HomeMy WebLinkAboutC_Ferris Comment_240223.pdfFrom: Alex Morganroth
Sent: Wednesday, February 14, 2024 2:34 PM
To: Michelle Ferris
Subject: RE: Logan 6 Development
Hi Michelle -
Thank you for your comments. Please note that this response is only on my behalf – you may receive
other responses from council and/or the Mayor. I will add your comments to the public record and will
certainly consider them as I prepare my staff report.
If you have any questions or would like to discuss, I’d be happy to meet via Teams, phone call, or in
person.
Thank you,
ALEX MORGANROTH, AICP, Senior Planner
City of Renton | CED | Planning Division
1055 S Grady Way | 6th Floor | Renton, WA 98057
Virtual Permit Center | Online Applications and Inspections
(425) 430-7219 | amorganroth@rentonwa.gov
From: Michelle Ferris <michelleferris@comcast.net>
Sent: Tuesday, February 13, 2024 7:53 PM
To: Mayor Renton <mayor@rentonwa.gov>; Alex Morganroth <AMorganroth@Rentonwa.gov>;
Vdolbee@rentonwa.gov; Carmen Rivera <CRivera@rentonwa.gov>; James Alberson Jr.
<JAlberson@rentonwa.gov>; Ryan McIrvin <RMcIrvin@Rentonwa.gov>; Valerie O'Halloran
<VOHalloran@Rentonwa.gov>; Ruth Pérez <RPerez@Rentonwa.gov>; Ed Prince
<EPrince@Rentonwa.gov>; Kim-Khánh Văn <KVan@Rentonwa.gov>
Cc: Michelle Ferris <michelleferris@comcast.net>; North Renton Neighborhood Association
<north.renton@gmail.com>
Subject: Logan 6 Development
Good Evening,
Please see the attached letter as an official opposition to the Logan 6 Development in
the North Renton Neighborhood.
Michelle Ferris
North Renton resident
CAUTION: This email originated from outside the City of Renton. Do not click links, reply or open
attachments unless you know the content is safe.
February 13, 2024
City of Renton
Re: Logn 6 Development
Dear Mayor Pavone, City Council Members, Alex Morganroth, and Vanessa Dolbee:
I am writing to clearly communicate my opposition to the proposed Logan 6 development. I plan on
attending and voicing my concerns at the next council meeting and wanted to proactively brief you on
the concerns I, and other North Renton neighbors (whom you’ll also be hearing from, along with the
North Renton Neighborhood Association), have been voicing since the first public meeting that took
place virtually during COVID in Spring of 2022.
Our goal and intentions are to preserve the North Renton Neighborhood. We are looking for
transparency, open lines of communication, and thoughtful consideration of the neighborhood and its
residents. There are three potential developments in downtown Renton that will adversely affect the
North Renton Neighborhood: Logan 6 (100 units), Airport Way and Logan Ave (multi-unit), S Williams
Avenue (multi-unit). The current infrastructure cannot absorb the additional residents, without negative
impacts to traffic, parking, etc. You will also see mentioned below the impact from the Sartori School,
located in the heart of the neighborhood.
I share the following concerns & make the following recommendations with my neighbors:
▪ The negative impact this size of a project will have on traffic and parking in the surrounding areas.
Logan 6 is a 100-unit building with 1-, 2-, and 3-bedroom units. 100 spaces are not adequate for this
size of complex. The initial guideline for the ratio of parking to units was established when Renton
was expecting to have improved transit systems along the Logan Avenue Corridor. Since those
transit systems were not realized (Sound Transit, etc), the ratio no longer serves the residents of
North Renton and the impact on parking will be adverse. The ‘overflow’ of traffic/parking will be
especially burdensome for these residents. As currently proposed, residents would access the
building on either the South (3rd Street) or North (4th Street) boundaries of the property, with no
access via North Logan Avenue. This drives residents into the North Renton Neighborhood, which is
not the purpose of intensified zoning along N Logan Avenue. The intensified use is linked to the N
Logan corridor, and if the development or the traffic analysis does not provide for access on N Logan
Avenue, then perhaps the proposed development is not the right land use for this property.
▪ We are requesting an increase to 1.75 parking spaces per unit. A one parking space per unit is not
adequate for units with more than one bedroom and this will drive vehicles to park east of the
property, in the North Renton Neighborhood, as there is no parking on N Logan, N 3rd Street, or N 4th
Street. This is not a “downtown” location, with amenities (stores, restaurants) within walking
distance, so potential residents would be using their vehicles to access local services.
▪ We are concerned that while the City, in its City Center Community Plan (2011, updated in 2017),
calls for the city to “protect and enhance the neighborhoods in the City Center” and to “enhance
measures (such as setbacks, buffers, landscape screening and height restrictions) to protect edges of
single-family areas from adjacent development”, no action has been taken.
▪ We are requesting that an updated traffic survey be conducted. This request has been voiced at
many meetings. It is our understanding this is occurring, but we request that a revised traffic
study/analysis be provided as a precursor to any further continuation of the review process.
▪ We’d like to understand why the City of Renton Resolution 2708, relating to the preservation of the
North Renton Neighborhood (and Kennydale) as single-family neighborhoods, with the city making
protection of these neighborhoods a priority, is not being abided by.
▪ The proposed complex on Logan, with the use of traffic accessing N 3rd and N 4th seems quite
counterintuitive to a settlement agreement signed by Larry Warren, attorney, and Earl Clymer,
then Renton City Mayor, and agreed upon with legal counsel and representatives from the North
Renton neighborhood (including former Councilmember Theresa Clymer and Neighborhood
President Marge Richter) at that time.
▪ A full disclosure of information should be shared with the Hearing Examiner, along with any
records provided at any hearing on this topic referenced above.
▪ Conduct retrospectives: It was evident at a North Renton Neighborhood Association meeting, that
the city did not conduct a retrospective on the impact of Sartori School redevelopment. We believe
there are valuable lessons, especially because that development continues to be a point of
contention for the neighbors. We’re asking that as new developments are proposed, we look at the
current state, conduct retrospectives, and that both long- and short-term impacts be considered.
▪ Since the Renton Comprehensive Plan is currently under review, we would like the city to present
the details of this plan to the North Renton Community Association at an upcoming meeting.
We have been residents of this neighborhood for 17 years and have seen increased problems from all of
the housing and retail developments over the years. It is not to say that progress should be halted.
We are relying on the City of Renton to listen to our concerns and those expressed by neighbors in the
North Renton Neighborhood. We ask that the city council listen to our concerns about this proposed
development, and act on both our behalf and on behalf of the city.
Sincerely,
Michelle Ferris
Concerned resident of the North Renton Neighborhood
921 N 1st Street, Renton, WA