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For an example of this negative outcome, we can look at some residential developments in Dublin. <br /> These developments typically have: <br /> ● Giant houses on small, skinny lots. <br /> ● Unusable driveways. <br /> ● No real front-yards. <br /> ● Not much space between the houses. <br /> ● Narrow streets. <br /> ● No single-story houses. <br /> One example is “The Knolls and The Bluffs at Tassajara Hills by Toll Brothers” developments in <br /> Dublin: <br /> https://www.google.com/maps/@37.7406349,-121.8563698,160m/data=!3m1!1e3 <br /> These developments are at around 4.6 houses to the acre, but the houses actually have the same <br /> square footage (3,700 to 4,600 sq) as most of the houses in the two neighborhoods adjacent to the <br /> Neal Property. These developments have all the aspects listed above that would make them not fit <br /> in with our neighborhoods. <br /> Another example is the “Wallis Ranch” development. One of the undersigned households moved <br /> from the Wallis Ranch development in Dublin to the Chateau Country Estates neighborhood <br /> adjacent to the Neal property 1 year ago to avoid the above issues. <br /> Point #3: Stick to the adopted zoning of 21 to 28 houses <br /> In a January 9th letter (attached) PUSD asks for even greater density than what the City rezoned <br /> to so far. They've requested 4 houses per acre on all 10.6 acres, so 42 houses, with 1.5 acres <br /> reserved for a park. <br /> This works out to 42 houses on 9 acres, or 4.7 houses per acre (vs 2.1 for the surrounding <br /> neighborhoods). Notice that at 4.7 it would be slightly denser than the Dublin neighborhood. <br /> June 1, 2023 3