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churches primarily. Mr. Weinstein said there is an existing church site on Bernal Avenue which is the <br /> St. Augustine Church that has empty and usable land; however not all sites are undeveloped and some <br /> could be available in the future for further redevelopment. <br /> Vice-Mayor Brown said she wants to be sure none of them are DSRSD wastewater treatment land <br /> which is called out in blue on the plan. Mr. Weinstein confirmed staff excluded the areas occupied by <br /> public uses. <br /> Vice-Mayor Brown asked when the last time was when the City allowed public institution land to be <br /> zoned to residential stating she believes it may be precedent-setting if approved. Mr. Weinstein said he <br /> could not recall and agreed it is not a common occurrence. <br /> City Manager Fialho responded that there were two publicly owned properties owned by the school <br /> district; one in the Sycamore area rezoned and developed residentially by Greenbriar Homes which <br /> was the location of the anticipated third high school. There was an elementary school site off of Hansen <br /> Drive rezoned as well to residential across the street from Hansen Park. The third location, as part of <br /> the original PUD application, there was a fairly large site zoned for an elementary school that was opted <br /> instead for senior housing. <br /> Vice-Mayor Brown said she believed it was a high school which became 110 senior homes, and Mr. <br /> Fialho confirmed this is the one he is referring to. Vice-Mayor Brown asked and confirmed that <br /> examples used are schools that have sold the land and not necessarily churches that have sold their <br /> land. <br /> Mayor Thorne said he knows at one time there was a project proposed for the St. Augustine site which <br /> was the Sisters of Mercy Hospital which was opposed by the public. Therefore, it is not unprecedented <br /> that other uses other than churches are actually on church lands. <br /> Mr. Weinstein opened discussion regarding the impact analysis part of the presentation, which is water. <br /> He presented a slide that compares the project's estimated water use to two other scenarios. One is <br /> existing conditions and the other is buildout of the approved church project. Staff collected data from <br /> the project site using City utility data. To calculate church buildout water use, staff collected data from <br /> the past 5 years from two different churches in Pleasanton; the St. Augustine Church and St. Elizabeth <br /> Seton Church, and staff applied a per unit area water demand to the square footage that would be <br /> developed under that approved church project. <br /> The point to emphasize is this was not an exhaustive analysis of water demand for the project. The <br /> data presented in the graph should be only used to illustrate potential water use and the actual <br /> operations of the school or residential uses could change the outcome significantly. With these <br /> estimations in mind, the estimated water projections for the site or the approved church project at build- <br /> out are approximately 27,000 gallons per day. In comparison, the proposed project assuming 120 <br /> students is expected to generate a demand of less than 10,000 gallons of water per day with the <br /> proposed residential homes and the existing 120-unit student school, when compared to existing water <br /> use which is about 7,700 gallons per day. <br /> Mr. Weinstein said traffic is another topic of interest. Traffic Engineer Mike Tassano is present and he <br /> also calculated a.m. and p.m. and Sunday peak hour trips for each of the three scenarios analyzed for <br /> water and he summarized the results. The project with 120 students would result in a.m. and p.m. peak <br /> hour trips relatively similar to those generated by existing conditions, although a bit higher in the a.m. <br /> peak and a bit lower in the p.m. peak. <br /> Generally speaking, the approved church project due to its size would generate higher a.m. and p.m. <br /> peak hour trips than under existing conditions or the project, and those trips would be amplified during <br /> the Sunday peak period for the church having large services. He stated the key thing here is, <br /> City Council Minutes Page 6 of 28 October 6, 2015 <br />