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From YouTube: Architectural Advisory Committee | March 5, 2018
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A
C
D
A
B
D
A
Anyone
opposed.
Thank
you.
Since
this
is
a
public
meeting
audience
members
are
permitted
to
comment
on
any
issue
that
is
within
this
committee's
purview
since
I,
don't
see
any
audience
we'll
pass
it
to
the
meeting
minutes
from
last
meeting
and
I
understand.
There
is
the
four
of
us
hi
Sheila,
and
so
is
there
any
comments
on
the
meeting
minutes
of
February
20th.
A
E
The
very
end
when
we
summarized
I
think
Flynn
mentioned
the
one
of
the
not
conditions,
but
one
of
the
suggestions
was
that
they
square
up
the
road
in
front
of
the
building
and
instead
of
making
it
a
wedge
shape
of
asphalt
that
it
becomes
a
larger
planter.
Hey
and
I
didn't
quite
see
that
clearly
written
in
here.
B
C
Have
one
clarification
yeah
in
terms
of
the
dealership,
the
size
of
the
rock
I
think
what
we
wanted.
The
suggestion
was
that
they
could
look
at
the
three
quarter,
inch
rock,
but
also
if
they
wanted
to
use
a
smaller
size
like
a
3/8
inch
rock.
That
would
be
acceptable,
but
we
were
trying
to
give
them
some
direction
that
it
it.
The
whole
project
did
not
need
to
be
the
decomposed
granite
that
other
rock
materials
would
be
acceptable.
Some
of
the
cobble
3/4
inch
or
3/8
inch.
A
A
F
Thank
you,
Grafton
and,
as
you
may
recall,
this
project
was
originally
reviewed
by
the
architectural
Advisory
Committee
on
the
January
16th
and
today
you
are
requested
to
review
the
revisions
to
the
original
submittal
or
those
who
enough
familiar
with
the
project
site.
This
property
is
approximately
3,700
square
feet
in
the
area
and
it
has
an
existing
freestanding
restaurant,
which
is
about
4,600
square
feet.
The
facility
also
has
a
drive-through
in
the
back
facing
the
rear
parking
lot.
F
The
displayed
image
shows
the
existing
innovations
of
the
buildings.
As
you
see,
the
fascia
beams
of
the
buildings,
as
well
as
bibs
and
rafters
of
the
freestanding
pergola,
a
painted
red
and
applicant,
was
initially
seeking
approval
for
this
color
scheme.
However,
at
the
meeting
on
January
16th
architecture,
advisory
committee
recommended
the
applicant
to
our
consider
reducing
the
impact
of
red
paint.
F
The
color
stamp
on
the
left
is
what
applicant
was
originally
proposing
and,
after
receiving
a
comments
from
the
ASC,
the
applicant
decided
to
replace
the
Valspar
classic
red
with
PPG
G
chocolate,
truffle,
Brown
and
I
replaced
that
du
jour
Vosper
paint
with
area
which
is
by
a
PPG
as
well
with
the
application.
The
new
paints-
and
this
is
how
the
the
South
elevation
of
the
building
is
going
to
look
like
they.
F
As
you
see
the
beams
and
the
fascia
of
the
building
is
going
to
be
brown
and
that
the
main
excuse
me,
the
primary
difference
between
the
previous
proposal
and
a
revision
is
bougainvillea
that
you
see
here
right
by
the
pergola
structure.
This
bougainvillea
will
be
placed
in
the
four
containers
and
placed
at
the
base
of
each
part
of
a
column
to
add
color
and
also
to
bring
a
natural
element
to
the
area,
and
this
is
the
the
primary
division
of
the
building.
F
The
same
color
paint
will
be
applied
on
this
new
division
as
well,
and
this
is
a
previous
landscape
plant
that
we
can
propose.
As
you
see
on
the
plan
had
a
general
lack
of
planting
materials,
and
particularly
this
is
evident
in
the
pyramid
of
the
landscape
as
well.
Just
to
look
at
the
parking
areas
does
not
have
any
shade
trees,
and
this
is
a
proposed
design.
F
Based
on
the
submitted
plans,
the
staff
finds
that
the
revision
is
consistent
with
a
specific
plan
in
the
general
plan
design
guidelines,
as
well
as
water,
efficient
ordinance
and
the
water
efficient
landscape
design
guidelines
and
in
for
the
reason
the
staff
recommends
approval.
The
project
subject
to
the
conditions
are
people
that
are
stated
in
a
staff
report.
The
applicant
and
the
staff
are
both
available
to
answer
any
questions
you
may
have,
and
this
concludes
the
staff
presentation.
Thank
you.
Noriko.
D
F
F
The
proposed
piece
PPG
and
the
area
color
is
a
little
bit
more
grayish
I
should
say,
whereas
the
du
jour
was
more
ivory
white
there's
a
slight
change
to
it.
But
if
you
look
at
the
staff
report,
which
is
a
page
for
these,
cars
are
taken
from
the
paint
manufacturers
website
directly.
So
this
shows
that
show
the
color
okay.
F
F
E
A
Yeah
are
there
questions
for
Noriko
I
rego
I
have
a
question
for
you.
So
on
the
site
plan,
could
you
identify
when
you
say
that
the
permit
records
for
the
existing
wall
drive
through
monument
monument
you're,
referring
to
the
monument
on
Indian
Canyon?
Yes,
that
is
correct.
Okay
and
then
the
existing
wall
where's
that
existing
wall.
F
B
Perhaps
let
me
just
clarify
what
noriko
meant
in
the
staff
report
is
that
we
don't
have
current
permits
for
the
signage
Burger
King
when
they
originally
developed
had
permits
for
the
drive-thru
signage.
The
monument
sign
the
wall
signs,
but,
as
you
change
those
out,
you
still
need
to
get
permits
and
what
noriko
is
indicating.
The
staff
report
is
that
they
haven't
obtained
those
permits
yet
to
change
out
those
signs.
Okay,.
A
A
A
H
A
A
D
G
A
G
A
A
A
D
C
Just
a
few
comments
regarding
the
landscape,
I
think
I,
like
the
improvements
made
in
the
landscape
plan,
I
had
one
concern
about
the
Palo
Verde.
That's
proposed
near
the
drop-off
area
kind
of
in
the
corner
of
the
building
there.
It
will
most
likely
get
too
large
for
that
location
and
they
may
want
to
select
a
smaller
type
tree,
because
they'll
have
to
keep
pruning
it
back,
not
to
interfere
with
the
building
or
with
the
drive
aisle.
It.
C
A
G
E
C
I
think,
overall,
you
know
there's
some
boulders
out
there
that
look
like
they
were
there
from
the
previous
that
are
set
properly,
there's
others
that
are
like
on
the
surface
and
I
think
before
they
do
this
in
landscape
installation
that
there
should
be
some
condition
or
some
grading
should
take
place.
You
know
to
form
the
proper
mounds
and
make
sure
the
grades
low
enough
adjacent
to
the
sidewalk.
C
C
You
know
for
these
locations
and
and
then
the
other
element
would
be
they
had
mentioned.
They
can't
dig
under
the
pavement
where
the
pots
are
gonna,
go
so
I'm,
assuming
they're
planning
on
hand,
watering
them,
which
you
know
I,
think
it
would
be
better
to
have
some
permanent
irrigation
that
comes
up
through
the
bottom
of
the
pot,
mm-hmm
versus
trying
to
hand
water
them
and
to
maintain
that,
so
you
know,
hopefully
we
might
see
something
come
back
to
staff
on
the
actual
pots
themselves.
G
C
Think
if
the
a
gobby
Perry
I
are
called
out
as
five-gallon,
they
should
actually
be
larger.
Those
will
only
be
about
six
inches
in
size
when
they
are
installed
and
I.
Think
that
would
be
too
small,
so
I'd
like
to
see
those
increased
in
size
and
then
the
Ocotillo
looks
like
it's
called
out
as
a
five
gallon
mm-hmm.
G
C
A
Yeah
me
first
me
first
Tom
on
the
on
the
pat
on
the
bougainvillea
in
sizes
that
we
that
they're
planning
to
put
on
these
pots
the
the
photograph
rendering
shows
it
as
fully
grown,
and
you
know
very
beautifully
sort
of
formed
around
the
porch.
What
what
should
be
the
starting
size
so
that
it
can
get
to
that
potential.
A
C
C
Typically,
the
detail
would
have
two
pipes
going
up
into
the
bottom
of
the
pot.
One
would
be
for
drainage.
One
would
be
for
irrigation
if
they're
unable
to
do
that,
they
could
fill
the
bottom
of
the
pot
and
create
kind
of
a
sump
with
some
rock
and
gravel
in
there,
and
then
that
would
allow
for
some
drainage,
but
fortunately
Boggan
via
or
drought
tolerance.
So
sometimes,
if
they
have
consistent
hand,
watering,
it
can
work.
A
Thank
you,
Tom,
remember
tom.
E
C
E
It
it
seems
to
me
that
we're
saying
if
they're
gonna
be
putting
irrigation,
they're
gonna
be
breaking
into
the
concrete
anyway.
So
if
that's
the
situation,
then
I
think
it
would
be
better
if
they
could
plant
them
in
the
ground,
and
my
second
comment
would
be
as
we
look
at
the
revised
landscape
plan.
I
wonder
if
the
pala
verities
along
the
driveway
to
the
drive-up
are
gonna
overhang.
The
driveway
such
that
they're
going
to
be
damaged
by
cars,
driving
up
to
the
drive
up,
Oh.
G
A
E
H
The
color
change
is
a
great
improvement.
I
happen
to
be
here
when
you
originally
submitted
I
liked
it.
The
boken
via
you,
know,
I
absolutely
loved
it,
but
I
I'm
genuinely
concerned
about
the
reality
of
how
it's
going
to
look
I'm,
assuming
that
you
plan
to
run
outside
water
lines
into
the
bottom
of
the
pot
and
all
that
sort
of
thing,
I
still
just
think,
there's
a
potential
for
an
eyesore
with
it
and
an
awful
lot
of
supervision.
H
If
it
doesn't
turn
out
that
you
have
to
replant
right
away,
you've
got
two
weeks
and
who
is
it?
Who
is
going
to
be
enforcing
all
of
this
driving
by
and
checking
the
bushes
every
two
weeks,
I
have
serious
concerns
about
the
implementation
of
the
bogan
via
I
love,
the
idea,
but
I
don't
know.
Maybe
we
could
have
a
little
more
detail
as
as
far
as
how
it
would
actually
work.
That's
my
thought.
A
See
where
we
are
all
agree
is
that
the
changes
and
then
the
new
design
that
has
been
proposed
is
a
huge
improvement,
as
member
rather
had
mentioned.
I
think
they.
We
all
love
this
idea
of
the
Volgin
bilious.
But
perhaps
there
are
several
suggestions
like,
for
example,
we
could
have
a
taller
pot,
that's
not
24
inches,
but
perhaps
it's
48
inches
and
then
the
plant
starts
growing
much
higher
and
it
gives
a
little
more
emphasis
on
the
basis
of
those
posts,
and
then
it
has
a
length
that
is
going
to
grow.
A
It
starts
much
higher
than
where
it's
supposed
to
go
grow
the
size
of
the
bogan
bill.
Also,
it's
going
to
help
in
the
type
of
the
vogue
Emilia
right
right
now.
I
think
we
have
taken
them
into
this
direction
and
what
I
would
like
is
for
them
to
consider
the
different
options
on
the
pot
sizes
and
configuration
to
see
if
we
can
make
this
design
concept
work
rather
than
you
know,
direct
them
into
a
different
direction.
A
E
There
they're
saying
here
that
there's
going
to
be
four
pots
at
each
of
the
columns,
so
that
means
on
that
little
small
patio
there's
sixteen
pots
is
that
gonna
be
too
much
of
a
cluster
of
pot
16
pot.
It
says
here
in
item
number
one
be
planted
in
four
containers
at
the
base
of
each
pergola.
Does
that
mean
a
total
of
sixteen
or
a
total
of
four.
A
A
So
so
far,
what
we
have
discussed
is
the
alternative
on
the
tree
type
tree
types
when
it
comes
to
the
drive
through
the
additional
information
that
the
applicant
has
provided
on
the
entrance
walkway
having
more
material
of
landscape
than
has
been
defined
here.
That
I
think
Noriko
is
going
to
further
develop.
A
D
A
D
D
B
E
A
I
You,
chair
song
and
committee
members,
the
application
before
you
is
for
a
hillside
development
project
consisting
of
a
single
family
residence.
That's
roughly
know
just
under
2,400
square
feet
in
size,
as
well
as
an
attached
two-car
garage
of
502
square
feet.
The
site
is
vacant
undeveloped,
parcel
on
West
via
Oliveira.
It
is
surrounded
by
homes
on
all
sides,
with
the
exception
of
the
south
and
north
those
sites
are
vacant.
As
you
see
in
the
aerial
photograph
on
the
screen.
I
The
house
is
configured
in
an
L
shape,
with
the
garage
being
on
the
northerly
portion
of
the
site
and
the
house
itself
being
in
an
east-west
direction.
It
does
contain
three
bedrooms
and
has
the
main
living
area
in
the
center
of
the
property.
The
rear
of
the
property
on
the
south
side
at
the
bottom
of
this
exhibit
here
on
the
drawing
is
where
the
pool,
deck
and
pool
area
will
be
located,
and
they
do
propose
to
realize
the
site
with
the
existing,
the
existing
sand
and
dirt.
That
is
there
and
boulders.
I
I
Elevations,
you
see
the
South
elevation
here
on
the
top
of
this
screen,
the
North
elevation
in
the
middle
and
the
West
elevation
on
the
bottom,
so
you'll
see
the
site.
Does
the
terrain?
Natural
terrain
does
slope
from
west
to
east
downward
and
they're,
proposing
one
flat
pad
for
the
entire
house
and
a
slight
as
well
as
the
garage.
I
I
This
shows
the
East
elevation
of
the
site.
So
this
again,
that's
just
the
retaining
that
would
be
the
bottom
portion
of
of
it
is
the
CMU
blocks
that
would
be
for
retaining
earth
for
the
finished
floor
to
be
consistent
and
then
the
middle
and
bottom
exhibit
here
do
show
site
sections
through
the
site
and
the
adjacent
homes
and
their
finished
floors.
So
it
really
does
integrate
with
the
adjacent
properties.
I
I
I
I
So
that
essentially
concludes
my
presentation.
I'd
be
happy
dancing
additional
questions.
I
would
just
note
that,
in
the
background
of
the
report,
there
is
one
error,
a
copy
and
paste
error
on
the
table.
The
owner
is
actually
Francis
LaBranche,
not
Brian
and
Lisa
Eberhardt,
as
noted
in
the
staff
report.
So
the
data
is
correct:
11
22
2002,
but
the
owner
is
Francis
LaBranche
and
they
have
owned
it
since
2002
and
that
concludes
my
report.
Thank
you.
I
E
I
I
E
J
Good
afternoon
committee
Lance
O'donnell
Oh
to
architecture,
1089,
North,
Palm,
Canyon,
Drive,
Suite,
B,
hey
thanks
for
that
great
report
David
this.
If
we
can
pull
the
site
plan
up,
I'll
just
talk
about
some
of
the
things
that
were
driving
the
design
and
the
generation
of
the
design.
So
the
client
is
retired
and
came
with
an
architectural
brief
that
said,
I
want
to
die
in
this
house,
which
meant
that
Aging
in
Place
was
something
that
we
had
to
think
about
seriously.
J
Typically,
we
would
approach
projects
like
this
with
multiple
steps,
or
at
least
a
step
in
the
site
in
these
hillsides,
but
that
configuration
just
wasn't
going
to
work
for
this
house,
so
the
long
axis,
east
and
west
trying
to
achieve
as
much
energy
efficiency
and
passive
solar
design
and
cross
ventilation
as
we
could
set
this
home
up
so
that
it
was
it
was.
It
was
going
into
and
out
of
grade,
and
so
we
chose
what
is
essentially
the
middle
of
the
site.
J
The
equidistant
from
the
low
point
in
the
high
point
and
said:
okay,
we're
gonna
start
there
we're
gonna
berm
on
one
side,
an
equal
amount,
we're
going
to
elevate
on
the
other
side,
and
so
that's
how
we
arrived
at
where
the
finished
floor
is
and
how
the
house
relates
to
to
the
site.
The
site
is
not
undisturbed,
it's
it's
actually,
I'd
almost
call
it
like
a
brown
field.
J
We
need
to
pull
all
this
stuff
out,
so
what
we
chose
to
do
was
to
push
the
house
as
far
north
as
we
could
and
off
of
as
much
of
this
fill
as
we
as
we
possibly
could
and
then
to
augment
and
to
bring
the
site
back
into
something
that
felt
much
more.
Naturally,
as
David
was
explaining
in
the
southwest
corner,
we
introduced
a
little
Arroyo
that
comes
up
into
the
kind
of
crux
of
the
home
there,
so
that
little
Arroyo
is
doing
a
couple
things
for
us.
J
One
is
its
its
Rina
lysing
an
existing
condition
and
then
it's
it's
acting
as
our
on-site
detention,
so
we're
moving
as
much
water
off
of
the
roofs
and
and
off
of
the
decks
and
things
into
that
into
that
little
Oh,
Roy
OH
detention
area.
What
I
found
I
built
a
house
up
in
that
neighborhood
ten
years
ago
and
what
happens
generally
is
where
the
extra
water
starts
to
accumulate
from
those
new
hard
surfaces,
you
get
what
I
call
volunteers,
so
trees
will
volunteer,
bushes
will
plants
and
Celia
creosote.
J
All
manner
of
stuff
will
start
to
start
to
grow,
and
so
what
we're
trying
to
do
is
we're
trying
to
augment
the
front
with
additional
boulders
that
we
know
we're.
Gonna,
pull
out
of
the
the
site,
so
there'll
be
a
natural,
boulder
landscape
along
the
street,
we're
augmenting
that
with
trees
and
we're
trying
to
filter
as
much
of
this
prevailing
wind
as
we
can.
We
get
seasonally
very
high
winds
up
there
and
so
the
the
front
door.
J
For
you
know
the
neighborhood
porch
kind
of
deal
because
up
there
it
is
just
it
can
be
seasonally,
very,
very
tough
and
with
all
the
boulders
and
trying
to
keep
as
many
of
those
natural
rock
features
up
there
as
possible.
What
we
wind
up
getting
is
larger
areas
where
weary
naturalizing
with
those
boulders,
so
that's
the
intent.
The
intent
is
something
that's
living
lightly.
On
the
land
single
floor,
somewhat
of
a
mystery
from
the
street
setback,
a
good
neighbor,
both
downhill
and
uphill
relative
to
the
overall
side.
J
Elevation
is
very
thin,
so,
even
though
the
neighbor
downhill
or
uphill
and
and
there's
kind
of
looking
up
at
us
relative
to
the
way
the
natural
site
features
work.
It
is
a
very,
very
small
portion
of
the
overall
north-south
aspect
of
the
site
that
is
sort
of
rendered
in
something
solid
and
then
again,
there's
there's
nothing
there
that
interferes
with
privacy.
We're
not
trying
to
look
in
that
direction.
We're
not
trying
to
look
at
them
down
on
the
neighbor,
but
rather
it's
a
very
blank
wall
and
we're
doing
the
same
thing
on
the
west.
J
We're
trying
to
mitigate
that
solar
exposure
on
the
east
and
west
as
much
as
possible
and
we're
we're
really
opening
up
as
we're
opening
up
to
the
south
and
the
view
and
then,
to
a
certain
extent
we're
opening
up
clerestory
views
to
the
west
and
to
the
north
in
and
around
the
home,
but
yeah
we're.
You
know,
obviously
quite
proud
of
the
design
and
feel
like
it's
gonna
fit
really
well
into
the
fabric
of
that
neighborhood
and
and
we're
happy
to
take
any
questions
that
you
guys
might
have.
Thank.
D
Can
you
talk
a
little
bit
more
about
the
hydro
seating
in
the
disturbed
areas
and
how
extensive
that
I
mean
when
I
look
at
the
plan?
It
looks
kind
of
extensive
yeah.
J
Yeah
one
thing
that
we've,
what
I've
found
just
empirically
up
there
is
that
we
will
get
in
Celia
that
pop
up
last
a
couple
of
years
and
go
away
and
then
reap
rocket
themselves.
Somehow
and
I
don't
know
if
those
seeds
just
sit
there
and
germinate
themselves
depending
upon
heavy
rain
one
year,
heavy
rain
or
just
a
disturbance.
You
know
the
natural
fauna
rot
walking
around
and
pushing
it
in
I,
don't
know
what
happens,
but
what
happens?
B
A
To
land
the
garage,
it
seems
to
have
it
sort
of
simplicity
and
purity
compared
to
the
rest
of
the
house.
Was
that
intentional
or
that?
J
You
know
the
mouse
just
wanted
to
be
as
recessive
as
possible,
we're
using
it
as
kind
of
the
first
layer
of
the
windbreak
for
the
house,
so
it's
I
would
think
of
that
as
the
prow
of
the
ship.
So
the
garage
is
starting
to
move
the
air
left
and
right
around
that
front
door.
The
front
door
is
intentionally
put
into
the
east
so
that
it's
not
being
exposed
to
the
prevailing
winds,
but
the
garage
just
yeah
it
could
be
a
carport
and
go
away.
That
would
have
been.
J
A
J
Are
yeah
so
we're
pushing
our?
Are
our
past
experiences
with
standing
seam
metal
a
little
bit
and
we
try
to
do
try
to
do
you
know
either
new
materials
or
taking
a
material
that
we've
worked
with
before
and
and
kind
of
push
it
till
it's
a
logical
extension,
and
so
this
this
standing
seam
metal
roof
is
it's
it's
a
warplane,
so
it
starts
out.
It
starts
out
at
an
angle
of
about
I,
don't
know,
let's
say
80
degrees
and
then
goes
to
90
degrees
over
the
length
of
that
12
or
15
feet.
J
So
it's
a
it's
just
this
warp
surface,
that's
going
from
a
slight
angle
to
vertical,
as
it
goes
east
to
west
and
the
interior
is
the
same.
So
the
interior.
When
you
approach
the
front
door,
it's
not
a
vertical
surface
at
the
front
door.
It's
and
maybe
you
can
you
see
in
there
David
and
one
of
the
views
may
be
the
elevation.
Anyway,
it's
a
it's
a
it's
a
cool
little
feature
and
the
client
really
initially
thought.
Well
gee.
You
guys
provided
us
with
a
really
plain
front
elevation.
J
Can
you
do
something
to
it
so
where
we
started
to
accentuate
the
front,
elevation
was
that
at
the
at
the
door
and
then
just
the
the
breaking
down
of
the
the
plaster
into
these
into
these
vertical
rectangles
we've.
Also,
these
are
somewhat
older.
There's
another
feature
at
the
far
left
hand
side
where
there's
there's
a
there's,
a
toilet
room
there
with
a
window,
and
so
we've
put
an
additional
screen
element
in
front
of
that
window.
A
J
E
E
C
It
appears
that
there
is
berming
up
against
the
structure
itself,
not
along
the
garage
but
further
back
to
the
towards,
like
I,
guess,
the
laundry
room
and
in
that
area.
So
even
though
the
elevation
it
almost
looks
like
there's
berming
against
the
garage,
you
know
along
the
North
elevation.
That's
that's
graded
around
there,
but
the
only
berming
occurs.
C
J
So
we
start
out
at
the
garage
door
at
zero
on
that
North
elevation
and
then
it
is
moving
up
until
we
get
to
about
40
inches
and
that
40
inches
occurs
at
the
backside
of
the
garage.
So
it's
it's
starting
at
zero
on
the
east
and
along
that
edge
of
the
garage
it's
kind
of
running.
Naturally,
uphill.
We
do
have
a
little
mechanical
unit
in
there
that
we're
flattening
out
an
area
for
that
mechanical
unit,
but
it
is
yeah.
It
is
sloping
uphill
David.
J
J
J
J
Was
at
one
time
and
since
this
was
submitted,
we
now
have
ax
to
that
little
court.
That's
between
the
garage
and
the
house
through
a
sliding
glass
door,
and
it's
it's
included
in
this
drawing
so
there's
a
sliding
glass
door
from
the
interior
into
that
into
that
small
courtyard.
Between
the
garage
and
the
house.
We
did
have
a
set
of
stairs
back
there
at
one
time
to
get
down
in
and
do
maintenance
in
there,
but
I
think
we've
removed
those
yeah,
so
we've
removed
those.
A
J
Did
the
homeowners
is
horticulturist
and
we'll
be
doing
some
planting
in
there?
That's
probably
very
special
to
him,
probably
a
bunch
of
different
types
of
succulents
and
things,
and
since
he's
going
to
be
doing
it
himself,
I'm
sure
he'll
provide
a
provision
for
forgetting
to
each
and
every
every
plant
in
there.
But
I
anticipate
that
it's
going
to
be
a
wonderful
little
kind
of
microclimate
in
there
that
yeah.
We
were
very
special
for
them
coming
and
going
through
that
that
little
bridge
to
the
garage.
C
So
Lance,
wherever
we
see
in
the
site,
plan
they're
kind
of
the
beige
left,
you
know
clear
areas
that
would
be
the
wildflower
mix
in
those
areas
yeah
and
then
the
only
other
comment
was
I
noticed
on
the
east
elevation.
There's.
No,
it
looks
like
it
might
need
some
landscaping
in
there
just
to
buffer
it
between
the
house
next
door
or
some
small
trees
or
something
on
that
elevation.
Was
there
a
reason
there
was
no
planting
I.
Think.
J
Tom,
the
reason
we
we
kept
it
fairly
clear
is
we're.
Gonna
need
one
access
point
for
the
pool,
guy,
the
gardener
and
just
getting
around
the
side
of
the
house.
We
can't
really
do
it
that
effectively
on
the
west
side,
just
because
we're
uphill
and
we're
tending
to
use
the
bowl
there's
a
lot
more
there,
and
there
was
a
lot
of
things
going
on
on
this
lower
side.
We
needed
some
detention
area
because
it
is
the
lope
we
needed
to
have,
as
I
said,
just
access
through
there,
but
I'm
sure.
J
At
the
end
of
the
day,
the
one
thing
I
would
like
to
see
is:
is
the
base
of
that
block
wall,
augmented
with
rock
and
just
inert
stuff.
That
then,
as
you
know,
we've
got
a
good
deal
of
water
coming
down
off
that
roof
and
we're
going
to
tend
to
have
a
very
maybe
a
small,
little
area
there,
that
there
is
opportunities
for
things
to
grow
and
I'm
sure
they
will
so
we're
catching
all
the
water
off
that
large
roof.
C
D
J
D
J
J
J
Going
to
need
to
do
some
provisions
right
now.
We
have
the
pool
as
a
rectangle
and
when
we
create
these
rectangular
pools,
we're
typically
putting
in
an
automatic
pool
cover,
and
then
we
found
that
the
building
and
Safety
Department
doesn't
really
recognize
those
as
a
barrier.
So
there's
probably
going
to
be
some
of
additional
fencing
at
the
property
line
on
the
north
there
of
some
sort
and
these
really
natural
these
natural
settings.
It's
it's
it's
one
of
the
things
that
we'd
struggle
with,
because
they
can
look.
J
As
you
all
know,
they
can
look
so
foreign
to
the
site,
as
somebody
tries
to
you,
know,
kind
of
go
up
and
down
and
keep
this
five-foot
barrier.
So
we're
going
to
try
to
put
it
out
of
sight
of
the
homeowners
and
downhill
found
in
that
natural
Arroyo
down
there
and
still
try
to
maintain
that
city
required
separation.
Okay,.
C
C
J
Will
but
we're
gonna
have
to
do
two
things.
One
we're
gonna
have
to
slope
away
from
their
wall
because
we
don't
want
to.
We
don't
want
to
drive
water
into
their
wall
and
yeah
as
much
as
we
can
mitigate
that
side
yard
wall.
Is
you
know
it's?
It's
not
it's
not
the
architectural
feature
for
the
house,
although,
as
you
see
in
that
elevation
up
above
it,
it
does
have
this
kind
of
nice
long,
linear,
quality
that
turns
into
that
that
front
platter.
So
it's
very
three-dimensional
and
integrated
into
the
end
of
the
project.
J
J
C
E
Was
there
ever
any
consideration?
Looking
at
that
section,
we
were
just
looking
at
to,
instead
of
putting
the
building
wall
right
on
top
of
the
retaining
wall,
to
pull
the
retaining
wall
to
the
east
two
or
three
feet,
to
give
just
kind
of
a
stair
step
there
and
an
opportunity
so
for
some
planting
to
be
kind
of
on
multiple
levels.
There.
J
No,
we
didn't
consider
that
what
we
were
considering
was
to
to
minimize
the
footprint
you
know
we
also
have
we
have
a
budget
and
we're
trying
to
we're
trying
to
use
these
stem
walls
as
a
continuation
of
the
perimeter
edge
wall.
So
insofar
as
we
could
keep
everything
assisted
essential
and
using
these
block
walls
as
the
foundation
stem
walls,
we
were
doing
it
so
rather
than
having
a
retaining
wall
in
the
footings.
Inside
of
that,
we
take
those
down
and
use
the
footings
underneath
those
and
just
do
one
single
move.
B
E
To
compliment
Lance
I
think
it's
a
great
design.
It's
a
very
interesting
use
of
different
materials.
It's
creative
for
the
neighborhood
I
love
the
boulders,
creating
the
separation
between
the
street
in
the
house,
I
think
separating
the
garage
from
the
house
and
having
that
little
glass
breeze
will
make
a
wonderful
experience.
As
you
enter
the
house
from
the
garage
so
I.
The
only
comment
I
would
have
is:
can
the
air
conditioning
equipment
that's
shown
in
that
side
yard
possibly
be
pulled
somewhat
up
towards
the
driveway,
maybe
where
you're
showing
a
creosote?
E
C
I
think
I,
like
the
solution
that
Lance
has
come
up
with
I
think
my
only
concern
again
is
with
member
Jake
ways.
You
know
how
that
a
see
that
side
area
is
going
to
be
handled.
I
would
like
to
see
some
additional
plantings
in
that
area
such
as
creosote
I
could
understand
where
maybe
there
doesn't
need
to
be
a
lot
of
height
but
I
think
some
height.
Then
there
would
just
to
soften
that
edge
of
the
building.
D
A
So
I
think
that
is,
these
are
a
couple
of
minor
things,
but
the
security
sort
of
fencing
design
that
gets
added
into
the
project
should
be
reviewed
by
staff,
the
location
of
the
trash
enclosure.
It
seems
like
they
already
have
it,
but
the
exhibits
need
to
be
updated
and
then
the
shifting
of
the
mechanical
location
so
that
it
could
be
better
wedged
into
the
existing
landscape.
An
additional
planting
on
the
east
side
will
be
the
five
comments
that
would
go
along
with
what
I'm
making
another
motion
to
approve
this
project.