Planners
and Developers. Anyway, thank you.
Tiseo: I did want to add one more thing, if I could. One of the first things that I
noticed that Mr. Taormina picked up on was the driving pattern and we,
through our course this week, corrected the pattern, thanks to Mr.
Taormina, so that the Center now flows better at the South end with the
traffic pattern. Thank you.
Toy: Thank you. Anyone else from the Council before we go to the audience?
Anyone from the audience wishing to speak on item number 3? Ok, you
have an approving resolution then on item 3 and so that will be heard on
st
October 21 which will be voted on.
Tiseo: Thank you.
Toy: Thank you, Mr. Tiseo. Thank you, Council. We’re done with that one.
As there were no further questions or comments, the Public Hearing was declared
closed at 7:24 p.m.