Mobile? Click HERE for m.isthmus.com
Connect with Isthmus on Twitter · Facebook · Flickr 

Friday, November 20, 2009 |  Madison, WI: 46.0° F  
The Paper
 

WATCH OUT!

Green Northeast Madison neighborhood gets green light
Unanimous passage of Northeast Neighborhood plan

Mayor Dave's pièce de résistance encounters almost no resistance — or notice.
Mayor Dave's pièce de résistance encounters almost no resistance — or notice.
Credit:Eric Tadsen
Related Articles:
Article Tools: Read moreRead more Watch Out! items
Email this articleEmail this article
Print this articlePrint This Article
Email the authorEmail the author
Recommend This ArticleRecommend This Article Add to DiggShare this item

Madison Mayor Dave Cieslewicz is pleased with how it all turned out: "I got less resistance than I thought I would."

The mayor is referring to the recent unanimous passage of his Northeast Neighborhood plan, which includes design features aimed at achieving a 25% reduction in the use of vehicles, water and energy. As envisioned, it would be Madison's greenest neighborhood and possibly a national model (see "Mayor Dave's Green Dream," 5/29/08 and "Down With Cars," 7/24/09).

In a recent blog post, Cieslewicz noted that plans for this area and University Research Park II passed "almost unnoticed," presumably because there was little opposition.

In an interview, he explains that the northeast area's developers had hoped to be building by last summer, a goal confounded by his desire to retool the planning. He credits them with showing "a lot of patience" and being open to a greener scheme. He thinks it may be a year or so before building begins, due to the recession.

Wait...they wanted to be building already but now won't break ground for a year? "Developers as a rule are optimistic people," muses the mayor. "In this case, their optimism [in the housing market] proved unwarranted."

The passed plan covers half of a 2,800-acre chunk that will ultimately house 30,000 people. Amendments were added to require the annual collection of data on traffic, water use and energy use, and to remove language calling on the city to market and promote the neigborhood.

Cieslewicz says council members felt "the city shouldn't be involved in the marketing and promotion of specific developments."

Does that mean he can't blog about it? The mayor doesn't miss a beat: "I guess we'll just have to test that idea."

Comments (1)

From Steven Klafka on 11/09/09 at 4:15 pm

Mayor Sprawlevich strikes again. He has time and money to promote two projects at the fringes of Madison, but doesn't support existing green neighborhoods or promote infill much closer to downtown. He's forgot about eastside alders opposing to the 2009 budget amendment providing city money for that $22 million expansion of roads on the far west side to bring suburban commuters to the new UW research park. Why wasn't this park built within the city rather than move the west side closer to Cross Plains? The mayor's comprehensive plan for the city removed 7,000 acres from residential use to accommodate the county airport so his "green" neighborhood needs to be pushed further east and will sit along noisy flight paths. Has the mayor ever been to the eastside?

Log in or register to comment

moviesmusiceats
Select a Movie
Select a Theater
PluggedcommentsViewedForum
Promotions Contact us Privacy Policy Jobs RSS
Collapse Photo Bar