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Commissioner Balch: And the metal siding as I tried to find on the plans, it's only on the <br /> third story, correct? <br /> Ward: Yes, it was just for an accent. It's not like that's the only material we have to use. <br /> I really agree with staff on the metal siding. You see a lot of it now. The old roofs on <br /> churches were all copper roofs, and of course that's kind of a problem now with runoff, <br /> but we've done rusting metal roofs quite a bit, Corten which is a nice product. It's kind of <br /> a sheet metal and it could be galvanized in flat sheets, ribbed sheets, all kinds of things. <br /> But again, we could find another material too. <br /> Chair Ritter: Thank you Tim. Okay, we have three speaker cards. <br /> Tom Zaro: My grandfather Jaquemar Zaro came over from Italy and he worked in <br /> Remillard brick factory and he resided at that residence right there; 4790 Augustine <br /> Street. The brick chimney came from the Remlillard Brick Factory. There's a little out <br /> building there, it's all brick. All of that came from the Remillard Brick Factory. They've <br /> been building next to it. They preserved the original house there and down the street <br /> they preserved those houses. And then across the street they preserved that and made <br /> a little business out of it, so I was hoping we could preserve the house where my <br /> grandfather lived and my father, and also my father had a small business and he served <br /> the community for over 30 years until he died. So that's my case. I hope we can <br /> preserve those buildings and see it work his plan in. Thank you. <br /> Ed Cintrone: They're building three units next to me; three houses on the other side of <br /> my property. I came in and I asked if you guys would allow in the back a three-story <br /> building and you refused it. Now, he's coming in and wants to put a three-story building <br /> in and I don't understand how it could change from one little section to the other. And <br /> then also, what do you guys consider a heritage tree? There are huge oak trees there <br /> that have been there for over 100 years and he wants to tear everything down and gut <br /> it; the whole landscape, and then he wants to build these with a three-story building with <br /> tin roofs and stuff and he doesn't even come close to what is on Augustine Street. <br /> There's nothing like that there, you know, so he's not really preserving one of the old <br /> streets in Pleasanton. I mean Augustine was my great, great uncle. He's the one that <br /> started the racetrack and they named that street after him. And now they're going to <br /> tear everything down and there's no retail on that whole Bernal Avenue. I just don't <br /> understand how they can tear down and cut down heritage trees. That's all I can say. <br /> Alok Damireddy: My company owns the property next door to the north. I have about <br /> eight points and you might have a few questions on them. So the FAR ratio; I'm a little <br /> concerned about that. From my calculations it shows a 60% ratio, a lot size of 12,632 <br /> square feet. There are 12 parking spots that are required I guess, but a 300:1 ratio of <br /> mixed use, I would presume three parking spots, and that would bring it to 15. The <br /> other thing I wanted to point out is my property, it wasn't one spot per unit, but rather 1.5 <br /> parking spots per unit so I created six parking spots. Now, I specifically emailed staff <br /> about the three stories and when I proposed a 30 foot building it was shot down so I'm <br /> not sure how staff here wants to recommend a three-story building. It wasn't about the <br /> height of the buildings but rather the number of stories. That was what was cited as the <br /> cause. <br /> EXCERPT: DRAFT PLANNING COMMISSION MINUTES, July 13, 2016 Page 6 of 21 <br />