patching...
Update: Worried about your commute? Check out our traffic map. »
Welcome back, Patch Blogger!

209-Unit Apartment Complex Proposal Moving Forward for East Broadway

A public hearing for rezoning for Broadway Commons will be held March 19.

 

While the Waukesha Plan Commission is recommending one area of the city be rezoned to keep a large-scale apartment building from locating in the River's Crossing neighborhood, it approved plans for an apartment complex on East Broadway during its meeting Wednesday night.

The 209-unit apartment complex will be located on 19 acres of land at 1910 East Broadway. The construction will be completed during several phases.

A public hearing for the rezoning of the East Broadway area from temporary to multi-family residential will be held at 7:30 p.m. March 19.

Meanwhile, the public hearing will be held about rezoning a 8.7-acre property along Clearwater Lane in the River’s Crossing neighborhood to change the vacant parcel from  multi-family residential to two-family residential at 7:30 p.m. March 19.

Related Topics: Waukesha Common Council, Waukesha Plan Commission, and Waukesha real estate

Mr Lundt

7:41 am on Saturday, March 2, 2013

Boy
Something stinks to high heaven!
One group gets zoning revoked and another group gets new zoning?
If I was a reporter I would look into this.
If I was a repeater I would just do nothing.

Time will tell.

Reply

TOM

9:21 am on Saturday, March 2, 2013

Does anybody know is this a goverment funded breeding colony for cradle to grave parasites??

Reply

Pennyluhu

2:06 pm on Saturday, March 2, 2013

Tom. You need to read a book. I suggest the Bible. You must be a hoot at parties.

Reply
Comment_arrow

TOM

4:19 pm on Saturday, March 2, 2013

Sounds like a subsidised nerve was struck

michelle

2:41 am on Thursday, March 7, 2013

Just what we don't need. Another apartment building. They should have a grocery store downtown. Instead of another apartment building. There are people that live down town. And wish that there was a grocery store downtown.

Reply

Steve Edlund

6:05 am on Friday, March 8, 2013

How does this project align itself with Waukesha's water conservation efforts?

If the application for Great Lakes water is rejected, what impact will the continued growth in apartment construction in Waukesha have on water management?

Would anyone on the Council care to address the Water Utility claim that our local water source is not sustainable and the impact that more apartments would have to that claim?

Reply

Leave a comment