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• Should the Operations Services Center (OSC) and/or Pleasanton Garbage Service <br /> (PGS) facility be relocated? <br /> The Preferred Plan would result in the following development: <br /> SF-R SF-R SF-R MF-R MF-R Total <br /> 4d/a 8d/a 11d/a 23d/a 30d/a Housing <br /> 183 units 664 units 296 units 241 units 375 units 1,759 units <br /> 46 acres 83 acres 27 acres 10 acres 13 acres 179 acres <br /> Retail Campus Industrial/ Destination Public & <br /> Office Flex Use Institutional <br /> 91,000 sq.ft. 442,000 sq.ft. 1,057,000 sq.ft. 3 acres 17 acres <br /> A total of 1,759 units would consist of 616 multifamily units and 1,143 single family units, or a <br /> split of 35% multifamily units and 65% single family homes. Looked at from acreage used, the <br /> multifamily development would account for about 23 acres or about 13 percent of the total <br /> acreage in residential development. In this plan, the multifamily locations are dispersed in two <br /> locations, one on Busch just east of the OSC and the other at Busch and El Charro Road. <br /> In the Preferred Plan, the OSC remains in its current location, and the PGS site would be <br /> relocated further east into an industrially-designated area. An approximately 13 acre park <br /> located just south of Lake I is also designated Public School Site and part of the site would be <br /> used for an elementary school if it is determined necessary by the Pleasanton Unified School <br /> District. Public and private parks cover almost 80 acres of the planning area. <br /> Circulation is provided by an extension of El Charro Road from Stoneridge Drive to Stanley <br /> Boulevard, Busch Road connecting from Valley Avenue to El Charro Road, and an extension <br /> of Boulder through the southern part of the Specific Plan area to Busch Road. In addition to <br /> these and other local streets, "Green spines" provide pedestrian and bicycle circulation <br /> throughout the area. <br /> As noted below in the Analysis section, this exact plan was not analyzed by the economic <br /> consultant. However, a similar plan with 1,759 residential units and a slightly different split of <br /> multifamily and single family units (fewer single family units and more multifamily units) was <br /> found to be one of two "most feasible" options, from an economic feasibility perspective. <br /> Impact on City's Share of the Regional Housing Need: The City Council's direction on June <br /> 18, 2013 was that the East Pleasanton Specific Plan should accommodate at least a <br /> proportion of the City's regional housing need for the next two housing elements (through <br /> P13-1858, East Pleasanton Specific Plan September 25, 2013 <br /> Page 3 of 6 <br />