Carpenter Community Plan
Town of Cary
Carpenter Community Plan
Adopted by Town Council, September 8, 2005
produced by the Town of Cary
Planning Department
A Supplement to
Volume II
of the Town of Cary
Comprehensive Plan



Credits
Town of Cary
Carpenter Community Plan
A Supplement to Volume II
of the Town of Cary Comprehensive Plan
Cary Town Council
|
Town of Cary Staff
|
|
Ernie McAlister, Mayor Jack Smith, Mayor Pro Tem Marla Dorrel Michael Joyce Jennifer Robinson Julie Robison Nels Roseland |
William B. Coleman, Jr., Town Manager Jeff Ulma, AICP, Planning Director Tim Bailey, PE, Director of Engineering Mary
Henderson, Parks,
Recreation, and Cultural Resources Director Project Staff for the Carpenter Community Plan Don Belk,
AICP, project
management, open space and historic resources, report author
Scott Ramage, AICP, project management, land use Teresa Townsend, project management, land use Juliet Andes, AICP,
transportation planning Amity Little, maps and GIS support Doug
McRainey, parks and greenways |
Planning and Zoning Board
|
Consultants
|
|
Wally Dawson, Chairperson Harry Baulch Christopher Brooks Lori Bush Kelly Commiskey Matthew Danielson Steven Goodridge William Lyke Christy Perrin Carla Sadtler |
Jerry Turner & Associates, land planning and design Elam, Todd, D’Ambrosi, land planning |
Table of Contents
Carpenter
Community Plan
A Supplement to Volume II of
the Town of Cary Comprehensive Plan
1.1. What
is the Carpenter Community Plan?
1.2. Plan
Vision and Guiding Principles
1.3. Overview
of the Plan
1.4. History
of the Planning Process
1.4.1. Carpenter
Community Plan
2. Land Use
2.1. The
Land Use Plan Map and How to Read It
2.2. The
Carpenter Historic District
2.2.1. The
Wildflower Buffer
2.2.2. The
Rural Village
3.1. Parks
Recommendations
3.2. Greenway
Corridors and the Trailhead Park
4.1. Roadway
Recommendations
4.2. Bicycle
and Pedestrian Recommendations
5.1. Overview
5.2. Implementation
Recommendations
Appendices (available separately)
Appendix A: Land Use Category Definitions
Maps (available separately)
Carpenter Community Plan
chapter 1: Summary and Introduction
1.1 What is
the Carpenter Community Plan?
The
Carpenter Community Plan (CCP) is a master plan for approximately 475 acres
(0.74 square miles) in the northwestern portion of Cary’s planning area (see Figure 1-1).
It is a policy document that establishes the Town’s official long-range
vision and recommendations for future land uses, parks, roads, sidewalks, and
greenways.
Most
of the plan area is located south of the future McCrimmon Parkway (south of the
existing Old Maynard Road) and north of the Morrisville Parkway. The Plan boundary extends eastward of NC
Highway 55 to just beyond the future Louis Stephens Drive (currently Koppers
Road). This Carpenter Community Plan
fulfills an implementation recommendation contained in the 2002 Northwest Area Plan
(NWAP). This plan constitutes an
amendment to the NWAP, as well as to the Town of Cary Land Use Plan,
Comprehensive Transportation Plan, and the Parks, Recreation, and Cultural
Resources Facilities Master Plan.
The Carpenter
Community Plan consists of a map (see Carpenter
Community Plan map) plus this
document. The map shows future land use and parks recommendations, greenways,
and associated roadway recommendations for the area.
The
chapters of this plan document
provide some supplementary information, and in particular address:
·
the overall
plan vision: includes the plan’s guiding principles and
project history
·
land use, open
space and historic resources: the recommended location, type,
density/intensity of future land uses, specific open space recommendations, and
details regarding the historic resources of the area
·
parks and
greenways
·
transportation: the
recommended roadway improvements and pedestrian transportation recommendations
·
implementation
recommendations and strategies: identifies the follow-up projects, tasks, and
strategies necessary to effectively implement the Plan
1.2 Plan Vision and Guiding
Principles
The
plan
vision
is to make the Carpenter area a unique regional destination and a highly
attractive place to live, work, and recreate.
The following Guiding Principles form the
framework around which this plan has been developed. These principles can also provide guidance in interpreting the
recommendations of this plan.
|
Guiding Principles Ø Plan for future residential development with appropriate densities and transitions from adjoining land uses. Ø Plan for future non-residential development that provides economic growth potential and a diversity of retail, services, and employment opportunities. Ø Revitalize the Carpenter crossroads area as a lively, unique historical and cultural destination focus area. Ø Preserve the significant architectural resources of the Carpenter Historic District to encourage their adaptation and re-use as a vibrant mix of uses. Ø Preserve elements of the rural character of Carpenter by providing streetscapes and open spaces that provide a ‘gateway’ into the core area of the Historic District Ø Plan for a highly-connected system of greenways and parks facilities to serve residents and visitors. Provide sidewalk and greenway connections that extend outside of the plan area, to link pedestrians, joggers, and casual bicyclists with parks in other parts of Cary, and points beyond. Ø Ensure public involvement in the planning process, and preserve the property rights of landowners. Communicate early and often with Carpenter area landowners, and acknowledge the realistic expectations of landowners and the value of their land. |
The
guiding principles, developed by Town staff and project consultants, are not
the sole influence on the land use and other recommendations contained in this
plan. They have been weighed against
citizen comments, council member expressions, and the professional expertise of
staff and consultants.
A Vision for the Carpenter
Area...
Imagine living in Carpenter area 20 years from now. Convenient to Research Triangle Park, the
Raleigh-Durham International Airport, and Interstate 540, Carpenter offers a
diverse range of residential housing choices, including single family homes,
town homes, condominiums, and even loft apartments within the Rural Village.
The Rural Village offers a lively mix of shopping, dining, and
entertainment options within a short walk, bike, or drive from your home. It is a unique destination in Cary, drawing
visitors and shoppers from throughout the region, who admire the architecture
of the meticulously restored buildings within the Village’s core area. Here, people can stroll the open space of
the Village Park, and browse, shop or dine in a charming area that contains
both National Register landmarks and newer structures that are designed to
complement the historic architecture of Carpenter. The C. F. Ferrell Store and Carpenter Farm Supply buildings have
become regional shopping destinations in themselves, providing a distinctive
array of merchandise rivaling the Mast General Stores of western North
Carolina.
The southern portion of the Rural Village is predominately new
construction, but the architecture harkens back to the days when Carpenter was
one of Wake County’s most thriving rural crossroads. It thrives again today, but now housing, shops, restaurants, and
services for area residents have replaced the agricultural-based enterprises of
yore.
Day-trippers from throughout the Triangle (and beyond) visit Carpenter
not only for shopping and dining, but for the recreational opportunities that
are available from the Trailhead Park.
It’s worth an entire day. This
park is a ‘hub’ from where you can hike or bike for miles in any direction, as
it connects four of the Town’s major greenways, which themselves link to the
greenway and trail systems of Raleigh and Durham. For area residents, the multitude of biking and pedestrian
facilities provides unparalleled opportunities for ‘alternative
transportation.’ Transit service has
even become available along the CSX Railroad corridor from Apex to Research
Triangle Park.
These convenient amenities, and the wide array of housing options
available, make Carpenter a very special community in which to live.
1.3 Overview of the Plan
The
Carpenter Community Plan introduces a new tier in the Town of Cary’s hierarchy
of land use plans: the community plan.
The overall Land Use Plan contains several area plans, such as the Northwest Cary Area Plan, the Town Center
Area Plan, etc; likewise, an area plan could contain one or more community plans as neighborhood-scale
implementation of the Land Use Plan takes place.
The
land use recommendations of this plan are centered on the principle objective
of this plan: to revitalize the Carpenter crossroads area as a destination
focus area. The Rural Village, the
centerpiece of the Carpenter Area Plan, represents a new type of activity
center for Cary: smaller in scope than a traditional Neighborhood Activity
Center (NAC), but one that contains diverse uses, housing types, and in the
case of Carpenter, the significant historic resources of a National Register
Historic District. (As a follow-up to
this study, it is recommended that the Land Use Plan be amended to create a new
activity center category to address special mixed use areas such as this.)
The
Rural Village (RV) retains the Mixed Use (MXD) designation of the current Northwest
Cary Area Plan, but residential uses comprise most the Plan area. Areas designated as Low Density Residential
(LDR) have expanded from the 2002 Northwest Area Plan. Good Hope Baptist Church, an Institutional
(INS) use, lies at the geographic center of the Carpenter Area. The Plan retains areas designated as Office
and Industrial (OFC/IND) from the 2002 plan, but adds the option of Office and
Institutional (OFC/INS). The Rural
Village is bordered north and south by Medium Density Residential (MDR).
The prevalence of LDR provides greater opportunities for creative designs to preserve open space and protect the historic resources that are so vital to the rural character of Carpenter. The Plan calls for the retention of most of the farm ponds in the area, ensuring that substantial portions of stream and pond buffers will be preserved. The Carpenter Community Plan introduces a unique open space concept for roadside open space: streetscape ‘meadows’ and ‘wildflower buffers’ that will enhance a rural ‘character’ as one proceeds to the Rural Village along the major east-west and north-south roads within the area. These open spaces also provide opportunities to preserve historic structures along these roads. The use of conservation subdivision design can ensure that allowable development densities can be achieved along with preservation objectives.
1.4 History of the Planning Process
Carpenter
has been a distinctive crossroads community since the 19th century,
and has long been a place of special interest to the surrounding area. Recent Town of Cary planning initiatives
involving Carpenter are summarized as follows:
- The 1996 Land Use Plan
designated the Carpenter crossroads area as Special Opportunity Site,
an area with significant historic structures capable of serving as
focal points for creative redevelopment.
- In 1999, the State Historic Preservation Office
awarded a grant to the Wake County Historic Preservation Commission to
prepare the nomination of Carpenter to the National Register of Historic
Places. The Town of Cary partnered
with Wake County to provide grant matching funds. The nomination was prepared by Kelly
Lally Molloy, author of The Historic
Architecture of Wake County, NC.
- On May 26, 2000, the
Carpenter Historic District was entered into the National Register of
Historic Places by the National Park Service.
- On August 23, 2001, the Town of Cary adopted its Open Space and Historic Resources Plan (OSHRP). The OSHRP included the Carpenter Historic District in its assessment of historic landscapes. To conduct this phase, the Town contracted with the Design Research Laboratory of the NC State University College of Design to perform a Historic District Visioning Initiative. This study identified the visual extent of the landscapes associated with the historic architecture of Carpenter, and developed photo-realistic simulations to demonstrate conservation design techniques.
- The Northwest Area
Plan, adopted in September 2002, recommended Carpenter as an area of special land use
recommendations and called for a master design plan for the Carpenter
area. The Plan also designated
Carpenter as the location of the ‘terminus amenity’ – the junction of the
Northwest’s proposed open space/greenway corridors.
1.4.1 Carpenter Community Plan
Town
of Cary staff initiated the Carpenter Community Plan in early 2004 following
guidance from Town Council in implementing the recommendations of the Northwest
Area Plan. Jerry Turner and Associates
and Elam Todd d’Ambrosi (ETd) assisted the Town staff in the development of the
Plan.
To
garner stakeholder input to the planning process, three community ‘open houses’
were held in the area, in March and October 2004, and in April 2005. Following each community meeting, staff and
consultants further refined the draft.
chapter 2: Land Use, open space, and historic resources
2.1 The Land Use Plan Map and How to Read It
The
Carpenter
Community Plan (CCP) map depicts
the future land uses recommended for the Carpenter community. Different color shadings are used on the map
to indicate different categories of recommended future land uses, with the
color shadings defined in the map’s legend. Transitions between different land
uses shown on the map generally occur along key geographic features, such as
roads, streams, and open spaces, but in some cases they transition at existing
lot lines. Development will normally follow these boundaries. However, the
final boundaries may vary according to the merits of a development proposal and
whether it meets the intent of the plan vision as a whole.
The land use
categories shown on the Carpenter
Community Plan map are described briefly on the map key. Text labels and numbered notes on the maps
are used to clarify recommended land uses for certain areas, or to specify
limitations, exceptions, or alternatives to the standard land use category
given by the color shading for the property.
Land Use category definitions are detailed in Appendix A.
2.2 The Carpenter Historic
District
The Carpenter
Historic District is the fundamental organizing component of the Community Plan
and the focal point of the Plan Vision and Guiding Principles. The boundary of the Carpenter Historic
District was established for the nomination of Carpenter to the National
Register of Historic Places (see Figure 2‑1). It was drawn in an attempt to incorporate
the greatest possible number of contiguous and historically or architecturally-
significant structures and sufficient adjacent acreage to define the structures
in their historic rural context. The
Historic District boundary encompasses the commercial ‘core’ area at the
intersection of Carpenter-Upchurch Road and Morrisville-Carpenter Road. It extends eastward to the C.F. Ferrell
house and farmstead and includes several farmhouses along the north side of
Morrisville-Carpenter Road.
The Carpenter Historic
District is a designation from the Department of the Interior, the federal body
that maintains the National Register of Historic Places. Although a prestigious honor for the area,
it is not a regulatory designation and imposes no regulatory restrictions on
landowners. However, significant
federal and state rehabilitation investment tax credits may be available to
some landowners within the District (see box below: ‘Contributing Structures within the Carpenter Historic
District’).
Although the ‘official’
Carpenter Historic District Boundary is not delineated on the Carpenter Community Plan, it nonetheless
represents an essential framework for determining future land uses and
addressing the preservation of historic resources, open space, and the rural
heritage of the Carpenter community.
The land use elements of the Wildflower Buffer and the Rural Village,
described below, are a result of this determination.
|
2.2.1
The Wildflower Buffer
A 100-foot “wildflower
buffer” along Morrisville Carpenter Road and Good Hope Church Road is proposed
to create a larger road setback and a more ‘open’ visual experience along these
roads (see CCP
map). The buffer also preserves the rural character and ‘feel’ of the
area and attempts to keep historic structures within a rural context. The buffer may be enhanced by plantings of
native trees and shrubs and includes an opaque hedgerow at the outer edge of
the buffer to screen new development behind it. Multi-use paths/greenways slated for Morrisville-Carpenter Road
should meander through this corridor.
The Wildflower Buffer will
preserve roadside open space, but it also provides an opportunity to preserve
the historic resources of the Carpenter Historic District. The following strategies are recommended:
§
The width of the Buffer
may vary, provided the average width is at least 100 feet. The buffer may be increased when additional
open space is desired to incorporate and preserve contributing historic structures along Morrisville-Carpenter Road
(see Contributing Structures box
above).
§
Development density that
is otherwise attainable in the open space of the wildflower buffer reserved for
historic preservation may be transferred elsewhere on the property.
§
To create an incentive
for open space/historic preservation, a density ‘bonus’ may be attained in
exchange of preserving the structure (see Chapter
5 – Implementation).
§
Contributing historic
structures within the buffer that are preserved and rehabilitated in accordance
with accepted State Historic Preservation Office standards may become any
use-type permitted within a Neighborhood Activity Center Overlay (see Land
Development Ordinance, Chapter 5, Table 5.1-1, Table of Permitted Uses).
2.2.2
The Rural Village
The Rural Village (RV) is
intended to be the focus of non-residential land uses within the Carpenter
Community Plan area (see CCP
map). The RV will contain a mix of residential, commercial, and office and
institutional uses, built at a pattern, scale, and architectural style that is
compatible with the ‘rural vernacular’ tradition of the area.
The objective of the Rural
Village designation is to preserve the existing, contributing buildings of the
Carpenter Historic District while integrating them appropriately among new
structures. Scale, mass, and materials
are critical elements in the build-out of the RV area. (See Figures 2-2
and 2-3.) Adjacent to and within the
‘historic core area’ – the portion of the Rural Village within the National
Register Historic District - the quantity of new infill development is a vital
consideration. Maintaining an
appropriate balance between the existing contributing buildings and the amount
and type of new development is essential in order to maintain the historic
integrity of the core area and keep Carpenter’s National Register status
intact.
|

Architecture and site
planning in the Rural Village will be governed by a separate Design Guidelines
document to ensure that new development is compatible with existing buildings. The Guidelines should also pertain to the
areas immediately adjacent to the RV, including lots in the Low Density
Residential (LDR) and Medium Density Residential (MDR) areas along the
east/south side of Good Hope Church Road, and in the Mixed Use (MXD) area on
the west side of the railroad and south of Morrisville-Carpenter Road. Creation of Carpenter Design Guidelines and
a Rural Village Illustrative Plan are the top priorities for Plan
implementation (see Chapter 5).
Village Park and Trailhead Park. Another
objective of the RV is to retain the existing Ruritan Park. This park has functioned as a neighborhood
park and gathering place for decades, and retaining it will help preserve the
‘openness’ that is characteristic of the historic core area today. It would be expanded to Carpenter Fire
Station Road to create a ‘Village Park’ and connect to a trailhead park that
would serve as the junction of several major greenway corridors. For more details on these parks, see Chapter
3.

Chapter 3: Parks and Greenways
3.1
Parks Recommendations
As
can be seen on the Carpenter
Community Plan map, three parks are recommended for the area: (1) the
Village Park, which represents an expansion of the existing Ruritan Park within
the Rural Village core area; (2) the adjoining Trailhead Park; and (3) a
conventional Neighborhood Park to be located in the northern half of the Plan
area.
Both
the Village Park and the Trailhead Park are envisioned as passive facilities,
with no formal active recreation areas.
While the Trailhead Park will function as a terminus point for several
major Town of Cary greenway corridors and will include parking areas and
restroom facilities, the Village Park is seen as a gathering place that
complements the open space and historic resources present in the core area of
the Rural Village. This park could also
host small-scale festivals or a farmers market.
The
density of future residential development within the Carpenter area and
environs will support development of a conventional neighborhood park, ideally
to be located between McCrimmon Parkway and Morrisville-Carpenter Road. The Town will explore cooperative efforts
with the Good Hope Baptist Church for the planning and development of this
park, possibly as a shared-use facility with the Church.
3.2
Greenway Corridors and the
Trailhead Park
A
key feature of the Northwest Area Plan is the four open space/greenway
corridors that follow Kitt Creek, Nancy Branch, Morris Branch, and Panther
Creek. The Northwest Area Plan envisions
two “terminus amenities” – one at either end of the open space/greenway
corridors. The intent is to provide
special destinations at the western and eastern points where all four greenways
(the Kitt Creek, Nancy Branch, Morris Branch, and Panther Creek greenway
trails) converge – the western terminus being located in Amberly (perhaps at
the public park), and the eastern terminus being in the historic Carpenter
area. The Carpenter Community Plan
recommends that the Trailhead Park serve as this terminus amenity. The Trailhead Park will also provide
greenway/pedestrian connectivity to the NC-55 multi-use path (which will run
along the west side of the highway), the Hatcher Grove Trail, and the
meandering sidewalks recommended in Chapter 4.
Chapter 4: TRANSPORTATION
4.1 Roadway
Recommendations
The
roadway improvements described in this plan are recommended in order to (a)
solve existing traffic problems, (b) provide adequate roadway capacity for
traffic that will result from future development within the area, and (c)
provide adequate capacity for the anticipated growth in regional traffic
passing through the Carpenter area (out to about 2025). Roadway recommendations are depicted on the Carpenter
Community Plan map, and
summarized as follows:
§
The planning area for
the Community Plan is bordered roughly by four major thoroughfares: McCrimmon
Parkway to the north, Morrisville Parkway to the south, NC 55 to the west, and
Louis Stephens Drive to the east. These
roads will become 4-lane, median-divided thoroughfares, and a 6-lane,
median-divided thoroughfare in the case of NC 55.
§
Morrisville-Carpenter Road
bisects the planning area. The CCP map depicts a conceptual,
recommended realignment of the road in order to: (a) bypass the core of the
Historic District; and (b) provide a direct and thru-connection to Carpenter
Fire Station Road west of NC 55.
§
Good Hope Church Road is
realigned to become the major north-south collector (2-3 lanes) through the
planning area, extending from McCrimmon Parkway south to Carpenter-Upchurch
Road. The new southerly extension of
Good Hope Church Road is intended to provide a collector ‘bypass’ around the
Rural Village to divert thru-traffic away from the RV historic core area. The section of the existing road, which
travels northwesterly to NC-55, may be closed if no longer needed after the
adjacent parcels redevelop, but the existing bridge over the railroad will be
retained for pedestrian/greenway use.
§
At its future junction
with Good Hope Church Road, Carpenter-Upchurch Road will become a minor access
road serving the Rural Village. It will
remain a 2-lane road.
§
Carpenter Fire Station
Road (east of the railroad) will become a vehicular access road for the
Village-Trailhead parks.
Rural
Road Treatments. Segments of certain collectors and
thoroughfares within the Plan area will be constructed to create a ‘rural
character’ to the road as one approaches the Rural Village. Roadway design within the Rural Village core
area will be addressed in the forthcoming Rural Village design guidelines.
Morrisville-Carpenter Road from Louis Stephens Drive
west to NC 55 will be constructed at the ‘Rural Thoroughfare’ standard
specified in the Southwest Area Plan.
This alternative design allows the thoroughfare to be built without curb
and gutter or sidewalks. Paved shoulders will comfortably
accommodate bicyclists. Good Hope Church Road will be constructed at the ‘Rural
Collector’ standard specified in the Southwest Area Plan.
While the elimination of street lighting would enhance
the rural character of the of Morrisville-Carpenter and Good Hope Church Road
corridors, lighting may be preferable for safety reasons, particularly along
the meandering pedestrian paths within the Wildflower Buffer. An appropriate style of street light
fixtures should be investigated during development of the aforementioned Design
Guidelines.
On-Street Parking. Within or adjacent to the
Rural Village, Carpenter-Upchurch Road and Good Hope Church Road may be able to
accommodate some on-street parking south of Morrisville Carpenter Road. Carpenter Fire Station and Indian Wells
Road may also be able to accommodate some on-street parking. Recommended locations and treatments for on-street
parking and parking lot access within and adjacent to the Rural Village will be
addressed in the forthcoming Rural Village design guidelines. The Guidelines will include recommended
street cross-sections for on-street parking.
4.2 Bicycle and
Pedestrian Recommendations
The
Carpenter Community Plan map depicts
the network of greenways and multi-use paths recommended for the Carpenter
area. Most destinations within the
Carpenter area will be accessible via a combination of sidewalks and greenways.
Along
Morrisville-Carpenter Road (west of Louis Stephens) and Good Hope Church Road,
in lieu of sidewalks, pedestrians will travel along meandering greenway trails to
be constructed within the Wildflower Buffer (see CCP map).
Except
as otherwise specified in this plan, roadways and sidewalks should be
constructed according to Town standards.
Chapter 5: Implementation
5.1 Overview
In
order for the vision and recommendations expressed by this plan to be realized,
specific implementation steps will need to be taken by the Town of Cary and
others. Many of the implementation
steps seek to provide the conditions under which the plan vision can be achieved,
by way of providing sensible land use regulation, necessary public investments,
the development of appropriate programs and policies, and other actions.
Controlling Factors
The
implementation of the plan will depend on action being taken to:
Ø
revise existing development and zoning regulations,
Ø
undertake more detailed
studies to refine the general recommendations that have been identified by this
plan, and
Ø
make infrastructure
improvements.
The
execution of the implementation steps listed below will likely be phased and is
subject to a variety of factors, which will determine their timing. These
include:
a.)
The availability of the
personnel and financial resources necessary to implement the specific
proposals.
b.)
Whether an
implementation step is a necessary precursor to or component of the rational
evaluation of a new development project.
c.)
The interdependence of
the various implementation items, in particular, the degree to which
implementing one item is dependent on the successful completion of another
item.
d.)
The relative severity of
the problem which a particular implementation item is designed to remedy.
Schedule
In
view of the above factors, it is not possible to put forward a precise
timetable for the various implementation items. The following schedule lists
the principal implementation tasks for the Plan, including an indication of the
agency expected to implement the proposal, together with an indication of
timing divided into three categories:
Ø
Short-term
tasks should start within a timeframe ranging from immediate to one year from
plan adoption.
Ø
Medium-term
tasks should start within about one to two years from plan adoption.
Ø
Long-term tasks
should be performed starting two or more years from plan adoption.
The Carpenter Community Plan was developed over an 18-month
period in consultation with stakeholders in the community: landowners,
residents, developers, and historic preservationists. The specific intent of several landowners regarding planned
developments, as well as the expectations of the community regarding the plan
vision and guiding principles, makes clear to Town staff that implementation
must proceed quickly following adoption of the Plan. Therefore, short-term tasks also include those steps deemed immediate for successful
implementation. Furthermore, because of
the expected pace of change in the Carpenter area, there are no implementation
items listed as ‘long-term.’
5.2 Implementation
Recommendations
|
Implementation Task |
Agency |
Timing |
|
1. Prepare Design Guidelines for the Rural
Village Prepare Design Guidelines that will apply to all new construction and to repair, rehabilitation, and modification of all existing buildings within the area designated as Rural Village. The Guidelines will also apply to the cover landscaping, parking areas, streetscape treatments, street lighting, for the RV area. |
Town of Cary |
Immediate |
|
2.
Create a Master
Plan for the Rural Village Prepare a illustrative master plan for the RV area that complies with the RV Design Guidelines |
Town of Cary |
Immediate |
|
3. Establish an Activity Center Overlay District
for the Rural Village Initiate procedures to establish an Activity Center Overlay District for the Rural Village, and to amend the Land Development Ordinance as necessary to create a new type of ‘village’ Activity Center category. |
Town of Cary |
Immediate |
|
4.
Develop a
density bonus/clustering provision for properties adjacent to the Wildflower
Buffers to obtain additional open space and preserve historic structures. The provision
could also be used for preserving farmland or open space beyond the
wildflower buffer, such as the strawberry farm along Good Hope Church Road
(see CCP map, Note #13). The approach would be similar to that
described in the Southwest Area Plan for Conservation Residential areas. |
Town of Cary |
Immediate |
|
5. Evaluate
existing zoning within the Community Plan area. Specifically,
determine if areas already zoned Office/Research & Development (ORD)
could allow for uses that run counter to the objectives of the Plan. Evaluate whether limited proactive
town-initiated rezonings are advisable. |
Town of Cary |
Short |
|
6.
Develop
incentives to encourage preservation and rehabilitation
of historic structures. Approaches to be
evaluated may include local landmark designation for individual, contributing
structures, density bonuses, waived/reduced development fees for renovation
and reuse of existing buildings, or even creation of a special TDF Fee Zone
for Carpenter RV, where reduced fees are conditioned upon adherence to
architectural and design standards and building restoration. |
Town of Cary |
Short |
|
7.
Update the
Capital Improvements Plan to include parkland acquisition for the Village
Park, Trailhead Park, and a neighborhood park. Pursue public/private partnerships with the Ruritan Club and Good Hope Baptist Church and explore opportunities for cost-sharing, joint use, and maintenance agreements for the Village Park and a Carpenter Neighborhood Park. |
Town of Cary |
Medium |
|
8.
Capital
Improvement Program (CIP), Transportation Improvements Program (TIP): Update the Town’s CIP and TIP to reflect this plan’s recommendations for roadways, greenways, sidewalks, and multi-use paths. The update should specify timing and funding for the Morrisville-Carpenter Road realignment, at-grade greenway crossings, and bridge crossings. |
Town of Cary |
Annual |
|
9.
Investigate the
procurement of Transportation Enhancement Funds for design/treatment of the
Morrisville-Carpenter Road/NC 55 bridge, and for plantings/pedestrian
facilities within the Wildflower Buffers. Determine if funds are available under the NCDOT Enhancement program or other sources. |
Town of Cary |
Medium |
|
10.
Investigate options for preserving the
existing strawberry farm on Good Hope Church Road. Work with the
farm owner and adjacent landowners to explore mechanisms for preserving the
strawberry farm as an important amenity and rural character element for the
Carpenter area. Options may include:
agricultural conservation easement, purchase of development rights,
development master plan with a transfer of density, purchase of farmland as a
community cooperative, etc. |
Town of Cary |
Medium |
Town Of Cary
Carpenter Community Plan
Appendix A: Land Use Category
Definitions
The land use categories used
on the plan Map are described briefly
on the map key, and are defined in more detail in this appendix. These definitions reflect and build on land
use category definitions used in other area plans, and in the town-wide Land
Use Plan.
Land Use Category Definitions
The following definitions
apply to categories recommended within the Carpenter Community Plan:
Office & Institutional (OFC/INS): Includes all types of office and institutional uses.
Examples include corporate and professional offices (large and small), general
business offices, clinics, nursing homes, banks, churches, schools, daycare,
government offices, and so forth. A limited selection of commercial uses (such
as banks, restaurants, personal services) supporting the actual office and
institutional uses in an area designated as OFC/INS on the Carpenter Community Plan may also be acceptable
within buildings whose primary use is office or institutional, as long as such
uses do not dominate the area designated as OFC/INS, and as provided for in the
Land Development Ordinance (LDO) for the OI zoning district. Depending on the size and intensity of the
particular site or area, provision of a bus transit stop may be appropriate.
Office & Industrial (OFC/IND): This classification includes a wide range of
employment-generating office, light industrial, research and development, and
“clean” manufacturing uses. A limited selection of institutional and commercial
uses (such as banks, personal services, hotels/motels) supporting large office/industrial
regions on the Carpenter Community
Plan may also be appropriate, but should not dominate the areas
designated as OFC/IND. The level of onsite activity and the degree of external
impacts associated with Office & Industrial sites tend to be more intense
than for the Office & Institutional category. OFC/IND areas should be
developed in a manner compatible with nearby properties to minimize potential
nuisances or damage to the environment. Depending on the size and intensity of
the particular site or area, provision of a bus transit stop may be
appropriate. Examples of office and industrial uses include general offices,
light manufacturing, warehousing and distribution, research laboratories,
prototype and production plants, automotive repair and bodywork, trade schools,
auto dealers with display and lot storage/inventory, and so forth.
Institutional (INS): Includes uses such as schools, colleges, hospitals,
daycare centers, municipal community centers, libraries, places or worship,
cemeteries, municipal buildings, and post offices. (Note: Institutional areas
shown on the Carpenter Community
Plan represent property owned by Good Hope Baptist Church.)
Mixed Use (MXD): This land use category indicates that a mix of commercial, office, and
medium to high density residential uses are desired for these land areas.
Institutional uses that are compatible and complimentary to the development of mixed-use
areas may also be considered – such as churches, schools, libraries, and
daycare facilities. Land uses in mixed-use areas may be mixed either
side-by-side on adjacent lots, sites, or individual tenant spaces in a
multi-tenant building, or vertically within buildings (e.g., shops on a first
floor, with apartments or offices on upper floors). A single use should not substantially
dominate an entire area designated as Mixed Use on the Carpenter Community Plan.
Residential uses are not required for MXD areas west of the CSX
railroad.
Medium-Density Residential (MDR): Includes housing densities between 3 and 8 dwellings
per acre and can include a mixture of dwelling types including single-family
detached and semi-detached units, single-family attached units, patio homes,
duplexes and triplexes, and townhouses. A variety of neighborhood-compatible
and complimentary institutional uses may also be considered such as churches,
schools, and daycare facilities.
Low-Density Residential (LDR): This category refers to existing regions of
single-family detached residential dwellings with density ranges from 1 to 3
dwelling units per acre and lot sizes typically ranging from approximately
10,000 square feet to 1 acre. Smaller lot sizes are acceptable when using conservation
subdivision design. Institutional uses
that are compatible and complimentary to the surrounding neighborhood and the
development of single-family residential dwellings may be considered such as
churches, schools, libraries, and daycare facilities.


