NC town rejects annexing massive lakeside community over fire-response concerns

Saying the development is too far from the nearest fire station, Mooresville commissioners Tuesday night unanimously rejected a plan to annex and extend utilities to an Alabama developer’s massive proposed community on Lake Davidson.

Birmingham-based LIV Development is planning 353 multifamily units, 136 townhomes, 90 duplexes, a waterfront restaurant and a public multi-use shoreline greenway along Transco Road in southern Iredell County.

The greenway in the 96.8-acre community would have offered rare public waterfront access, Estes McLemore of LIV Development stated in a rezoning application for the project.

In April, commissioners approved the rezoning by a split vote. But by Tuesday commissioners had reversed course.

Commissioner Bobby Compton questioned previously whether the fire department could get to fires in the proposed development as quickly as it does elsewhere in Mooresville.

Mooresville town commissioner Bobby Compton
Mooresville town commissioner Bobby Compton

“My concern is, it’s outside the fire department response time,” Compton said, according to a recording of a Sept. 1 meeting held before Tuesday’s vote.

Compton, a retired firefighter, fire marshal and mayoral candidate, urged Fire Chief Curt Deaton to call into the Sept. 1 meeting to address the fire response issue.

“It’s outside the response time,” Deaton told the board, referring to the LIV Development community. “We’re looking at 9 minutes. I think the far edge of this property is beyond 5 miles ... We strive to make it to the area of the call in 4 minutes.”

And it’s unclear when the town will build its newest fire station that would be near the development, after Mooresville-based Lowe’s Cos. Inc. pulled out of the project, commissioners said.

No formal timeline has been developed, town spokeswoman Megan Suber told The Charlotte Observer.

Mooresville officials are evaluating a parcel off Transco Road and several other sites for the fire station, Suber said in an email. The town has nearly $6.5 million in reserves to cover construction costs, she said.

“Safety has to come first,” commissioner Tommy DeWeese said at Tuesday night’s meeting. “Not having fire projection is unconscionable, putting people’s lives at risk.”

At 341 acres, Lake Davidson straddles the Mecklenburg-Iredell county line along Interstate 77 and is part of the larger Lake Norman, according to Duke Energy. Under federal license, the company manages the chain of lakes it formed along the Catawba River in the Carolinas in the mid-1900s.

Tunnel-like culverts beneath I-77 connect Lake Davidson and neighboring 125-acre Lake Cornelius with Lake Norman.

“It is scary”

Commissioner Lisa Qualls said Transco Road “is a right-in, right-out road that makes it a cul-de-sac, and it’s without a fire station. There’s a major gas transmission line down there, and without a fire department, it is scary.”

“That is a major issue to not have a fire station right there,” she said.

Mooresville town commissioner Lisa Qualls
Mooresville town commissioner Lisa Qualls

In a memorandum to commissioners Tuesday, town planning staff recommended approval of the annexation and utilities extension but cited “some concerns” about fire response.

“Fire Station 7 is planned for this area, which would resolve the distance and response time to reach this site,” Danny Wilson, Mooresville’s director of planning and community development, said in the memorandum. “But it is not in place at this time.”

Funding shortfall for needed road

The town also is roughly $10 million to $12 million short on funds to build a long-planned East-West Connector road that the development would have tied into, easing traffic concerns, commissioners revealed Tuesday.

“The project you guys have, and the willingness to work with us, is truly appreciated, it really is,” Commissioner Gary West told developer representatives. “But I can’t sit up here and approve something without knowing how we’ll close that gap and when.”

Mooresville town commissioner Gary West
Mooresville town commissioner Gary West

“I’ve said two times sitting here that the East-West Connector would never get built,” Commissioner Compton said.

“And the Lowe’s Cos. Inc. promise (for a fire station contribution) got pulled away from us,” he said. “The whole deal for me is a fire station would be under construction by now, but that hasn’t happened.”

“It needs the East-West Connector to make it safe,” commissioner Tommy DeWeese said about the development. “But more dangerous than that is, the fire station cannot be built today.”

Mooresville town commissioner Tommy DeWeese
Mooresville town commissioner Tommy DeWeese

Said commissioner Thurman Houston: “It’s a beautiful project, just at the wrong time.”

Mooresville commissioner Thurman Houston
Mooresville commissioner Thurman Houston

Developer “shocked,” “discouraged” by vote

Representatives for the developer said the board’s vote disappointed them, especially because of all the time, money and effort the developer put into addressing town concerns over the years.

In 2015, land owner Langtree Development Co. LLC donated 4.03 acres for a fire station near the site, Cindy Reid of Cornelius-based Urban Law Group told the board Tuesday night.

In 2018, Langtree gave $1 million-plus for a sewer pump station and sewer-line extension to technology firm Corvid Technologies off Transco Road. Langtree paid over 50% of the cost of the pump station, she said.

And in 2022, Langtree agreed to donate $800,000 toward the connector and give 2.4 acres for road and utility right of way, Reid said.

“Langtree has been a partner in the development of this quadrant for many, many years and has contributed significantly to development of this site,” Reid said.

LIV Development planned to build a $3.5 million public greenway and donate 14 acres valued at $2.17 million for a future park and trail, said Tim McEachern, the company’s managing director of development for the Southeast.

The developer also intended to extend Langtree Campus Drive by 3,000 feet, from Corvid Technologies across town-owned land to the East-West Connector, he said.

Chapel Hill lawyer T.C. Morphis Jr., who represents Langtree Development Co. LLC, said rejecting the annexation and extension of utilities for an already approved project was unprecedented.

“I am surprised at how much the tide has turned against us,” said Andrew Murray, LIV Development senior managing director of development. “We have a long reputation of being a group that works well with municipalities ... to see that the entire board has turned against this project is surprising and, honestly, shocking.

“We’ll continue to work to be a good partner with the town and figure out ways to come up with better solutions,” he said, adding that he was “really discouraged” by the town board’s vote.

The developer can resubmit its plans after addressing the concerns, town staff said. It was unclear Tuesday night if and when the developer might do that.

Huntersville holds hearing on ice creamery plans

Two residents spoke at a public hearing Tuesday night regarding Charlotte-based Golden Cow Creamery’s plans for a store in downtown Huntersville.

One spoke in favor of the store at 14516 S. Old Statesville Road and one against.

“Bring on the ice cream,” said Gatewood Campbell, who served 13 months on the downtown Huntersville planning steering committee. “I love that Golden Cow wants to invest in our downtown and sees us not as a risk but a reward to their proven business model.”

The store would be the family-run company’s fourth, joining locations in uptown, South End and SouthPark, Charlotte Five previously reported.

Golden Cow Creamery’s Huntersville store would be in a building with 5,600 square feet of retail space. Co-owner Alex Hannah envisions a taproom/brewery and a coffee shop as other potential tenants.
Golden Cow Creamery’s Huntersville store would be in a building with 5,600 square feet of retail space. Co-owner Alex Hannah envisions a taproom/brewery and a coffee shop as other potential tenants.

The store would join several tenants in a building planned by Golden Cow’s affiliated business, H2H Holdings LLC, Alex Hannah, who co-owns the businesses with his wife, Liz, told the Observer.

Sarah McAulay, a former Huntersville mayor and commissioner, urged the town board to deny Golden Cow’s rezoning request.

Sarah McAulay, former Huntersville mayor and town commissioner, opposes a rezoning for Golden Cow Creamery.
Sarah McAulay, former Huntersville mayor and town commissioner, opposes a rezoning for Golden Cow Creamery.

She said no one from Golden Cow attended any of the numerous public hearings held by a downtown Huntersville study group.

“They’re bringing their idea of what they think would be good for Huntersville, rather than what we already spent a long time with professional guidance and citizen input developing our plan,” she said.

The proposed building for the businesses would be taller than what the town allows, she added.

Campbell said the project “would turn an empty lot into a viable gathering spot in our downtown.

Commissioners will vote on the rezoning at a town board meeting to be announced.

The building would include 5,600 square feet of retail space, Alex Hannah told Charlotte Five in July. He envisions a taproom/brewery and a coffee shop as other potential tenants.

The Hannahs are native North Carolinians who founded Golden Cow Creamery in 2016 to share the love for homemade ice cream, CharlotteFive previously reported.

Where should new parks, greenways go? Cornelius asks

Cornelius residents are invited to tell the town where new parks and greenways should go.

The Cornelius Parks and Recreation Department has scheduled “listening sessions” to hear from residents, according to a town news release Tuesday.

The department is developing a new master plan identifying “current and emerging” parks and greenway needs.

Sessions are scheduled for noon-1 p.m. and 6:45-8 p.m. Thursdays, Sept. 7, Oct. 5 and Nov. 2 at Cornelius Town Hall, 21445 Catawba Ave.

Details: 704-892-6031, extension 160; and www.cornelius.org/pr.

One-stop development shop

Mooresville residents, business owners and contractors no longer need to drive to Statesville for permits to modify their buildings and homes.

On Tuesday, Sept. 5, the Mooresville Building Permitting & Inspections Department started issuing permits for projects in the town limits, according to a town news release.

The new Mooresville Building Permitting & Inspections Department now administers and enforces N.C. building codes in the town, including reviewing plans, issuing permits and inspecting additions.

People previously had to drive to the Iredell County Building Standards Division in Statesville to obtain permits.

“This one-stop shop allows the Town of Mooresville to better serve our community as the area continues to grow and expand,” Tommy Rowland, Mooresville director of building permitting & inspections, said in the release.

The Mooresville Building Permitting and Inspections Department is located at One Mooresville Center, 750 W. Iredell Ave. (N.C. 3), along with the town planning and community development office and the fire marshal’s office.

The center is just off East Plaza Drive (N.C. 150) past the ABC store.

The town spent $1.9 million converting the former police headquarters to accommodate the change, officials said.