Title
Consider/Discuss/Act on the Request by applicant Jeremy Jones on behalf of owner Barratt Properties, LLC of a Certificate of Appropriateness for Demolition for the Building Located at 301 S Kentucky Street
Summary
COUNCIL GOAL: Enhance the Quality of Life in Downtown McKinney
MEETING DATE: May 2, 2024
DEPARTMENT: Planning Department - Development Services
CONTACT: Cassie Bumgarner, Planner
Paula Jarrett Nasta, Planning Manager
RECOMMENDED BOARD ACTION:
• Staff recommends approval of demolition of the Certificate of Appropriateness for demolition of the building at 301 S Kentucky Street.
ITEM SUMMARY:
• The applicant requests approval of a Certificate of Appropriateness for demolition of the building located at 301 S Kentucky Street.
• The applicant has submitted a Field Observation Report completed by architect Bryan Moore of DBA Architects on June 22, 2022.
• The Architect found the house had considerable structural damage, racking, dry rot, and termite damage and would “never survive the moving process.”
• Applicant also included proposal from Cunningham House Movers, which reports that “there are two more structures that have no value to move. These are located at 301/311 Kentucky Street, McKinney, Texas.”
• Applicant submitted Certificate of Appropriateness Staff in 2022. Staff approved demolition for the medium priority home on August 17, 2022.
• The Applicant is reapplying as the previous COA approval expired and work was not ready to commence.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION:
• Zoning code states that the applicant shall not construct, reconstruct, alter, change, restore, expand or demolish any exterior architectural feature of a building or structure that is visible from a public right-of-way located in the H historic preservation overlay district without first obtaining a certificate of appropriateness.
• The criteria for approval mandates that the following standards, guidelines, and criteria be used in a balanced evaluation of the project:
• Secretary of the Interior’s Standards for Rehabilitation and Guidelines for Rehabilitating Historic Buildings to assist in the consideration of all applications.
• Checklist of design elements to be reviewed and evaluated.
• Consideration of the preservation priority rating assigned to the property in question.
o The 2015 Historic Resource Survey Update found the home at 301 S Kentucky Street to be low priority rating, built circa 1913.
o A low priority property: Typifies a common local building form, architectural style or type, with no identified historical associations; is a moderate to severely altered resource with reversible modifications that exemplifies a distinctive building type or architectural style, or that has only minor historical significance.