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Williams Lake developer eyes building 9 homes on South Lakeside Drive

An application for zoning amendment will be considered by city council April 30

A Williams Lake construction company hopes to build nine new homes on South Lakeside.

Dan Gossen of GL Construction told the Tribune they purchased the 6.78-acre lot at 1749 South Lakeside Drive last summer and have been busy working on a development design for the property.

On Tuesday, April 30, city council will receive a zoning amendment application for the property as it is inside city limits.

The request is to change it from A-1, acreage reserve zoning, to R-8 residential to make nine lots which they hope will be serviced by the city.

“We would either build spec homes or have people come to us and we would design a home for them,” said Gossen. “We are very excited.”

In recent months, the lot has been cleared of trees.

All of the resulting logs were sold to Tolko and Tsideldel Enterprises arrived with its grinding machine last week to process the remaining woody debris and haul it away.

There is an old red barn on the site for sale.

“We had one young guy interested, but so far we have not had a commitment from anyone. It will have to be moved off the property by the buyer. Someone else stopped and said they had looked at the barn 15 years ago,” Gossen said Monday.

Gossen and his sons Andrew and Ben Gossen have built several homes in the Russett Bluff area further down South Lakeside Drive and in Deer Park Terrace across from Terra Ridge and were on the lookout for a new area to build in.

Calling the new development Vista Estates, Gossen said each home will have a nice view of the lake.

A layout of the lots he provided the Tribune indicates six of the lots at the front will be smaller and three at the back will be much larger.

In a report for city council, planner Marie Whitehead noted the city is in receipt of a geotechnical report dated Nov. 21, 2023, prepared by Octo Engineering Ltd., from the applicant addressing the rock fall hazard and steep slopes. A wildfire assessment as of Nov. 10, 2023 addressing mitigation measures that will be required at the building permit stage has also been submitted.

Under the new provincial rules, a public hearing is not required so staff have followed the new rules and notified a 100-metre surrounding area of neighbouring properties by mail and placed a notice in the Tribune about the zoning amendment application.

Since notifying the public, the city received an inquiry about geotechnical stability in the area, to which Whitehead said the subject property is not located in an area of known geotechnical stability concerns.

Another query was about a fencing request, but neither the existing zoning or the proposed R-8 zone requires the properties be fenced.

Whitehead noted staff are in support of the zoning amendment application.

READ MORE: GL Construction enjoys the lakecity

READ MORE: Williams Lake councillors attending UBCM housing summit Feb. 13, 14

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Monica Lamb-Yorski

About the Author: Monica Lamb-Yorski

A B.C. gal, I was born in Alert Bay, raised in Nelson, graduated from the University of Winnipeg, and wrote my first-ever article for the Prince Rupert Daily News.
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