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News / Clark County News

La Center ordinance will allow cottage-style homes in city

They’re described as hybrids of single-, multifamily designs

By Jack Heffernan, Columbian county government and small cities reporter, and
The Columbian
Published: September 13, 2020, 6:00am

The La Center City Council approved an ordinance Wednesday that will allow cottage-style homes in the city.

The ordinance, approved unanimously, will add a new section to the city code that regulates development of the homes. Cottage-style housing typically features small homes on shared or individual lots that don’t face public streets and have a common open area.

Ethan Spoo, the city’s planning consultant, characterized them as hybrids of single- and multifamily designs.

“It’s really, sort of, trying to combine the best of both worlds,” Spoo said.

The council conducted the first public hearing on the ordinance Feb. 26.

Questions about whether the code required sufficient parking and emergency access delayed the process. Councilors also raised concerns that the previous draft of the code allowed excess density and development sizes.

City staff then examined similar codes in Clark County, Ridgefield, Washougal, Battle Ground and six other governments in the state. Staffers attempted to address the concerns without making changes that were far outside typical code requirements.

The version adopted Wednesday establishes some limits. Four to 12 units are allowed per cluster and there must be at least 750 feet between developments. Four to 11 cottage homes are allowed for every two acres. Each cottage house must have three parking spaces.

The ordinance also requires that Clark County Fire & Rescue review developments for safety requirements before they’re presented to the city council.

No public comments were offered before the ordinance passed, save a few written comments from developers read by Spoo. The developers raised questions about specific requirements such as spacing and parking.

Councilor Elizabeth Cerveny cautioned that the city should avoid enacting code changes that might be viewed as overly burdensome.

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Columbian county government and small cities reporter