OCR Text |
Show A-4 The Park Record Sat/Sun/Mon/Tues, June 27-30, 2020 Tour of PCMR lots planned NEW H S E R F GUAC MADE FRESH DAILY 1723 UTE BLVD., PARK CITY, UT ©2020 Del Taco LLC DTL-20785 Parkites have a chance to walk project location JAY HAMBURGER The Park Record The Park City Planning Commission is slated to tour the Park City Mountain Resort parking lots in early July with representatives of a Provo firm that is pursuing a large project on the land. The Planning Commission members as a group only occasionally visit the location of a proposed development. The tour of the PCMR lots is scheduled early in the panel’s review of the PEG Companies’ proposal. A tour offers the Planning Commission, City Hall staffers and the public an opportunity to walk the ground as a developer explains a proj- ect, providing a perspective from the land itself. The tour is scheduled on July 8 from 3 p.m. until 5 p.m. starting at the PCMR transit center. A City Hall report prepared in anticipation of a Planning Commission meeting held on Wednesday indicates the members could learn about a range of topics regarding the proposal while walking the lots, including building heights, the location of plazas and how the buildings would be set back. The Planning Commission on the tour is also expected to learn about traffic and transportation. The report says members could be provided details about pedestrian routes, including the possibility of a tunnel or a bridge for pedestrians, proposed road alterations, roundabouts and zones for bus loading and unloading. The Planning Department said PEG Companies will show the height of the proposed buildings with balloons as well as mark on the ground the locations of proposed building corners, garage entries and the setbacks. The Planning Commission tour is open to the public. Staffers in the report indicated there could be alternatives for the public based on health guidelines designed to halt the spread of the novel coronavirus. Masks will be required for people on the tour, according to the report. The Planning Commission on July 8 is also scheduled to continue its review of the proposal during a meeting after the tour. The panel on Wednesday night held another meeting about the project, but the members did not make a decision on a key procedural question that needs to be addressed before talks about the proposed development’s details start. ther eroded the situation on Main Street, including the weekly Park Silly Sunday Market, the Tour of Utah bicycling race and the Park City Kimball Arts Festival. The In- Main Street businesses. The Main Street leadership has pursued a series of steps designed to pull the businesses through the downturn. The most notable to date is pedestrianizing nearly all of Main Street on Sundays through the early fall, something that is meant to offer a unique experience and create space for social distancing. The pedestrian Sundays won quick support from Park City leaders and debuted earlier in June. Kuhlow said the Historic Park City Alliance is conducting a marketing campaign targeting people on the Wasatch Front and in places that are within a sixhour drive of Park City. It has been rare for there to be the possibility of significant business closures on Main Street in a concentrated period since Park City rose in prominence in the North American ski industry starting in the 1990s. PRICE AND PARTICIPATION MAY VARY. Continued from A-3 The protection you need and the service you deserve Auto • Home • Life • Retirement • Motorcycle • Renters • Boat Steven Robertson Partner Robertson-Cooper Ins Services Call or Text: 435-647-9898 Email: srobertson5@allstate.com 505 Main Street Park City, UT 84060 Closings possible cases in Utah increased and further public-health restrictions became possible, she said. There is concern that a rise in cases could further depress sales. “We have a lot of businesses concerned about making it” under the worst scenarios, she said. Shortly after the shutdowns in March it appeared nearly certain Main Street businesses needed to prepare for a long slog back toward normalcy. There has been a series of event cancellations that fur- We have a lot of businesses concerned about making it,” Alison Kuhlow, Historic Park City Alliance, discussing worries about a worst-case scenario for sales on Main Street dependence Day celebrations will be subdued on a day that normally draws one of the largest one-day crowds of the year to Main Street. The special events during the summer have long provided a boost to Get all the latest Park Record updates. |