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Address Info: 1150 O Street, P.O. Box 758, Greeley, CO 80632 | Phone:
(970) 400-4225
| Fax: (970) 336-7233 | Email:
egesick@weld.gov
| Official: Esther Gesick -
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20053249.tiff
Lifebridge PUD Page 1 of 2 align Carol Harding From: Archer, Rick[rarcher@spike.dor.state.co.us] ' h1 IOEcx1 Sent: Tuesday, October 18, 2005 9:25 AM To: Dave Long; Glenn Vaad; Rob Masden; ill Jerke; Mike Geile Cc: Carol Harding Subject: Lifebridge PUD Good morning, My intent is to keep this brief so I will just jump right into our concerns. My family and 1 do not oppose a Lifebridge campus,and are even excited about some of their plans. We are not wild about the height of the buildings,but are resigned to that occurring. We invite pedestrian and bicycle inner-connectivity through green belts and parks. We moved to the Elms primarily because the safety the neighborhood offered our children,Joshua 6 years and Cailey 4 years. We moved from an affluent Thornton neighborhood which was subjected to inner-connectivity with an adjacent development. As a resident of the neighborhood we experienced immediate difficulties with the connecting roadway. Vehicle traffic easily tripled,speeds(posted 25 mph) increased significantly,and neighborhood problems developed as a result of residents yelling at speeding vehicles,and in some cases even throwing things at the speeding cars. At the time we were Thornton residents I was also a Thornton Police officer. As a police department we experienced a marked increase in calls for service in the inner-connected neighborhoods. We experienced increased traffic complaints,hit and run accidents,vehicle and auto pedestrian accidents and criminal mischief reports where citizens' lawns and landscapes were driven over by vehicles from adjacent neighborhoods. We also experienced an increase of neighborhood disputes which were caused by the residents yelling and throwing things at cars speeding through the neighborhood. As a department we saw what appeared to be rational adults engaging in criminal behavior due to the increased risks to their children,way of life,and property, caused by cars speeding through one development to get to another. We had data to indicate an increase in property crimes as well. Subsequent to the inner-connectivity we experienced significant increases in burglaries, vehicle thefts,car break-ins,and even sexual assaults. This is not to say the inner connected roadway directly caused these increases,but officers are familiar with the fact that areas that have multiple entrances and exits are more appealing to criminal elements because they are not as easily noticed because of increased "transient"traffic, as well as suspects having more than one way to flee. The neighborhood we lived in was not unique to these incidents. Anytime we opened an established development up to inner-connectivity with a new development we experienced similar problems. Another striking effect of the inner-connectivity in our old neighborhood was the lack of"community". Children did not play in the front yards, families did not go for walks, and neighbors did not socialize across the streets as we had become accustom to. Our children, as well as most others were relegated to playing in our fenced in back yard so we didn't have to worry about them running out into a dangerous street,thus creating an isolating effect. In the Elms,the community feeling exists today. At any time through out the day or night families can be seen walking the neighborhoods with children on bikes, razor scooters,skate boards,and skates. Children play hide and seek, street hockey, and all sorts of neighborhood games. Neighbors stop on the sidewalks,streets,and green belts and actually talk to one another. During the summer there are constantly family and children oriented block parties. This is a safe neighborhood where my children are allowed to go "stop sign to stop sign"and even "around the block"without concern for traffic. In my professional experiences as a police officer as well as in my personal experiences living in a neighborhood subjected 2005-3249 10/18/2005 Lifebridge PUD Page 2 of 2 to inner-connectivity I have experienced the negative effects of utilizing roadways to inner-connect developments. I implore you,please look at the negative effects to 261 homes,most with children that will result from connecting Pearl Howlett or any other roadway. This proposition will negate the positive community feeling that exists today in the Elms. On my block alone,Victor Dr.,there are 12 children that would be forced to change their way of life if the roadway is connected. Now children walk home from the bus stops,across Pearl Howlett in safety. If inner-connectivity occurs,this will be the most dangerous area in the entire neighborhood,and it would cut our development in half. Again, I ask for our entire development that inner-connectivity not be allowed. Sincerely, Rick, Lisa, Joshua,and Cailey Archer 11691 Victor Dr. Longmont,CO 80504 720 652-6517 archers4Pa att.net 10/18/2005 ..;)hx.kt I PLEASE SIGN IN IF YOU ARE HERE FOR AMPZ-1004 - LIF IDGE EXHIBIT NAME: ADDRESS: #1 �� tli e c 7 S .3 fl{ You & , l L� , in„,, rs• Liq q2 Si • TlhGIaer /,/ C7 G�J d✓ela n ( 44 'rim cApy,5 9e J•„.\ l v'i-vs r k i`-'I 1L' \2S / 0,-,s„,1 . (a Tod 5 41144,,,-r /5473 r6c,e vi I- I) Lrr..s....-� eon)Y -5iC c /l/o/(/? r y i37Z /CE/ E /7r'.& /7/0 lr•v!-y-- %G'/�3 .s icS I / uAME LEISF 2686 PE AIL L. 147,-.I.)4.-er`r k� L.acn6.47- Ct, ooco/ l / /. ILO‘14C7 0)- v._ le_ S.; florti>Ems;-&,r)2) Lnaib-,ricti SOTS-MI \-).4 sf- is /c (7r- .2 Fr4v, ( '4. 2c, 6,,,../ ) / CG11 9 iAmati S )-.l IQ4-J54t r icc `tic A14"d y ,e,- h,CciC) I.Ni(tit r t t k- I[ (P=li IA,- &c (..iTi4/1i 31+ (� . &i.x —' ));4- c6 ,v/leivvS / cc2c &ruy7 C( 7 / �;�%(z/ Eco,IA -, - le( 1lcri i Ma ' ,,, -1k d�s'c� u �� ne. y Edit r G�.��n�" � f q i 4 eW U1 f39 fit` goriu al 6.kf t &DID er ,03:44_ tit .,—. -0 B ; 1-3;,..-e -ki C-: V' . I > ,• c\e-.L' Vc.AC i6 1.if > e.. V L_, 'C SC' i M,Cl ms,0i I -001101 11 C 1 VC 14;• a! Lci4, (_ tit sCJe aw� )1..5L'`l PLEASE SIGN IN IF YOU ARE HERE FOR AMPZ-1004 - LIFEBRIDGE NAME: ADDRESS: ,ntCt nlOs,c1 10 r`) 1'! . Y`''c=/Y 1?-1) Lofti ioiC 404-4-4 (O b O rea r ( Md tu2&tt FA t‘kt-rizc tilt (e, ,9".1)1 v PLEASE SIGN IN IF YOU ARE HERE FOR AMPZ-1004 - LIFEBRIDGE NAME: ADDRESS: / 719 2z/VI-' / -- tek �9 ' ' .haCdo7/l llG9, v, e ra/c° �GL )- U!✓fe- l7or/ 7 2c)@-/ �y Esther Gesick From: Peter Gries [peterhaysgries@yahoo.com] ent: Monday, November 07, 2005 2:32 PM fo: Esther Gesick Subject: open records request Dear Ester, Please consider this e-mail to be a formal open documents request for the following e- mails dating back to 2000: 1) All e-mails (sent and received) between Commissioner Glenn Vaad and Bruce Grinnell, Reggie Golden, Dale Bruns, Barb Brunk, and Dave Williams. 2) All Glenn Vaad e-mails (sent and received) that include within their text body the words Lit eBridge, LBCC, Fairview, Longview, Elms, or Meadowvale. Thank you for your prompt attention to this matter. I will drive up to Greeley tomorrow afternoon and hope to be able to look over the e-mails then. 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Deleted Items (390, IA Sent Items Lid Search Folders " n Sn Wit. »Q a,i f i stab.. ., ® { �U]inb t L r .c�R u urtitled-Faint __ .. .... _ ®7 la 8 eZ auk i;,, 4:39 F71 Inbox -Microsoft Outlook(Logging Enabled) [Jfrlf^1 File Edit VIew Go'=Tools Actpgs '.Nalp "` ', _ ' :.a -. Type a question for help New - y _,." { yReply Rzptv_ko All. For d SendiReceive, ,F nd `*x Type a co ta=t to find Look fors Fairview - Search In• Deleted Items;Draftslnbox,Outbox; Find Now {Dear -Options- X New Mail Message Fav_mte.Fdeers, ;,,r ,_�,-^. --- Inbox . . i Inbox (7) Eat:t;❑ 9l From ;Subject (Received I Size _.?.Unread Mae For Follow Up No items found I)Sent Items All Mad Folders _, __ l Mailbox-Glenn Vaad ej Deleted Items (120. 421 Drafts LID Inbox (7) L4 Junk E-mail LA Outbox LA Sent Items 4 Search Folders J Archive Folders iT Deleted Items (390. LI Sent Items Search Folders 117 .xa w d .•des /; start i Inhc,.. Nbosnft cut. 'f untitled-Faint ! 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Lj Sent Items All Mad Folders .. t Mailbox-Glenn Vaad Deleted Items (120 421 Drafts l Inbox (7) 1,4 Junk E-mail LA Outbox L21 Sent Items J la Search Folders di Archive Folders Deleted Items (390 Sent Items L.4 Search Folders Task ;4' start ® t Inbox t ticrnsnit ur it untitled-Faint g7 Q Q <J� tr-��_ 4:41 FM > > > PA Inbox -Microsoft Outlook(Logging Enabled) CIN ...Type a question for help _ 3': :1_13 W s7s„" d eak, Type a contact to find commui Lookfor:z Elms - SearchIn- Deleted Items;Drafts;Inbox;Outbox; FII NQW clear :Optier's X: Bayarkdi ldets Print(\ti,Printsrvr01VCM01-H4050) 6 Inbox (7) ® t l p ��From Subject !Received I Size �� i .i Unread Mai , a Bruce Grinnell Elms neighborhood letter Mon 10131/2005 9:16... 98 KB For Paton, LiA Sent Items a Archer,Rick Lifebridge PUD Tue 10/1812005 9:29... 17 KB AllMadFs .,_. 31.Ct.1 Mailbox-Glenn Vaad e] Deleted Items (120 L a Drafts Inbox (7) Li Junk E-mail LA Outbox LA Sent Items J La,Search Folders 4 Archive Folders 0 Deleted Items (390` La Sent Items Search Folders ari r ". a$= TEL., =SAO 'r3 Start NJ it NJ lob t0 resell-r ut untitled-Pant 7 ItO] A =C;� '•..- 4:4.2 PM Inbox -Microsoft Outlook(Logging Enabled) d IX FGe edit View Go T ols Lion& "rHelp ". „ type a question for halo ,39 New f.-4-.," X Re v_, "'Kepi koAll .For and ( Se d Re eive - end Tppe a contact to find . .' New Mail Message Look for' Meadowvale - Search In• Deleted Items;Drafts;[nbox,Outbox;3 Find Now Clear Options• X a Favorite Folders '{ , Inbox C Inbox (7) ®ii! D 91 From !Subject I Received I Size I? Unread Mad _ for F Aw UP No Items found. L Sent Items All Mail Folders c�'•r1 Mailbox-Glenn Vaad j7 Deleted Items (120 a Drafts L Inbox (7) LA Junk E-mail LA Outbox Lj Sent Items - ±1 is Search Folders CJ Archive Folders Deleted Items (390 Li Sent Items a Search Folders nj: r C Cotacts. * P 4 Tasks '_ S + start ® ce; tgInb M1liuesaft out untitl?d-Faint 1 ®9 A 9 'F( ®�++„� " . 44k'Ph7 Page 1 of 1 Glenn Vaad From: Bruce Grinnell [BGrinnell@Ibcc.org] Sent: Monday, October 31, 2005 9:16 AM To: Reggie Golden; dalebruns@frii.com; Rick Rusaw; barbb@dgmllc.com; JAGCONSTRUCT@aol.com; martin@espoons.com Subject: Elms neighborhood letter Attachments: Elms neighborhood letter 2005_10_25.pdf Attached is the latest Elms neighborhood letter, Reflecting Light into the Darkness, Bruce Grinnell email:bgrinnell@lbcc.org cell: 303.956.9300 4C Corporation,a non-profit supporting organization of LifeBridge 2602 Clover Basin Drive Suite B Longmont CO 80501 PH 303.532.2721 FX 303.678.0311 • 11/7/2005 LifeBridge Rezoning Fact Sheet As you may have heard, last Tuesday, October 18,the Weld Planning Commission approved the amended LifeBridge rezoning,AmPZ1004. There were two significant changes to the original rezoning that had been approved two years earlier: 1) To increase the value of the proposed Fairview development (owned by several LifeBridge administrators)just west of Longview, a train crossing has been shifted west from CR 3.5 to Fairview St This has forced a northeast rerouting of CR 3.5 along the south side of the train tracks to now connect up with the intersection of CR 5 and CR 26 at the northwest corner of the Elms.This rerouting in our direction increases the likelihood that traffic will cut through the Elms (along Ashton and Riverview and past the mail center)to get to CR 5.5 and out to SH 119. 2) They now have two,rather than one, area in which they are permitted to build 75 foot tall general commercial(C2)buildings. Otherwise, the 313 acre plan is basically unchanged. Its massive scale remains difficult to grasp. 1. "10 to 20"general commercial(C2)buildings totaling 1,000,000 square feet, as well as a 5,000 odd car parking lot.This"includ[es] auditoriums"up to 75 feet tall, seating 6,000 in one and unspecified thousands in another. The Twin Peaks Regional Mall in Longmont only has 558,314 square feet. 2. Another 603,000 square feet of residential commercial(Cl) development for retail and commercial use,number of buildings "TED."The Cl and C2 portions of the LifeBridge development together will be over three tirnev the eize of Twin PealCc Mfnl1 3. Over 300 residential units,including estate, single family, duplexes and triplexes,as well as an unspecified number of units (several hundred more?) for a seniors "village."1 There have been numerous irregularities surrounding this rezoning,which is by far the largest in the history of the county. • Weld is currently being sued for failing to properly post notice about the first Planning Committee Hearing in 2003. • County Commissioner Bill Jerke moved the location of Tuesday's hearing from SW Weld near us up to Greeley. Only a dozen odd homeowners were able to attend. • The Planning Commission originally listed the LifeBridge rezoning as a"consent"item, which would have prevented even those few homeowners from even speaking. • Chapter 26 of the Weld County Code's"Mixed Use Development"(MUD)Plan(see http://colocode.com/weld.htnil) designates the field for"residential" development,but the Planning Dept.,the Planning Commission, and the County Commissioners have all approved an application dominated by Cl and C2 zoning. County Commissioner Glenn Vaad,who represents our Weld District 2,is a LifeBridge leader. Although he has recused himself from Commission votes on the LifeBridge application,he has publicly spok m out in favor of the LifeBridge application and against the Elms.2 Personal comment If the seniors area is a just a`village,"what should the entire 20,000 person development be called? Anything over 2,000 is technically a city. 2 See"Vasd in Eye of Storm,"Longmont Da%Times-Cali 12 July 2003. Your Choice America is a democracy,and as citizens and taxpayers we have rights and options—if we decide to pursue them. 1. Referendum.We have the right by law to gather signatures on a petition that would require that the rezoning be put to a popular vote,just like C,D, and 3A on our current ballots. Overturning the rezoning in this way would require 1) gathering about 2,500 signatures within the month following the County Commissioner's Nov 9 meeting, and 2)winning the popular vote,probably in the fall of 2006. This would be challenging,but not impossible given the injustice of the tax burden the rezoning places on Weld taxpayers (paving CR 26 east and west and CR 5 north of the LifeBridge development alone will likely cost$3 million), as well as the challenge to Weld property rights posed by redefining residential ` zoning to allow 75 foot tall auditoriums.And there are a lot of people in SW Weld who are fed up with Greeley... 2. Lawsuit. Continue to pursue legal action against the irregularities that have plagued this rezoning. 3. Incorporation(become a town). The lowest unit of government has ultimate authority over land use, so becoming our own town is the only way to 100% ensure that Pearl Howlett is never connected through to LifeBridge, or that CR 5.5 does not become a four-lane highway. BBC Consulting did a study for us on this issue two years ago, and found that because of the small size of the town, a small sales tax would pay for its expenses(primarily police and a part time administrator).No increased property taxes would be necessary. 4. Annexation. Becoming part of Firestone,Mead, or Longmont would put our fate in the bands of a closer and smaller government likely to be more responsive to our needs than. Greeley is.But our property taxes will likely increase, although we might be able to minimize that increase by becoming a special district. Given that increased traffic could reduce our property values by 15%, a small tax increase may well be worth it. 5. Do nothing. Take our chances and hope that 5-10 years from now the traffic surges from this 20,000 person development will not impact our property values or our children's safety. The choice is yours. 1-4 will require time and/or money, and should only be undertaken if there is support from the majority of the neighborhood. So talk with your family and your neighbors and decide. Failing to make a decision now amounts to choosing#5—and forfeiting the right to complain later. Please let us know your decision within the next two weeks. • Peter Grits,peterhaysgriesc@vahoo.com • Duane Leise, djleise@comcast.net, 2 Page 1 of 1 Glenn Vaad From: Dale Tenny [safetyrxguy@peakpeak.com] Sent: Sunday, October 16, 2005 6:48 PM To: Glenn Vaad Subject: County Road 7 vs. County Road 5.5 So you pro-business, anti-consumer "elected officials of the people" want to enhance your business/development support by turning CR5.5 into a four-lane highway? Why not CR 3 -- or even CR 1 -- or wouldn't LifeBridge "church" approve???? (We understand that elders and other LifeBridge members own other properties in the area of the church development, so of course, we understand your reluctance to give other area residents -- except LifeBridge church -- a break.) We will remember your names in order to lend support to your opposition if you should run for any other political offices in this area. Dale and Natalie Tenny 11/7/2005 Lifebridge PUD Page 1 of 2 Glenn Vaad From: Archer, Rick[rarcher@spike.dor.state.co.us] Sent: Tuesday, October 18, 2005 9:25 AM To: Dave Long; Glenn Vaad; Rob Masden; Bill Jerke; Mike Geile Cc: Carol Harding Subject: Lifebridge PUD Good morning, My intent is to keep this brief so I will just jump right into our concerns. My family and I do not oppose a Lifebridge campus, and are even excited about some of their plans. We are not wild about the height of the buildings,but are resigned to that occurring. We invite pedestrian and bicycle inner-connectivity through green belts and parks. We moved to the Elms primarily because the safety the neighborhood offered our children,Joshua 6 years and Cailey 4 years. We moved from an affluent Thornton neighborhood which was subjected to inner-connectivity with an adjacent development. As a resident of the neighborhood we experienced immediate difficulties with the connecting roadway. Vehicle traffic easily tripled,speeds(posted 25 mph)increased significantly, and neighborhood problems developed as a result of residents yelling at speeding vehicles,and in some cases even throwing things at the speeding cars. At the time we were Thornton residents I was also a Thornton Police officer. As a police department we experienced a marked increase in calls for service in the inner-connected neighborhoods. We experienced increased traffic complaints,hit and run accidents,vehicle and auto pedestrian accidents and criminal mischief reports where citizens'lawns and landscapes were driven over by vehicles from adjacent neighborhoods. We also experienced an increase of neighborhood disputes which were caused by the residents yelling and throwing things at cars speeding through the neighborhood. As a department we saw what appeared to be rational adults engaging in criminal behavior due to the increased risks to their children,way of life,and property, caused by cars speeding through one development to get to another. We had data to indicate an increase in property crimes as well. Subsequent to the inner-connectivity we experienced significant increases in burglaries, vehicle thefts,car break-ins,and even sexual assaults. This is not to say the inner connected roadway directly caused these increases,but officers are familiar with the fact that areas that have multiple entrances and exits are more appealing to criminal elements because they are not as easily noticed because of increased "transient"traffic, as well as suspects having more than one way to flee. The neighborhood we lived in was not unique to these incidents. Anytime we opened an established development up to inner-connectivity with a new development we experienced similar problems. Another striking effect of the inner-connectivity in our old neighborhood was the lack of"community". Children did not play in the front yards,families did not go for walks,and neighbors did not socialize across the streets as we had become accustom to. Our children, as well as most others were relegated to playing in our fenced in back yard so we didn't have to worry about them running out into a dangerous street,thus creating an isolating effect. In the Elms,the community feeling exists today. At any time through out the day or night families can be seen walking the neighborhoods with children on bikes,razor scooters,skate boards,and skates. Children play hide and seek, street hockey, and all sorts of neighborhood games. Neighbors stop on the sidewalks,streets,and green belts and actually talk to one another. During the summer there are constantly family and children oriented block parties. This is a safe neighborhood where my children are allowed to go "stop sign to stop sign"and even "around the block"without concern for traffic. In my professional experiences as a police officer as well as in my personal experiences living in a neighborhood subjected 11/7/2005 Lifebridge PUD Page 2 of 2 to inner-connectivity I have experienced the negative effects of utilizing roadways to inner-connect developments. I implore you,please look at the negative effects to 261 homes,most with children that will result from connecting Pearl Howlett or any other roadway. This proposition will negate the positive community feeling that exists today in the Elms. On my block alone,Victor Dr.,there are 12 children that would be forced to change their way of life if the roadway is • connected. Now children walk home from the bus stops,across Pearl Howlett in safety. If inner-connectivity occurs,this will be the most dangerous area in the entire neighborhood,and it would cut our development in half. Again,I ask for our entire development that inner-connectivity not be allowed. Sincerely, Rick, Lisa,Joshua,and Cailey Archer 11691 Victor Dr. Longmont,CO 80504- 720 652-6517 archers4@att.net 11/7/2005 BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS' SIGN POSTING CERTIFICATE THE LAST DAY TO POST THE SIGN IS ( c.i. 2 r('o) THE SIGN SHALL BE POSTED ADJACENT TO AND VISIBLE FROM A PUBLICALLY MAINTAINED ROAD RIGHT- OF-WAY. IN THE EVENT THE PROPERTY BEING CONSIDERED FOR A SPECIAL REVIEW IS NOT ADJACENT TO A PUBLICALLY MAINTAINED ROAD RIGHT-OF-WAY, THE DEPARTMENT OF PLANNING SERVICES SHALL POST ONE SIGN IN THE MOST PROMINENT PLACE ON THE PROPERTY AND POST A SECOND SIGN AT THE POINT AT WHICH THE DRIVEWAY (ACCESS DRIVE) INTERSECTS A PUBLICALLY MAINTAINED ROAD RIGHT-OF-WAY. I, Jacqueline Hatch, HEREBY CERTIFY UNDER PENA TI OF PERJURY THAT THE SIGN WAS POSTED ON THE PROPERTY AT LEAST T IFTEE AYS BEFORE THE BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS HEARING FOR /InnF -/:.-v IN THE AGRICULTURAL ZONE DISTRICT. J - -MCC4- Jacqueli e Hatch Signature of Person Posting Sign STATE OF COLORADO ) ss. COUNTY OF WELD The foregoing instrument was subscribed and sworn to me thisic day of all..0 J , 2005. WITNESS my hand and official seal. OTA$9�..> Notary Public • • 'SF My Commission Expires: EXHIBIT 14 t Si #Ism F {jj i - # a \ f ° , :l Y l i mar: 'IF r' f ea ' '1Va le t,-,/,'/_., "r ��� 7 F ki �Y�r ; � "t.,..1 ty t F s 3YT yj-- 1 : ' , 5 12 i Longs ew 'f 'V �',` Iri i I - r 1 v 1�i�1' i { rte` I`' ,/,_ ::,,4, >,. — I 1I I- . Li - n � r- 1.- 'L Vt§tia G© fit err-cia f ' -, it,- 't .iLI i ilkwsi 7 ONGMONT --- ,r : , • = Sign Posting Locations C] NN U G \\N I _ J i \ E / yfpt #, Sn,`-�+ ' 2ry t 411 +;t 4 , , x ,' d ,iL�t° ✓ v „sif *,.b-k ra � � ,,,.4.1.- e tl ' a++tv . 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"1''' f t,, �� 'r ; ^` ; THIS PROPERTY WILL BE HELD AT \,;:', ./0•.'', "1,, kr r ,,, r t, t" c �3P!" � IS r�..- ! y..ns j¢13. , ,v ,�f'• i 1 ' 5. +� '.7 , ,. ' r i''' % ! ,n 'r NAME �'+v .„` a x v 11 }{{{ :;"':':„1,:,....2:.,::'''.7.4'.',-,-;"2'7-.7" �~ rt r ,rky t f � ✓ � REQ0EST f ` -w +--- ..;.. a ... 1� wl 'x x { ,, i FOR MORE INFORMATION GALL 1 �, , i'� r WELD COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF ,, / :4 PLANNINGSERVICES 117 \ 1, � ° t I � t (979)353 &l0O ezt. 3540 f� ) 7, .. . V 111 ,, / 'FF , 1 , • ,N 'am>;', +x a 'ncx s. t a sopz.�Sa''n -,-,'�..td ;p-0, . 2'" ra °-` ` .°.% " d "!°',r.r�.r^ +a.;j ¢ a�+WRY..-v#r^b.^°`s vi, `vtv z . .9** "' r v,'^ d*'t,,v..:e , v..> " X'+'+4^3"JvvH5J.a J.-x ,wx..»ro r r �?' ar n^r� k"-re +a*; ,'°':-..,k -�,,y.,,{h :.''',E0 }'t?"""q,�s+ro9Y:,. ;"t'..,- ,+lt1F%rd C'4'fW'ro'°,. 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I ti %. c! 5 it `q"- Exploring , ,. . • - 7 the world of a ,� I ,f{ te e A NARNIA ____ , . • �. d n 0 EXHIBIT Who is Aslan? Who was C.S. Lewis? U ' # OD9 Will the movie compare to the books? www.lbcc.org II I Volume 5, Issue 4 Spiritual Journeys 2 By Krista Petty Communication Arts DirectorH out-dated, antiquated way of thinking. It at Lure Bridge Christian Church can help you build a foundation for your experiences" to stand on. Standing in line at the grocery store, a new I was sad about their answers. It showed me Your hands: Faith can be greatly deepenell magazine, Personal Journey,caught my eye.It was that people must be longing for an "experience" when lived it out in practical ways—not simply in the spot normally occupied by soap opera of faith, because that is all it discussed. It said "theorized" about. God's love shows up in real magazines (No, I don't normally buy that,but I nothing of truth or eternity.I used to think that ways when we give of ourselves for others.Why admit to reading the covers!).I found this a little people went on spiritual quests to find out what not sign up for a service opportunity coming up odd and interesting,so I did what was expected this is true and what happens after this life is over. during A Time to Serve? See what God's love in American consumer-I made an impulse buy! If you are on a journey to "experience" action is like. After the groceries were put away, I sat down something spiritual, it may come in different Your heart:Yes,God gives us experiences,too. for a quick read. For $1.99 I hadn't bought a forms other than the ideas expressed by the Those experiences are called peace and hope in journey, it was a roller coaster read! There was people who make soap opera magazines.A deep- times of despair; joy and contentment in times everything from explaining your psychic powers rooted faith can come from God through his son, of celebration and need;and prayer and worship to faithbooking(spiritual scrapbooking).Stories Jesus Christ.And faith in him can be discovered, in times of connection with God. about Jesus were right next to a piece about deepened,even experienced in your head,hands, The grocery store magazine was right about getting rid of God to become a happy atheist. and heart. one thing:faith is a journey,both personally and Though I disagree with almost everything in You head-God has provided evidences for us in a community.That's why God sent Jesus,gave it, I didn't get angry over what I was reading. It to explore the truth about Jesus.The Bible and a us the church,and each other.Together,we can made me realize that spirituality and the quest book called The Case for Christ are great starting explore truth, share ourselves in service, and to find answers about God are on the rise, but points on this journey. Seeking truth is not an experience God's love. INSIDE THIS ISSUE `� • A Time to Serve! 3 Exploring Narnla Read how this special annual community C.S.Lewis classic hits the silver x ' • set-vice event has grown to serving more screen.What can we learn from ^' agencies! these ulnas and this author. / Iti-; i ((jf/ .vim. ,. I . - yam,. Movies with Your Mind mow r" 6 Student lmput and Ladder?h tear: The Case for Christmas up to help students learn how to take even i hought captive. ' 1 1 Who was m the manger? Lee Strobel 11 shares how his search tot the truth about Christmas began. The Bridge at LifeBridge Christian Church is Our mission is to lead people in a growing ' published quarterly and is part of the ministry relationship with Jesus Christ. LIFEBRIDGE of LifeBridge Christian Church. 10345 Ute Hwy., Longmont,CO cnatsrrnn CHURCH I 303-776-2927•www.lbcc.org •We believe in God,the creator of all things. We invite you to worship with us. thebridge@lbcc.org He is eternal, loving,merciful,and just. LifeBridge a Longmont Communication Arts Director: •We believe that Jesus Christ died on the 10345 Ute Highway,Longmont,CO Krista Petty:kpetty@Ibcc.org cross for our sins and rose from the dead. Saturdays 4:30&6 p.m. Graphics Coordinator: Maria Hauser Sundays 8, 9:30& 11 a.m. Communication Assistant:Cheryl Peterson •We believe that the Holy Spirit is our guide LifeBridge a Tri-Towns Contributing Writers 8 Editors: Dr.Joe and comforter. He empowers believers to Legacy Elementary School Grana,Chris Steele, Eric Farwell, Dan Gilliam, fulfill God's vision for their lives. CR 18&Eagle Bvld.,Frederick,CO Laura Hargis, Debby Davis, Barb Smith Sundays 9:30 a.m. •We believe that the Bible is God's message to Student&Children's worship and classes For corporate sponsor information contact his people.It is divinely inspired,the supreme available during each hour. Cheryl Peterson at 303-776-2927,ext.210, cpeterson@lbcc.org. and final authority for faith and life. Learn more about us at www.lbcc.org 2 LifeBridge Christian Church - 303-776-2927 nt key: r ;fit, µ 44 It's been real =� 'g 4tig ✓ "orb -=7, *c-"'''' y� vet f ,�" i y,T�< children of ail s ,n. F fit' into 29 different languages and ranks second only to n`-• Harry Potter in book sales. ---'— The Chronicle., of Narnia by r. .- •, - - "������ tt' C.S. Lewis now takes another L step in sharing the legend of _� ' s s mss, a magical fantasy land called 's - - - t Narnia. The first book in ►a .,:;c-7.:.-7.\---.N.\-41...________1i �� this set of classic literature will he introduced in theaters � z r all across the country on •A>,. �'� � December 9. +r '3Ex lorin ,• > x, g � , iN A . i\ \ . - . .1 Walt Disney Studios and Walden Media have taken this beloved classic and shared it with the world in a new medium. But how will the movie compare to the book?According to Outreach Magazine, Asian,the lion Walden Media agreed to involve Lewis'estate in decisions of scripting, casting, and more. Douglas One of the main characters of Gresham, Lewis'stepson and creative and artistic director for the C.S. Lewis company, is a devoted the book and the movie is gsten. Christian who is committed to preserving the integrity of the original writings. He is both feared and loved by the creatures of Narnia and the The special effects of this movie are rumored to rival Lord of the Rings. The creative animation four undeSui f e siblings—Lucy, and Peter Eorthe Susan.and Pc (yes, Asian the lion is animation) and creative special effects are cutting edge. But is that what is For the film.Asian was create d causing such a stir of excitement over this movie? This multi-million dollar blockbuster movie through computerized animation isn't stirring controversy, but rather excitement. People of faith see this movie as an opportunity that wasn't in existence until to explore not only a fun fairy tale for children, but the classic struggles between good and evil, recent years.The film is so the need for redemption, and the resurrection of a savior.When you watch the first book in this technically advanced that dAS series, The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, come to life on the screen, what will you see?Join Ths fl edam Adamson,says. "This film couldn't fivhave been us on the journey of exploring the man who created this fantastic world called Narnia and the made even rive years ago discoveries he challenges us all to make. THE CHRONICLES OF NARNIA,NARNIA,and an book titles characters and locales original therto are trademarks of C.S.Lewis PTE ltd and are used with permission. DISNEY Enterprises.Inc.and Walden Media.LLC.All rights reserved.The views expressed herein do not necessarily reflect those of the Disney Enterprise or Walden Media. N A Fantast(y) is Fairy Tale By Dr. Joe Grano •:' 't v.f -H- 1ty �oImagination often gets thwarted surprised to learn how few imaginative with age. This reality can be true for stories they knew, so he decided to write t Cillt individual an or a society. Who needs down one of them. He scribbled the ee` imagination in a media-driven world?We opening sentences about four children, .i +,.- can see it all! And as one's dreams get Ann, Martin, Rose and Peter who went ."�%_ smashed by the school of hard knocks, to live with an old professor who lived _ survival not hope, is one's focus. by himself in the country. Years later However, there is something he returned to the story and renamed wonderful about fairy tales. When we the children Peter, Susan, Edmund, and It allow ourselves to enter another world,an Lucy;but kept the same setting, thus, the t 3, .m excitement can erupt that takes us from genesis of Narnia. f OS the mundane to the sublime. C. S. Lewis' The Chronicles of Narnia And the book begins... and packages in a snowy woods. Years has the potential to take us to another later, Lewis said "he sat down to see if he world. This fairy tale may be able to On the first morning at Professor Kirke's a could make a story out of tt" teach us realities and truths that our home it rains. The children play hide- The children experience many "real world" is not able to. Perhaps, by an indoors. Lucy hides in an old difficulties in Narnia. Edmund, in going to Narnia we can return to earth Wardrobe. Much to her surprise she particular, is influenced by the Whi refreshed, renewed, and excited with discovers more than clothes and coats. Witch. His siblings attempt to save hii 1 hope. Narnia may rekindle imagination Lucy enters a new world, a land called but the road is difficult. Extraordinary and revive broken dreams. Narnia. The country is under the control help is needed. That help comes from a The Chronicles of Narnia were of the White Witch. Narnian legend majestic lion named Asian. written by Oxford/Cambridge scholar prophesied that the witch's evil magic can Asian "...plays an important role in Clive Staples (C.S.) Lewis in the 1950's. be overthrown only when two sons of every story: in the Magician's Nephew he Although begun and finished at various Adam and two daughters of Eve sit on the gives life to Narnia; in The Lion,the Witch times the seven books of The Chronicles thrones in the castles of Caib Paravel. To and the Wardrobe he defeats the evil of the were published in the following order: hinder this possibility the witch threatens White Witch; and in the final volume that anyone who sees a human but does The Last Battle, Asian concludes the story The Lion,the WitchandtheWardrobe(1950) not tell her will be turned to stone. of Narnia and leads its faithful friends to Prince Caspian (1951) a new world."' Voyage of the Dawn Treader(1952) Always Winter, Asian gives his life for Edmund and The Silver Chair(1953) Never Christmas all of Narnia. Everyone is heartbroken The Horse and His Boy(1954) Lucy escapes Narnia back into the except for the witch. However, Asian The Magician's Nephew(1955) returns to life and spring finally comes in wardrobe. To her surprise no time has P g The Last Battle(1956)' elapsed since her departure from the Narnia! His sacrificial love has made the professor's home. Lucy's siblings find her difference. IThis series has sold an estimated 85-100 story incredulous.However,at a later time million copies among them all. all four enter Narnia.There they encounter Discovering Symbolism talking beavers,beasts,centaurs,as well as Of course, there is plenty of symbolism Into the Wardrobe giants and dwarfs. The spell of the White in Narnia. The fun, however is in Actually the writing of The Lion, The Witch Witch keeps Narnia "always winter and discovering it yourself, not just getting and the Wardrobe began in 1939. The never Christmas." an armchair theorist's opinion. Dialogue context was the outbreak of World War The first creature Lucy meets is a with a significant person about the fil� II. Many children were evacuated from fawn (half man, half goat), Mr. Tumnus. makes for a more fulfilling evening. London to the country to be protected This caricature originated in Lewis' However, a couple important points from the air raids. Four children came imagination when he was 16, the mental should be made. Asian is a Christ-figure. to Lewis' home, the Kilns. Lewis was image was a fawn carrying an umbrella His story does not exactly parallel the 4 LifeBridge Christian Church ----. 303-776-2927 P, , A iii, k h ` J-- _ ask nyM.Y., t s • •t S -::') t` • I Vile- " -Jesus story in the New Testament.Yet, his 1.) Arrived at the came time as Father "' wisdom, love, sacrifice, and resurrection Christmas, �„', "•,.y�i/1 • do reflect the Jesus we read about. 2.)Said he was the son of the Great Emperor According to Christopher Mitchell 3.) Gave himself up for someone else's fault, to . of the Wade Center at Wheaton College be jeered at and killed by wicked people, �� r - t ID >" Wheaton, Illinois, "He [Lewis] saw the 4.) Came to lift again, and ,�c- " . ) ryasa"supposal'rather than allegorical. 5.) Is sometimes spoken of as a lamb (see the -� e's saying to the reader, suppose that the or end of Dawn Trader)?Don't you really know - a t • i a same God who created our world created His name in this world?Think it over, and let .."!.i. 's i " "4 another world of Narnia. What do you me know your answer."tl c• suppose would happen?"10 One can only expect a fantastic movie. 1111 ' Lewis himself wrote to a friend It will be funny, sad, scary, intriguing, and ' A J� y;��^ about this concept. "What might Christ thought provoking. Narnia will touch the _ _ f eyey+ae become like, if there really were a world heart and stimulate the head. Perhaps it '` • ' Y a " a like Narnia and he chose to be incarnate will move the soul as we watch an old, old and die and rise again in that world as he story presented in a unique, stimulating . i"" " ' actually did in ours?"" way. Perhaps through experiencing Narnia • , It appears that Asian in Narnia is our world can enter springtime as Jesus C.S. Lewis' answer to that question!After becomes alive to us! '_ reading about Asian and his friends in �`'{"—»,��.,.. "" • " • Narnia, a little girl named Hila wrote to f f"�°":" - • "" Sources for thit amide: a�w db. - ' Lewis and asked him to tell her Asian's `http.'/ibook,.narma.com/ehronider/a[euaskreanan.htmk r""�'� other name. Lewis responded with clues 'I6`d;'http.//booksnarnia.com/chronwlet dewh/index. et.% i •`.=at _.*` g. honk'Clyde Kilby"Into the land of the lineation ion;"r r} �_from the stories. htip'//bookt.narnia.com/chroniekr/ctlewit/ereatiort.bimd, b "" b I'Kerr Wyatt Kent en grlani on the Move." Outreach p. "e s ^" • ) "Well, I want you to guess. Has there ever 56;"Ibid'"iutaw.mitrionamerica.arg ≥ been anyone in this world who Meet Dr. Joe Grana t' A native of Waukegan,Illinois,Dr.Grana is in his 18th year at Pacific Christian " ' , College where he serves as chairman of the Church Ministry Department and iip teaches Preaching, Bible, and Leadership.A graduate of Lincoln Christian ' College, Dr.Grana has also served in many church ministries throughout the U.S.His wife Linda is from Indiana and they have four children:Jolynne(30), Joey(26),Julia(23),and Keenan(13)as well as three grandchildren. - y Dr.Grana is currently on sabbatical from the college and LifeBridge Christian • '' Church is privileged to have him working on our staff this fall. xe€ s i f Watching :, \ Movies with ri Your Mindit By Chris Steele& Krista Petty VirHI. 0 ., -....„...„ "...take captive every thought to make it obedient to God." !l�,-2 Corinthians 10:5 \\ '� f • Student Impact and Ladder 56 be questioning the actions and thinking ministries at LifeBridge Christian Church that run counter to God's teaching. These Watching aI} ch1ng Movies want to capture the movie-watching skills in critical thinking and analysis experience presented in two monumental will be vital as these students grow up with Your Mi nd films through two special events this and encounter the philosophies of the Sponsored by November and December. These world." ministries have secured the rights to see Steele says The Chronicles of Narnia- Student Impact & Ladder 56 Harry Potter and The Chronicles of Narnia -The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe a day before their release and guide a provides an excellent springboard to This event is pre- and post-movie time of discussion conversation about Christian themes and especially (as well as some fun).According to Chris imagery. "Again, this is another chance designed NAT-Hi� Steele, LifeBridge Student Minister, to equip students to watch a movie with for 5'^-8"' `liu.JJON:lurWu ii -' "The two best-selling sets of children's their mind and walk away having grown graders. .l"`1Y""""''"' literature will have images come to life in their understanding of God." Families " ' """ ' in theaters this fall. Both Harry Potter Using modern day images to are welcome. and The Chronicles offNarnia have excited connect people to God is not a new Children under 5"'grade young readers who are looking forward concept. The Apostle Paul was known must be accompanied by an adult. to the films. And some non-readers are to communicate with his culture in looking forward to experiencing these relevant-of-the-day images. When he stories for the first time.We want to help goes to Athens and encounters Greek Watching Harry Potter With Your Mind guide their movie-watching experience." philosophers (Acts 17:16-34), he uses an Everywhere we look there are idol they have to an unknown god and November 17 powerful images to present a message. tells them about this god in the form of Twin Peaks 10, b p.m. McDonalds uses the golden arches and the God of the Bible. He uses the image Cost is $9 Disney uses Mickey's ears. Something of something they know and that God about us is drawn to the simple power of despises (Exodus 20:4-6) to communicate with Watching Namia an image and it stirs within us memories the truth of God. OUI Mind nd and thoughts, and can motivate us to So it is with that historical pattern December 8 I action. Steele agrees, "Soldiers find that Student Impact and Ladder 56 Twin Peaks 10, 6 p.m. courage for a flag and fans go crazy embark on this new method of leading Cost is $8 for a team logo, all in response to an students to grow in a relationship with image. When images accompany stories, God. Families are invited to attend the Tickets available at Off the Shelf our emotions are stirred and we can be two films together. Students under 5'5 Bookstore, LifeBridge Christian Church, inspired (or incited)." grade must be accompanied by an adult. 1cket Ute Highway. Please notel The What valuable themes can be found "2 Corinthians 10:5 says that we are to ticket you will receive from LifeBridge in these two films? According to Steele, 'take captive every thought to make it will be your ticket into the theatre' Harry Potter provides the opportunity to obedient to God.'We'll have fun and learn the theatre box office will not look for themes of loyalty, heroism, love, together and our goal is to teach students issuing tickets for this event. or St o destiny, choice, and more and connect through this experience how to take about these events? Call Eric or Steele these thoughts with the teachings of the thoughts captive for God." at 303-776-2927 or email them at Bible. "At the same time," he says, "we'll info@Ibce.org. 6 Life&'idge Christian Church ---` 303-776-2927 Receiving the Gift "r"ge °f the °<„r,,t �;e�t,�er, when "Only then did I start to I hev reached the "end of the world" where the water was sweetest, and realize that Asian was a Rep cheap got in his little boat and `'s representation of of Reading By Laura Hargis took the children with him, where Jesus...''they met the lamb, that I started to Growing up in a non-Christian understand. household, I didn't know the grace or glory Many years later, while at ^`t t of God until I was much older. However, another neighbor's house,we started I saw that glory and grace all around me. discussing The Chronicles and what When I was very young, our neighbors were they meant. I gave my I2-year-old Christians. I enjoyed going to their house to views and listened intently to the sit and listen to them talk about their trips adults' views. I felt very grown up as the themes and happenings. Chronicles (I do believe, looking back, that they were indeed to be having that conversation at that has once again proved to be a great tool— missionaries) and the people they had met time. Being able to talk with the neighbors, teaching now my children the educational and worked with. So I was very disappointed as an adult, and add my views of the hooks and spiritual values presented in the book. when they moved away. Before moving was a great learning experience for me. These books are a great read for young though, they did the one "Christian" thing I didn't think of or read the books or old, and even if you think your kids arc my father could not object to. They gave my again until we were visiting relatives in "too old," just think how much fun you will older sister and me one book each from The Alaska. They had the set on the shelves, have when your grandkids come to visit and Chronicles of Narnia. so I picked them up and read them again. you sit with them in the big comfy chair My sister received The Magicians Nephew, My kids were only 2 and 4 at that time and and share with them one of the greatest and I, The Silver Chair. I reread that book not that interested in sitting still to listen books ever. And who knows, you might just many times, as well as my sister's book. But to mommy reading a book with very few be the neighbor who shares the books with I had no idea that they were part of a series pictures, but I knew I wanted to get the set a young girl (or boy) and helps them to see of books until I went to my cousin's house. for our household. the truth through the'kvardrobe. They had the entire set. I borrowed the set Now that they are older,we have started frat my cousin and read them from start reading them together as a part of our Laura Hargis is afrequent volunteer writer for Rt.! sh. Only then did I start to realize school curriculum. And my boys can't wait The Bridge magazine.that Asian was a representation of Jesus,and for our reading time now. We discuss the Narnia, heaven. In fact, it was while reading old-English terms used in the books, as well THE CHRONICLES AUTHOR & CREATOR By Dr.Joe Grano Clive Staples Lewis was born November Lord of the Rings by J.R.R.Tolkien(1892-1973). 29, 1898, in Ireland. His nickname was Jack. Tolkien and Lewis were friends and belonged His father was a lawyer. His older brother, to a writers' group together. A strong Roman Warren (Warnie), and he were very close. Catholic, Tolkien helped Lewis with his At the age of almost ten his mother died of spiritual questions. And it was Tolkien who cancer. Jack and Warnie were soon ushered was instrumental in bringing Lewis to a faith to boarding school in England. in Jesus. For most of his life Lewis was single; As a teen,Lewis loved poetry,and mastered however, he married Joy Gresham in 1956. French, German, and Italian. Soon after Sadly, she died of cancer in 1960. Lewis' entering Oxford University, Lewis joined the health began to deteriorate shortly thereafter. It British Army to serve in World War I. After He died November 22, 1963, the same day the war he graduated from Oxford and then President John Kennedy was assassinated. taught there for 29 years and at Cambridge for eight years. His first major writing was Source nobs for this ardde: Tlie l'il -Int} Re teas 1933 The biographical in tiarmation was gleaned from in Am- gt g ( ). This book was clt by Ann-Marie Inthornuni enlided "Mc Creator of about his own spiritual journey. Narnia: CS. Lewis." hU)f(wvnv.1,tcimunster.unn s v,l When Lewis began to write children's namia-Icwis.ttm_I_ Inhvntalion ,'ho"' Lewin: ca(mnag to books, his friends and publisher tried to I nth is Item th writing 1 C o t Alley, Dy i.(,hair of I aglish at ii„pc,c lntenuli n9 tsnncrsits in huet ha.- discourage him.J.R.R. Tolkien, in particular, C_d dorn i.t. sh is an expert n ( t l ewi With ha ha.- criticized The Lion, The Wiief,and ThelGudrohe ha nd.Steve,C1,ru bas wnnen the chddren's materials Iii because he thought there were too many the Disney pr,lecl concerning the relea uttins Brut. clashed! Addit lunar inlonnanon cant. from Iterit ICtods wnimgs elements that /nikeiits Lord of the Ruin:hurl,.h/wb orBoth Many readers arc very familiar with the - Walter Stoneman,an,Clive Stapes -p ') Lewis by 1955 ©National Portrait Gallery, London 1. / .r �/ T r* HI eft ( C ,flLfrS9 ' • This year marks the 5'" annual A Time to Serve community sere event f• 7j vr LifeBridge. During the Holiday season, LifeBridge partners with area non-profit f., organizations and schools to complete needed community service projects. This special service "event" engages thousands of people in thousands of hours of serving.This year, it's bigger and better, including online sign ups! s R b u. A Time to Serve was born out of the hope is that people from LifeBridge will .. z° idea that LifeBridge could be doing invite friends and neighbors to servemore to help in the community year alongside them. Serving with others is a round. It was still is) ' �< r (and a launching great way to show that God's love is real, �r - pad for ongoing service relationships relevant and alive in Longmont." in the community. This annual service Without Internet access at home? event helps prepare and equip people The LifeBridge lobby will host signups `I' at LifeBridge to be externally focused between all weekend services. s t" *� �'� s, a� as well as accomplishes much needed Another added benefit to online - s "` ` work projects for local schools, non- registrations is streamlining paperwork profits, and human service agencies. and providing e-reminders. "As you can LBCC Director of Involvement, imagine, there is a lot of paperwork . Tricia Richardson, shares how this that goes along with an endeavor of There are also special icons helping vision to connect with the community this size. Registering online will allow you choose outdoor projects and family- has grown. "During the preparation for us to do more work with people and let friendly projects. "The family-friendly the first A Time to Serve, we had to technology assist us with the paperwork." projects are our most-requested projects. convince community agencies that Registration online will also help with It is so encouraging to see entire families— we really did want to be of benefit to email reminders and allow coordinators young children, students, parents and them. We offered to paint, clean, wrap to communicate easily with their teams. grandparents—serve together," says gifts,remodel—anything they needed us Tricia. "Probably the most exciting part of to do" says Tricia. "Now community agencies call us all throughout the Pick a Project! A Time to Serve is watching people who This year, A Time to Serve projects have have never found a way to volunteer get year asking for LifeBridge volunteers to come and make a difference. They been organized and categorized to reflect involved in a project and then continue prepare for our involvement and the commitment to certain endeavors. their commitment. to serving all year appreciate the difference LifeBridge There are eight categories to review and long," shares Tricia. Some people who within each category you will find a started out as a painter the first year volunteers make in the community." number of specific service projects to A Time to Serve was launched are now choose from. A Time to Serve for 2005 leading service projects all year long. Register online! includes the following categories of Many of our initial volunteers in year For the first time,you can now register projects benefitting: one are on community non-profit boards for a service project opportunity online. •City, County&State •Area Schools and are making a significant difference Why the change?Tricia explains, "This •Children & Families •Salvation Army all year long. "Watching people grow year, with online sign-ups, we want to •Women •LifeBridge their commitment and passion for serving`^' make it available for anyone in the •Elderly Christmas Events others is what continues to make A Time community to get involved as well.Our •Tri-Towns 'Habitat for to Serve a success—for LifeBridge, for our Humanity community, and for God's Kingdom!" 8 Life&idge Christian Church ---1 303-776-2927 worship serve row Y1 y{Yy i p t V f k.r.041 with LifeBridge Christian Church LIFEBRIDGE @ LONGMONT LIFEBRIDGE @ TRI-TOWNS 10345 We Highway, Longmont, CO Legacy Elementary School WCR 18 & Eagle Blvd., Frederick, co Weekend Worship Schedule Saturdays: 4:30 & 6 p.m. - Contemporary Weekend Worship Schedule it Sundays: 8 a.m. - Traditional Sundays: 9:30 a.m.-Contemporary 9:30 & 11 a.m. - Contemporary LifeKids & Ladder 56 LifeKids & Ladder 56 LifeKids and Ladder 56 programs are LifeKids and Ladder 56 programs are available available each hour. Please register your during the service. Please register your child at child at the LifeKids Counter in the lobby. the counter in the lobby. Student Impact Saturdays: 4:30 Student Impact Y p.m. - MS Class Sundays: 9:30 a.m. - MS Class 6 p.m.-MS&HS Worship Sundays: 9:30 a.m. - MS Worship 9:30 a.m.-HS worship �;n gym with awns) 11 a.m. - HS Worship To Loveland To Highway 119 LifeBridge 8 Ft.Collins Longmont To @ Longmont Firestone To Lyons SY�I`j 8 Estes Park H 66 a Grant Ave.(WCR 18) — o a - To Frederick u m _ Jrd q 8 d c V R dCC A p w 0 Ken Pratt Blvd Hwy 119 LifeBridge m H @ Tri-Towns To Boulder To Lafeyette To Denver To Erie Hghway 52 i To Dacono 8 Broomfield www.ibcc.org �1 LifeBridge Christian Church 9 Is there a Case % N.\ •. ;4,. ( for Christmas? ��_ � 1 Lots of people view Christmas as a warm, vibrant season when the best 4APicttii •‘, of humanity is celebrated. But is that all there is to Christmas? On Dec. 4, ‘It‘n\c,.,, i 'LifeBridge Christian Church is pleased to host author and investigative �{� r y \\\N.Se al/I ' , [� !\`� 11 journalist Lee Strobel live via satellite as he shares his journey to find the truth /// /� \ '� in Christmas with audiences throughout America. Strobel, a former Chicago /fffVVVI , " Tribune journalist and spiritual skeptic, went on a search for the truth about the baby in the manager. In his latest book release, The Case for Christmas, `S�a a« •��. 7/4 // Strobel explores the claims, the evidences, and the divinity of the baby in the .��^ I� ,i i 1 manger named Jesus. How did his search begin? The following story is an s excerpt from Strobel's The Case for Christmas. In his own words, he describes �//i1. the start of his search and what this latest book seeks to answer. m • 3c. Who Was in the Manger hand it to her shivering sister,who would the Delgados with treasure trove of gif 9 wear if the rest of the way. roomfuls of furniture, appliances, a Christmas Morning? But despite their poverty and the lavish rugs; a lavish Christmas tree with By Lee Strobel painful arthritis that kept Perfecta from piles of wrapped presents underneath; working, she still talked confidently about carton upon bulging carton of food; and The Chicago Tribune newsroom was her faith in Jesus. She was convinced he a dazzling selection of clothing, including eerily quiet on the day before Christmas. had not abandoned them. I never sensed dozens of warm winter coats, scarves, As I sat at my desk with little to do, my despair or self-pity in her home; instead, and gloves. On top of that, they donated mind kept wandering back to a family I there was a gentle feeling of hope and thousands of dollars in cash. had encountered a month earlier while I peace. But as surprised as I was by this was working on a series of articles about I wrote an article about the Delgados outpouring, I was even more astonished Chicago's neediest people. and then quickly moved on to more by what my visit was interrupting:Perfecta The Delgados 60-year-old Perfecta and exciting assignments. But as I sat at my and her granddaughters were getting ready her granddaughters Lydia and Jenny—had desk on Christmas Eve, I continued to to give away much of their newfound been burned out of their roach-infested wrestle with the irony of the situation:here wealth. When I asked Perfecta why, she tenement and were now living in a tiny was a family that had nothing but faith and replied in halting English:"Our neighbors two-room apartment on the West Side. yet seemed happy, while I had everything are still in need. We cannot have plenty As I walked in, I couldn't believe how I needed materially but lacked faith—and while they have nothing.This is what Jesus empty it was. There was no furniture, no inside I felt as empty and barren as their would want us to do." I rugs, nothing on the walls—only a small apartment. "This is wonderful; this is very good," kitchen table and one handful of rice. I walked over to the city desk to sign she said, gesturing toward the largess. That's it. They were virtually devoid of out a car. It was a slow news day with "We did nothing to deserve this—it's a possessions. nothing of consequence going on. My gift from God. But," she added, "it is In fact, eleven-year-old Lydia and boss could call me if something were to not his greatest gift. No, we celebrate that thirteen-year-old Jenny owned only one happen. In the meantime, I decided to tomorrow. That is Jesus." short-sleeved dress each. Plus one thin, drive over to West Homer Street and see To her,this child in the manger was the gray sweater between them. When they how the Delgados were doing. undeserved gift that meant everythiret walked the one half mile to school through When Jenny opened the door, I the biting cold, Lydiawould wear the P more than material possessions,more than y couldn't believe my eyes. Tribune readers comfort, more than security. And at that sweater for part of the distance and then had responded to my article by showering moment, something inside of me wanted 10 LifeBridge Christian Church i--. 303-776-2927 lk desperately to know this Jesus—because, of history: Who was in the manger on that ill n a sense, I saw him in Perfecta and her first Christmas morning? randdaughters. They had Can we really trust the biographies peace despite poverty of Jesus to tell us the true story of his while I had anxiety despite plenty; they birth, life, teachings, miracles, death, and /�� had joy of generosity while I only knew / ultimate resurrection from the dead? Did 1 ��' i the loneliness of ambition; they looked the Christmas child actually grow up to ( )�� /heavenward for hope, while I only fulfill the attributes of God?And did theii ,<looked out for myself; they experienced baby in Bethlehem miraculously match ( / the wonder of the spiritual while I the prophetic "fingerprint" of the long- was shackled to the shallowness of the material—and something made me long awaited Messiah? The Case for Christmas seeks to get to the bottom of this I 8 for what they had. matter by retracing and expanding Or, more accurately, for the One the upon my original investigation into y the roots of this cherished holiday. j knew... s''.Spetiah thanks to Zomdervan, Grand Rapids ^ Embarking on an Michigam. or permission to reprint fi g; Investigation excerpt of Care it Christmas,Lee Strobel _ • Copyright 1998,2005 Lee Strobel Strobel '. . As a youngster, like countless other \, •' wide-eyed children, I listened with rapt _ Y fascination to the Bible story about -____� Christmas. But as I matured, skepticism set in... Sure, believing in Jesus could provide solace to sincere but simple folks like the Delgados; but as a law-trained Don't wonder about the real reason for ,newspaperman, I dealt in the currency of acts—and I was convinced they supported Christmas...Seek answers. my atheism rather than Christianity. All of that changed several years CASE E FOR later, however, when I took a cue from .�._ — F I -�i one of the most famous Bible passages about Christmas. The story describes how an angel announced to a ragtag r group of sheepherders that "a Savior who is Messiah and Master" had been born in David's town. Was this a hoax In this all-new, CCN live broadcast, award-winning author and or a hallucination? Or could it actually journalist, Lee Strobel will present the evidence that changed his be a pivotal event of human history—the own beliefs as an atheist and convinced him that Jesus is Divine }incarnation of the living God? Through Lee's compelling presentation and a live question-and- : > The sheepherders were determined answer session, explore the truth of the Christmas miracle: *� to get to the bottom of the matter. Like i first-century investigative reporters being Is the Christmas star credible? dispatched to the scene of an earth- Does the virgin birth make sense? shattering story, they declared: "Let's get Has Christianity merely copied earlier pagan myths? over to Bethlehem as fast as we can and see When was Jesus most likely to have been born? for ourselves. Essentially, that's what I did for a Join both skeptics and believers for this one-time opportunity. living as a Tribune reporter: investigate claims to see if they're true, separate rumors from reality, and determine facts December 4, at 4 p.m. from fiction. So prompted by my agnostic Cvi£e's conversion to Christianity, and still LifeBridge Christian Church intrigued by memories of the Delgados, I decided to get to the bottom of what I 10345 Ute Highway (corner of Hwy 66 & Gay St.) Longmont, CO now consider to be the most crucial issue IP www.lbcc.org �1 LifeBridge Christian Church 11 ,w Mt+ r w nre R an cc i �, ' u" Are you in search of a spiritual gathering that emphasizes sacred,r'a 'a e� _ . such as quiet reflection, inspired sharing and prayerful meditator � x `'" of the opinion that God has something to say to us through art,music,sow;.' v' 1 , i .• literature and friendship as well as through Scripture?Are you at a plat.`"ta hie • =,ya- 7wur spiritual Journey where you are feeling adventurous enough to �.,u ffi . new(or old)creative expressions of reverence?If you can answer"yes r "�` ~'a �£ n ` ,_. '." '' '' _ ""maybe"to one or more of these questions then Dan Gilligw,M ster p 1 Care at LifeBridge invites you to enter Sanctum;A Contemplative � ''''''.1 Sanctum:A Contemplative Gathering details, "During Sanctum, it is considered customary to see people move around the room at will,visiting and participating Sanctum,Latin for"secret place of pilgrimage" or "holy place," at certain stations, all the while observing our values and goals is the name for a new LifeBridge gathering that values and of quiet reflection and soulful meditation." emphasizes quiet reflection and prayerful meditation.This ancient / future-type spiritual happening is designed to draw together At this point, Sanctum is still in the planning stages, although people of all ages who would enjoy an opportunity to encounter leadership at LifeBridge anticipates a launch in the next couple the presence of God with others in a quiet, relaxed and even fun of months. "We are in search of a site that we hope will be format. ', - welcoming to people at all stages of their faith journey," Dartitstates. "And while we "This is not your typical LifeBridge hope this contemplative gathering will ...this is the real end of meditation-it traditional or contemporary worship appeal to God-friendly seekers who are not service," shares Dan. "Upon entering teaches you how to become aware of currently active in a spiritual fellowship,we I the Sanctum gathering everyone is the presence of God;and most of all it also believe that many seasoned church encouraged to embrace a sense of stillness members will attend Sanctum in an effort aims at bringing you to a state of almost at the door and to seek a state of mind to grow in prayer and meditation or jump open to listening, loving, and giving. constant loving attention to God and start their relationship with Christ." Instrumental music plays softly as one dependence on Him. The real purpose finds a comfortable seat amid the tables, clusters of chairs and pillows scattered of meditation is this:to teach a man about the floor. This candlelit time of how to work himself free of created Is Sanctum for You, or for shared silence helps to set the tone of things and temporal concerns...and Sanctum and prepares our hearts to hear Someone You Know? God peak to us as He chooses" enter into a conscious and loving contact with God..." From the outset, the staff and eldership of Sanctum is a less-programmed style of -Themd,Me.,o,,,New Seed.fContemplation,p se LifeBridge know that Sanctum and some of worship designed to help attendees quiet the inner life development opportunities their hearts:and minds and be able to listen being created by the Soul Care ministry to the"sound of sheer silence—wherein Elijah the prophet heard are not going to appeal to everyone, although any and all are I the voice of God," says Dan. It is also arranged to allow many welcomed and encouraged to attend.As you read the description people,over time,to participate at a variety of levels. "Over the of Sanctum above does someone's name or face come to your course of the meeting,seemingly without cue,gatherers who have mind that you think would be attracted to this type of spiritual signed up in advance emerge to share songs, read passages from gathering? Do you have a friend or acquaintance that is seeking inspirational literature and to tell short God-stories from their God but who is not interested in traditional or even contemporary lives.In between these acts of devotion,we hold space to reflect expressions of church?Dan Gilliam asks,"If so,please pass on to on the gifts that are shared and how these can encourage us in our them the contact information below that they can he a part of this faith journeys." fresh and stimulating occasion to experience God with others." For those who desire an interactive experience, there are tables To learn more about Sanctum or the Soul Care Ministry at located nearby with art supplies,papers, and pens, inspirational LifeBridge Christian Church,contact Dan Gilliam,Minister books, emblems for celebrating the Lord's Supper and sign-ups of Soul Care, at 303-776-2927, ext. 268 or email him at for small group opportunities.Dan describes this aspect in more dgilliam@lbcc.org. 12 Life&idge Christian Church -----. 303-776-2927 O ,- 41/4 Come Grow ` ` With Us ! Earn a degree that makes a difference... An education from Colorado Christian University is a complete education, developing the whole person academically, professionally, and spiritually. Now, more than ever, our world needs effective leaders—who are equipped with a biblical foundation of knowledge—to make an impact in their careers,communities, families and churches. Earn a degree today that businesses want and one you will be proud of! Evens & weekend classes " y > at ourLoveland Center 6 i The School of Adult and Accelera4egree format • Graduate Studies at Colorado Christian Online courses available • University is now offering Teacher censure • ` Bachelor and MBA classes at @ LifeBridge Christian Church. k 4, Flexible & personal • For more information, call 970-669-8700. q Colorado Christian www.ccu.edu U N I V E R S I T y SCHOOL Of ADULT AND GRADUATE STUDIES , , 1 . Gy .. eyFn9 N' y �, 4 / °-8044FAITH *s �. I todaylip, . .14W '. 1? Fxh ,, a z4,r," '� A. * , r . a op, r f tiy.u. Y , • with LifeBridge 2005! Saturday, Dec. 17 Willie Brown Family-friendly Comedian a� t 1 Sunday, Dec. 18 Scott Kassner Christmas Piano Concert 1 ft Monday, Dec. 19 Lannie Garrett Concert Tr 4 Tuesday, Dec. 20 Denver & The Mile High Orchestra a Wednesday, Dec.21 Longmont Barber Shop Quartet a Thursday, Dec. 22 Denver Brass Christmas Concert , a Friday, Dec. 23 Acoustic Eidolon . ' y Con_Fats .tart ^.f t:30 p.m in the LifeBridge Auditorium. All are FREE! 4 wyrf , ' I it 303-776-2927 • www.lbcc.org o. KENNETH ALFORD M.A., Ed.S., LPG You !Thank ,r - ,-;-„L- Lirsn=ed Professional /1 ee ehoeherapist Ail American Auto Repair Counseloi Adolescent, Adult, CorporateSponsors Mari 1l & t;oup ,Th for your support. 291930. v^nve.,Ste.n214 Longmont,Colorado 80503 303776-2910 BudgeBudget i i„„...„ [min As a small business owner, you already tI know the dollars are in the details. 5-Corp?C-Corp?LLC?Sole Proprietorship? llip, 40 °y l Whether you re about to open or have been around a style for every point of view 1 /� for a while, these choices will make a BIG difference. 1'T` / ti QUALITY BLINDS,SHUTTERS,DRAPERY 8Awnrn'cs Steven M. Dye Cotttor Dean & Connie Wann T 1'RI I I RRIi)RI 11 I1 Attorney-at-Law y n°Ortree 2919 W. 17rH Ave.,Ste. 116 303 485 1131 303-651-0304•sdye@mldjcpa.corn °"3O/1O11°n Longmont,CO 80503 www.budgetblinds.com 1714 Duchess Dr.•Longmont,CO 80501 l3ricI u -l: Coats, D.I). Si. 1'.('. fie �/' FIRST Family and Cosmetic Dentistry /i.j ) Vr �i./ CHOICE Consulting HEATING & AIR, INC. (303)772-1597 (970)535-4837 veww.firstchoicehea[i ng.corn 1305 Sumner Suite 300 R. Paige Mathews pars?firstchoicehea[ing.tom Longmont,CO 80501 (303) 776-4090 303-378-5363 14469 Mead Court PAT& DEBBIE TOROK Longmont,CO 80504 Jim Linda Hess Protect your investment by maintaining FFMpFRONTIER BUSINESS PRODUCTS four hardwood floors. Realtor Partner 700 West 48th Avenue Se,d 111 B„alder.weltr,nd I.,,„ncr c„LLnr,e, Call the expert today for your FREE no obligation estir Denver, Colorado 80216 Direct:303684'774] L A D PETER MITSCHKE Cell:720.480.5357 Hess Vice President Fax:303.776.6640 �' Hardwood Flooring { • New Installation • Design Work Phone: 303-390-3620 '' �;� raaaaaa • Refinishing • Repairs • Cleaning Supplies Fax: 303-390-3640 • `R4 Real tea 0>< Leonard Dodds- 15 Years of Quality Service E-mail: peter@fbponline.com Caring • Honorable • Respons, e 303-678-0745 O F F the SHELF H E L F ,,,t, �� .. .._ 1 �ft 4lit A Q i.Mon.-Fri.:9 a.m.-5 p.m. � ` fif Saturday: 4:30-7:30 p.m. R sit Sunday 7:30 a.m.-12:3O p.m. t' 10345 Ute Highway, Longmont, CO ' 303-776-2927 The Chronicles of Narnia r complete box set! Includes o The Lion,The Witch,and The '',.' IllWardrobe.Other Narnia gift books for all ages and additional accessories also available. regularly$45 LM Handmade Products Soaps,Lotions, i - l Soy Candles,Bug Spray&Lotion, , 5;^ r7 a ar C'Th% Natural Now Skin&Body Tabs&Vitamins 'We Zoirc ttcU3 N altNSow, I r_ Provern to make a difference with skin 443 w GARDEN CENTER disorders,boa acres, aln d;,' II \11111\I. Ills\I1> hl\h\hp / �l, Y p &more I'VIA 1T11 id I www lrllgardencenter co 11 .it IT1 i tit t I,v 1 v NI XIv-I Id I I �_ Laurinda Gardner )., .Colorado Hwy 56 (970) 532-3232 l'',E,r\ I I"\" Spirit S II'\! ' , Mountain Healing Arts Center 303-678-0404 Berthoud, CO 80513 Fax:(970) 532-3230 713 3rd.Ave.,Longmont,CO 80501 877-678-8702 so •VF 46 ♦ se 1► GS ter,. w s* std ii it a ,1P GS t�" t POSSIBILITIES � Photos 6 annieb' 1 Unique Furnishings for Your ;w a Home&Garden PAWS&CLAWS 'A y I .IT i`Z 1700,R.Boettcher t- COUNTRY PET GROOMING _ ANTIQUES T fee f PRIMITIVES � COLLECTIBLES - / slSo sitting ` ^y r- I r I i .v —ftCm or DCgir P y� GIFTS [7C�•/% CARDS IncCuctes Negatives or Pkoto CP (303)678-82nD BH.APyotntmentr 303-776-7174r I Shopkeeper Dottie Seely 'X' _I I Aitt ..% a .j 'Rrr 530 Kimbark St,Longmont,CO 80501 303 7747643 �� Sa b X11 Mon-Sat 10 a.m.-5 p.m.Sunday-Closed - 14 V '�// CUSTOM HOMES BASEMENTS CUSTOM CABINETRY n AG / DAVID N. SONNESYN DECKS-ADDITIONS REMODELING 111 l'AI.IAN GP!I,I. Attorney Law STANLEY Emphasis: Estate Planning CONSTRUCTION co •Classic Hahn Mashie -Paulin and Oven Inked 8te1w*: Real Estate and Water Law *Pizza aid Csboass -large Wile aid ley Selection "OLD FASHIONED CRAFTSMANSHIP WITH TODAY'S TECHNOLOGY" II nr Scr4 r,s6r n IL'o IFi k VI Cary Out 303-651-2828 0„43 n ,ae,salt, I &z I d (301)776sm7 Phone:303.772.7282 Fax:303.772.8556 1135 Frands Street Loeb CO 80501 ID ogmo„r,CO 80501 T,r.:(303)684-0654 STEVE STANLEY,Owner Licensed&Insured-30 Years in the bossiness G I 5WORKG Oven bared Subs, ti"iiNE 303.772.2250 JUVVV Ere.)h -4Iads, irisfi lb; LIE FRESH FOOD — Soups'a Desserts PATRICK&GINGER CANNON Brian. Wirth Kleti'Dlr FACES 303-460-0707 Master Plumber Licensed•Insured B°stress&Bo.Lu nohes FKEE Delivery "You're On The Right Track to Fast, Quality Service." in Longmont Party Subs,Catarina Residential•Commercial Western Refractory Longmont•Erie•Lyons-Mead•Frederick•Dacono 1104 Francis Street•303-774-7000 Construction Inc. www.streamlineplumbing.info Sandy& Delinda Hammond t starting , iine Have you ever wondered... What is Christianity all about? Does it matter what I believe? Who is Jesus Christ? 4t` Is the Bible really true? 411 Do you have questions about... LifeBridge Christian Church? What we believe? p What LifeBridge has for you? STARTING LINE In this class we explore God's plan for a relationship with him and communicate the mission,vision, and beliefs of LifeBridge Christian Church. We also explore important issues such as baptism and communion. One of LifeBridge four core classes, Starting Line is offered monthly at LifeBridge. Call us today for upcoming class schedule. 303- 776-2927 • www.lbcc.org LifeBridge Christian Church Non-ProfitOrg. 10345 Ute Highway U.S.Postage PAID (Highway 66 & Gay St.) Longmont,Co Longmont, CO 80504 Permit No.3 LIFEBRIDGE CHRISTIAN (.l1URLll Connecting People With God October 31,2005 Dear Neighbor, There has been a lot of information regarding Project LifeBridge PUD distributed over the past several years. We hope you have been able to attend one of the neighborhood meetings. The plans as submitted to Weld County reflect the information presented at the meetings. You recently received a flyer with an interpretation of the project presented by a few of your neighbors. We believe that the information in the flyer is not an accurate representation of the project. We encourage you to do an independent review of the facts and form your own opinion regarding our proposal. • A full copy of the application as submitted to Weld County is available for review Monday through Friday from 7:30 to 5:00 or by appointment at the 4C Office at 2602 Clover basin Drive in Longmont. Call(303) 702-0708 for directions. • You can send us mail to: 4 C Corporation 10345 Ute Highway Longmont, CO. 80504. • We are available to meet with you to go over the project and answer your questions. Please contact: o Reggie Golden (303) 702-0708—reggieg@dgmllc.com o Dale Bruns(303) 772-7986 -dalebruns@frii.com o Barb Brunk(303) 532-2262—barbb@dgmllc.com • We can mail you information upon request. • A full copy of the application materials are on file at Weld County and available for public review. Their Southwest Office is located at 4209 CR 24.5 (just east of I—25, north of 119, off of the Frontage Road). They are open from 7:30 AM to 4:30 PM, Monday through Friday. The Weld County Planner handling the case is Jacqueline Hatch. She can be reached at(720) 652-4210, EXT 8730 or emailed at jhatch@co.weld.co.us. We also invite you to attend a service at our existing Church, located at 10345 Ute HWY in Longmont and learn more about us. Thank you. LifeBridg hristian Church %3rs G s (W, y w LifeBridge Christian Church • 10345 Ute Highway • Longmont, CO 80504 phone: 303.776.2927 • fax: 303.776.2902 • website: www.lbcc.org P9 LifeBridge Rezoning Fact Sheet As you may have heard, last Tuesday, October 18, the Weld Planning Commission approved the amended LifeBridge rezoning, AmPZ1004. There were two significant changes to the original rezoning that had been approved two years earlier: 1) To increase the value of the proposed Fairview development (owned by several LifeBridge administrators)just west of Longview, a train crossing has been shifted west from CR 3.5 to Fairview St. This has forced a northeast rerouting of CR 3.5 along the south side of the train tracks to now connect up with the intersection of CR 5 and CR 26 at the northwest corner of the Elms. This rerouting in our direction increases the likelihood that traffic will cut through the Elms (along Ashton and Riverview and past the mail center) to get to CR 5.5 and out to SH 119. 2) They now have two, rather than one, area in which they are permitted to build 75 foot tall general commercial (C2) buildings. Otherwise, the 313 acre plan is basically unchanged. Its massive scale remains difficult to grasp. 1. "10 to 20" general commercial (C2) buildings totaling 1,000,000 square feet, as well as a 5,000 odd car parking lot. This"includ[es] auditoriums" up to 75 feet tall, seating 6,000 in one and unspecified thousands in another. The Twin Peaks Regional Mall in Longmont only has 558,314 square feet. 2. Another 603,000 square feet of residential commercial (C1) development for retail and commercial use, number of buildings "TBD." The Cl and C2 portions of the LifeBridge development together will be over three times the size of Twin Peaks Mall. 3. Over 300 residential units, including estate, single family, duplexes and triplexes, as well as an unspecified number of units (several hundred more?) for a seniors "village."' There have been numerous irregularities surrounding this rezoning, which is by far the largest in the history of the county. • Weld is currently being sued for failing to properly post notice about the first Planning Committee Hearing in 2003. • County Commissioner Bill Jerke moved the location of Tuesday's hearing from SW Weld near us up to Greeley. Only a dozen odd homeowners were able to attend. • The Planning Commission originally listed the LifeBridge rezoning as a"consent" item, which would have prevented even those few homeowners from even speaking. • Chapter 26 of the Weld County Code's "Mixed Use Development" (MUD) Plan (see http://colocode.com/weld.html) designates the field for"residential" development, but the Planning Dept., the Planning Commission, and the County Commissioners have all approved an application dominated by Cl and C2 zoning. County Commissioner Glenn Vaad, who represents our Weld District 2, is a LifeBridge leader. Although he has recused himself from Commission votes on the LifeBridge application, he has publicly spoken out in favor of the LifeBridge application and against the Elms.2 Personal comment: If the seniors area is a just a"village,"what should the entire 20,000 person development be called? Anything over 2,000 is technically a city. 2 See"Vaad in Eye of Storm,"Longmont Daily Times-Call,12 July 2003. ) 3 LIFEBRIDGE 13 U.S.Pot Org. U.S.Postage CHRISTIAN CHURCH Connecting veep,kWh God Paid Longmont,CO 10345 Ute Highway Longmont,CO 80504 Permit No.3 Current Resident Longmont, CO 80504 � .. . •-..•.?-,,,,:',...,,,,' t" �y • R 8 Ri r .. F Ii n �b"vo-P �� �� is y : ... ;iiNr 5 ! u i t" � f .a- S # � - a t-v `��� Y i N 4 .. � � st: 4.�4i' '4'�k�dtt�r � ' §"�rs # �:. � s ' . waf {`° � - r � tiSY arva tl � 44 I .4f1 . . ne T-f. k I d4 44 pi 1 t t.,:"..,;,44.7./...eti,,,,,:: t w :::!.::.k. 1.1 i.....,H.r„. :::::,:::,Ei,,,.,7!)10,8n1r,..4..iva..!::: f,,,ii:::; _::.!.:i..:::. ;__ ..iiiii iti;I:k.f.„..itT:::.;:ii,i,,, :,,,,,!; ..1 -..!,11;:. 4.,.:iliih,,,..im ,,... ,ii,;,:iil,7r t • li:SH/i';, !.)::4:71T1:;‘,:.. ..,:::::(:::"ii-r;: '', C., j"!',,i,,,,,,,,,,Ir; 1,117P,:::.1.11.44:IJ'INI.i.,... '. .: if..i,7',:;;',..!.:.::,..,ii 4-::::,;„:;„;:;:',-.::Th,-,'' - ,!jr""-!• •,' - ,:' - ' • ' ` O tit 5 NOTICE Pursuant to the zoning laws of the State of Colorado and the Weld County Code, a public hearing will be held in the Chambers of the Board of County Commissioners of Weld County, Colorado,Weld County Centennial Center,915 10th Street, First Floor,Greeley,Colorado 80631, at the time specified. If a court reporter is desired, please advise the Clerk to the Board, in writing, at least five days prior to the hearing. The cost of engaging a court reporter shall be borne by the requesting party. In accordance with the Americans with Disabilities Act, if special accommodations are required in orderforyou to participate in this hearing,please contact the Clerk to the Board's Office at (970) 336-7215, Extension 4226, prior to the day of the hearing. The complete case file may be examined in the office of the Clerk to the Board of County Commissioners�etdtounty Centennial Center,91510th Street,Third Floor,Greeley,Colorado 80631. E-Mail messages sent to an individual Commissioner may not be included in the case file. To ensure inclusion of your E-Mail correspondence into the case file, please send a copy to charding@co.weld.co.us. DOCKET#: 2005-72 DATE: November 9, 2005 TIME: 10:00 a.m. APPLICANT: LifeBridge Christian Church do 4 C Corporation Attn: Reggie Golden P.O. Box 54 Longmont, Colorado 80502 REQUEST: Change of designated Zone Districts,AMPZ#1004,for LifeBridge PUD with E(Estate), R-1 (Low-Density Residential), R-2(Duplex Residential), R-3(Medium-Density Residential), R-4 (High-Density Residential),C-1 (Neighborhood Commercial)and C-2(General Commercial)uses, and continued oil and gas production LEGAL DESCRIPTION: Lot B of Recorded Exemption#1389, and part of Section 5,Township 2 North, Range 68 West of the 6th P.M., Weld County, Colorado LOCATION: North of and adjacent to State Highway 119; south of and adjacent to Weld County Road 26;and west and east of Weld County Road 3.5(See Legal Description for precise location.) BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS WELD COUNTY, COLORADO DATED: October 14, 2005 PUBL-ISMEI ?�5, th, hte r + upton-P-ress TJB Consulting Group, LLC Civil Engineering • Site Design • Project Coordination Infrastructure Design • Construction Assistance October 4, 2005 Mr. Peter Schei, P.E. Public Works Department Weld County PO Box 758 Greeley, CO 80632 Re: LifeBridge Project(AmPZ-1004) Request for Variance, Street Cross Sections Dear Mr. Schei: LifeBridge Christian Church is requesting a variance to allow the street cross-sections within Project LifeBridge PUD to vary from the typical Weld County street cross-sections. As you know, this project is located at one of the designated community centers of the I-25 Mixed Use Development Area (MUD). The intent of a MUD community center is to create a framework for an interconnected network of homes, employment, and commercial uses. The urban nature of the center, coupled with the need to calm traffic for the safety and comfort of pedestrians and to accommodate slower moving vehicular traffic suggest that an urban street standard be implemented in this development. Additionally, development within this portion of the Weld County MUD will be near or adjacent to future development within the City of Longmont. Per an Agreement between Weld County and the City of Longmont, WCR 26 in this area will be constructed to City of Longmont Arterial Street standards. The remainder of the streets as designed vary slightly from the Weld County standards and meet or exceed the City of Longmont standards. A few of the proposed street cross-sections do not have comparable standards in Weld County and the City of Longmont. However, both jurisdictions allow for flexibility within the Planned Unit Development process, especially for special conditions that support the intent of the policies of the jurisdiction. The cross-sections as requested will create a safe, pedestrian friendly transportation network, within and adjacent to the PUD. We believe they are very appropriate for the environment anticipated. Requested variances for each street-section and tables comparing the proposed cross- sections to existing Weld County MUD standard and the City of Longmont Standard are attached. We have developed urban standards within the PUD for the following streets: • Mixed Residential District- Local Neighborhood Street • Mixed Residential District- Collector • Mixed Residential District- Collector(Parkside) ,. • Mixed Residential District - Neighborhood Alley • Arterial Boulevard 2602 Clover Basin Drive, Suite B, P.O. Box 1348 Longmont, CO 80502 303.532.2268 fax: 303.702.0585 toddb@dgmllc.com Page 2 of 2 October 4,2005 o•—••• Mr. Peter Schei P.E. We have also included a typical cross section for the Main Street within the Mixed Use District. We anticipate that this area will be owned and maintained by the Homeowners Association and will remain a private street within a joint access and parking area to serve the main street area. Please let us know if you have any questions regarding this request. Sincerely, TJB Consulting Group, LLC Todd J. Borger, P.E. President Enclosures HALBCC 119 Site\Correspondence\street cross section variance request.doc ) ) ) Local Residential Streets: Project LifeBridgu PUD Weld County MUD City of Longmont Right of Way 60' 60' 51' _ Width of Street flow line 36' 42' 36' Travel Lanes (2) 10' lanes (2) 12' lanes _(2) I1' lanes Parking Lanes (2) 8' lanes (2) 8' lanes (2)7' lanes Planting Strip/Tree Lawn (2)7' strips 2.5' between curb and walk or 3' behind the walk on each side behind the walk Sidewalk 5' detached walk,both sides 5' walk,both sides, attached or 4.5' curb-walk both sides detached walk Alley: Project LifeBridge PUD Weld County MUD City of Longmont Right of Way 20' No standard established 22 Width of Street flow line 20' No standard established 20 Travel Lanes (2) 10' lanes No standard established _(2) 10' lanes Parking Lanes No parking in alley No standard established No parking in alley Fence Setback (2)3' strips No standard established 0' Utility Easements 10' each side No standard established Varies by use -4' minimum ) ) Collector Streets: Project LifeBridge PUD—Collector Weld County MUD City of Longmont Parkway Street Urban two lane collector Collector Right of Way Varies 60' to 95' - Varies 80' to 100' 72' Width of Street flow line 48' plus the width of the median _82' 48' Travel Lanes (2) 12' lanes (2) 12' lanes (2) 12' lanes with 4' pavement between travel and parking on each side Turn Lanes (2) 12' lanes as needed (2) 12' Lanes as needed Turn lanes added if needed, additional _ ROW required Parking Lanes No parking on street (2) 8' lanes (2) 8' lanes Bike Lane n/a (2) 8' lanes n/a _ Planting Strip/Tree Lawn 10' strips on each side of street 2.5' between curb and walk or 6' minimum on each side behind the walk Sidewalk 8' detached walk, both sides 6' walk detached one side, 8' 5'detached walk both sides attached walk on other side Median Planted 11' minimum with a provision 14' painted median with provision none for a 10' turn lane as needed for a 10' turn lane as needed Project LifeBridge PUD—Collector Weld County MUD City of Longmont Parkway Street(Parkside) Urban two lane collector Collector Right of Way 100' Varies 80' to 100' 72' Width of Street flow line 39' on street and 32' on adjacent 82' 48' parking and access area I Travel Lanes (2) 12' lanes (2) 12' lanes (2) 12' lanes with 4' pavement between travel and parking on each side Parkside Parking Access (1) 12' one way lane No Standard established No Standard Established Parking Lanes (1) 8' on street and 20' diagonal parking (2) 8' lanes (2) 8' lanes adjacent to the park Bike Lane (1)7' lane (2) 8' lanes n/a Planting Strip/Tree Lawn 10' strips on each side of street 2.5' between curb and walk or 6' minimum on each side behind the walk Sidewalk 6' detached walk on street and 7' 6' walk detached one side, 8' 5'detached walk both sides attached walk adjacent to the park attached walk on other side Median Planted 10' median between street and 14' painted median with provision none park side parking access lane for a 10' turn lane as needed ) ) ) Arterial Street-WCR 3.5 Project LifeBridge PUD—Arterial Weld County MUD City of Longmont Boulevard Urban 4 lane Minor Arterial Arterial Right of Way 150' Varies 110' to 120' 120' Width of Street flow line 31' each side of median 84' including painted median 68' _ Travel Lanes (4) 12' lanes (2) 12' lanes (3) 12' lanes with 16' pavement between (2) 13 lanes travel and curb each side Turn Lanes (2) 12' right lanes as needed (2) 12' Right Lanes as needed Turn lanes in landscape setback as needed Parking Lanes No_parking on street No Parking on Street No parking on street Bike Lane Off street- Included in 8' detached (2) 8' on street bike Lanes on street-included in 16' lane each side walk of street Planting Strip/Tree Lawn Varies—minimum 10' strips on each 2 minimum between curb and walk 18' if no turn lanes -6' minimum on each side of street or behind the walk side I Sidewalk 8' detached walk, both sides 8' walk detached one side, 8' 8'detached walk both sides attached walk on other side Median Planted 12' minimum with a provision 14' painted median with provision none for an additional median, left turn lanes for(1) 10' left turn lane as needed and merge lanes as needed Arterial Street—WCR 26 Arterial Street Project LifeBridge PUD— WCR 26 Weld County MUD City of Longmont Arterial Urban 4 lane Minor Arterial with Arterial raised Median Right of Way 120' Varies 110' to 130' 120' Width of Street flow line 68' 46' each side of median 68' Travel Lanes (3) 12' lanes with 16' pavement (4) 12' lanes (3) 12' lanes with 16' pavement between between travel and curb each side travel and curb each side Turn Lanes Turn lanes in landscape setback as (2) 12' Right Lanes as needed Turn lanes in landscape setback as needed needed Parking Lanes No parking on street No Parking on Street No parking on street Bike Lane on street- included in 16' lane each side (2) 8' on street bike Lanes on street- included in 16' lane each side of street _ of street Planting Strip/Tree Lawn 18' if no turn lanes -6' minimum on 2.5' between curb and walk or 18' if no turn lanes -6' minimum on each each side behind the walk side Sidewalk 8'detached walk both sides 8' walk detached one side, 8' 8'detached walk both sides attached walk on other side Median none 24' raised median with provision none for(2) 10' left turn lanes as needed • ) ) ) PROTOTYPICAL STREET SECTION y> Re II _O r o r lii t 4 •� ji*.s.,, , i — ,.• .i.,..:: _...,7 . \F c. I �• � \ t Zi l i ACA Icy® rte.- -�: (.- fr 195' N 2, 1 / A /5y.. 923 MIN MISS IRO ID UM MUMS " PARALLEL PAM WW1 LANE TRAWL LANE MAUI PARIII STREET TREES Nu Huff / RMLRR6 MISS ---) FORME MANURE IONE 9" / IV RRMLWRR-IRwTARS( Ye ay BRAINS SEPARATION -_ p � m#-}4d ` 'r • 4 T§dY., +t*i I 3i x 91 v' Yi iZt -"-- E "3? F ., . �: n t'' ,.. . _ � ` Vim'- .w .2 A. ,- x . 4,:r.1.,-,:t2 t.., 4 -.--- . -,-.:4 . •:,e=1t4,4 a. IPAfE 91 ) ) ) PROTOTYPICAL STREET SECTION . - .✓ r i0,41k4 ;« a -. i\ i - mil,k-,. . i — ;.•,' ' ,,,,; ",---.... ... - ,,, I Y' WY1Y.. �e-kVIII, ° N �� ��r (' -� nr ��'� . r lg �+ ' O p ..i r ax a.. tie IL At I I x 15-20" B B , B ,, T ,4, 12' ,�. 12' 1B , 12' y 2B' ,_ 2' BIIIRNB SETBACK -SIDEWALK�PARKSTBIP PARALLEL BIKE LANE TRAVEL LANE TRAVEL LANE MEDIAN TRAVEL LANE ' MAMBRALPARKINB SIDEWALK CENTRAL PARK ) PARKING ' CNRR-10.0008 ----_. k. `---- CMB-TT0 ' y K 100 ROW X ,*. - 1--1-----4-4‘y:r...^ .+,,.`To-.... .. .x- (pig f6) • PROTOTYPICAL STREET SECTION �1 �. i�.; - Y •_ l � I' 1.. p 5 ft f ..A;. Y, a // fi r ., X -1,..„.04$4. '10.‘,1.1 , .,,, , ' -zi.,...).p„, ' '',,,:t ",‘ ,t"-'•' :',-,..,,i 4,74; bc,O � �+Y ..A B�NIOIBVDOG _ iv L �QQQQGQQQQ�a r ,,Lt 'c Fu- �0�1 �� , ii .1 5.2U �'_ 5' ,f __.I' J _/... IA N / 9' / _Z- / 5 15-2A 61NIDNS SEINAR SIIEWA12 PARK SIAW PAAAUftPARSIN6 TRAVEL LANE TRAVEL LANE PARAWL PAAKIIG PMN SLAW SAIEWAEA NUN➢NG SEINARDS � SEENUUSAANNAROS' I SEENUTASIANOAANS ) ) ) PROTOTYPICAL STREET SECTION 'fig �V l` „■ 5 a % li _ � ' -4 • , / Y �j �. w ''.1,-7:::,141' P ,p ' °`f k 1iS AE/ J" / .i . `.ili t �. .if" �� ti N �`� 11 ' . ! ��� lit I1 ., .Il_ u , frt,91kt al - Iii 5 5 3 __--PARNSiWP _-'� iAA UNE _. ..--.. TRAVEL LINE _ iEN�0IAN - MAW 1L UAE- l` -TRUIIF- PA9NSTRIP ._3" 5 y 5' I 4# WOEWRLA k "I` �G i ------00RE-TD1RO- - �' �✓._. pq is ' k NNm"WAERT lie MLlIV EMENi ROW VARIES(SEEPM)- . .` :•r. - y "'4t - nm.y ) ) PROTOTYPICAL STREET SECTION ■ NN. p00000q own V Q I r SOW AIM IANE AM LANE SEW 1' p MIIIY EASB4XE UIIIIY EASEAIff PfIW � Colt( 4 V"" U'.- Wa4 p SietS (Anstrcw-f o-n S ic.Gilons sop . streIrr 201.01 GENERAL 1. Sufficient right-of-way will be provided as required for the traffic needs and cross-section and maintenance of the street including cut or fill slopes, auxiliary lanes, sidewalks, public landscaping, signing, utilities, and other aspects of the development. The right-of-way will extend a minimum of 6 inches beyond the back of the detached sidewalk. A sign easement will be required in situations where the right-of-way does not extend 2 feet behind the curbwalk, or in the case of detached walk,2 feet behind the curb. 2. Standard right-of-way and street widths shall meet or exceed the minimums set forth in the Design Criteria. Additional right-of-way and roadway width may be required to accommodate traffic or other development needs such as turn lanes, accel/decel lanes, extra lanes,pedestrian or bicycle facilities,landscaping,utilities,or construction requirements such as cut or fill slopes. 201.02 DESIGN CRITERIA(STRAIGHT ZONING) 1. Standard right-of-way and street widths shall meet or exceed the following minimum criteria: STREET TYPE LAND USE DESIGN MINIMUM MINIMUM ADT WIDTH FLOWLINE RIGHT-OF-WAY WIDTH ROADWAY �'^ Arterial(2) All 9000+ 120' 68' Collector(2)(5) All 2,500- 72' 48' 9,000 Local Commercial/Industrial 0-2,500 55' 40' Local(6) Residential Standard 300- - 51' 36' 2,500 Low Volume Local Residential 0-300 47' 32' (3)(4) (6) Low volume Alley All N/A 22' 20' Emergency Access All N/A 22' 20' Notes: 1. In all cases where traffic volumes are anticipated to exceed the design ADT shown above, the street and right-of-way width will be increased to the next higher classification, or increased in accordance with the specific design needs of the proposed street. 2. Because of the wide range of volumes and uses that can be experienced with arterial and collector streets,they will be reviewed more extensively on a case by case basis to determine the actual right-of-way and street width needs. 3. The use of the Residential Low-Volume criteria shall require sight distance review and approval in accordance with Section 205.02,and parking needs review and approval by the City. 6-f Liirn tnn4 5kd, :2 mat colts bta-1 r° RSL4 -for 1,nwP u.r1Sbw • _ _ . _ 4. Thirty two feet (32') wide (fl to fl) street sections may be used in low density,residential .. _ neighborhoods when the following conditions are met a. All buildings within the development, or all buildings on the street, are protected with fire sprinlder systems. b. Without fire sprinkler systems for all buildings within the development, or on the street,the following criteria must be met: 1. A 20'wide lane,maintained free of parking, shall be provided through all'tums with no less than a 50'outside and 30'inside radius. 2. A "modified curbwalk" or "mountable curb" section shall be used. The transition from flow line to top of curb shall not exceed a 4/12 slope. 3. Not more than twenty five dwelling units may be located on a street section between connecting cross streets. 4. Each dwelling unit shall have a minimum of two off street parking spaces. Said parking shall connect to the street and be no less than 16'wide. 5. The following notes shall be placed on the recorded Plat a. "The City reserves the right to post one side of the street "NO PARKING" if, at some future date, the Fire Department determines that unrestricted parking may inhibit emergency access." b. "All finish roofing materials shall have a"Class A"fire resistance•rating." 6. Collector section assumes vertical curb and gutter, 6' landscaping, and 5' offset walk. 7. Assumes use of modified curbwalk. Streets 3 201.03 DESIGN CRITERIA(PLANNED UNIT DEVELOPMENTS) 1. The streets shall be designed in conjunction with the overall intent of the PUD. The following requirements will apply: a. The design of collector and arterial streets shall be in accordance with section 201.02. b. On local residential streets,travel lanes shall be ten feet(10') in width, exclusive of curb and gutter. c. Not providing for on-street parking in the design of the street section requires the approval of the City. In determining whether approval will be granted,the City shall consider what measures the Developer has taken to eliminate the need for on-street parking. d. Sufficient right-of-way width shall be provided as required for the traffic needs and cross-section and maintenance of the street including cut or fill slopes, auxiliary lanes, sidewalks, public landscaping, signing, utilities, and other aspects of the development. Unless otherwise approved, right-of-way will extend 2' beyond the back of the sidewalk. 202.00 HORIZONTAL ALIGNMENT 202.01 GENERAL 1. Horizontal alignment shall provide for the safety of pedestrians,bicyclists,and motorists. 2. The street pattern in a subdivision shall be the most advantageous configuration to serve adjoining areas and the entire neighborhood or district Where appropriate to the design, proposed streets shall be continuous and in alignment with existing,planned or platted streets. 3. Proposed streets shall be extended to the boundary lines of the subdivision, except where prohibited by topography or other physical conditions, or where such extension is not necessary for connection to adjacent properties. Where streets will be extended beyond the property line, sufficient engineering data shall be provided to establish feasibility of extension meeting city standards. Construction of the proposed streets may include grading and drainage transitions at the edge of the development. 4. Streets shall be placed in accordance with the Longmont Area Comprehensive Plan where applicable: Streets-4 • 7e > . 36E / C t _ 79 ], ^. ` PARKING TRAVEL T TRAVEL 1 PARIUAG r r IP' re 9 PARKING 't TRAVEL TRAVEL >r SINES I 1 SI RDA 1 I` 11 •RESTRICT PARKING TO ONE SIDE ONLY. LOCAL r78 �E 3fE /E zI TS1 r r c PARKING 1 TRAVEL PARKING MO sat S/W 1 I 1 1 1 r 471 R• "1 LOCAL (LOW VOLUME) ktIA T9 ),_ 4C E /E 9 TS 1 r C !z It > PARKING TRAVEL I TRAVEL PARKING 1 . SAV 71 5/W • 1 1 5 ROM. LOCAL t-tiA • 1 i (COMMERCIAL) 1 •-•--••- •PROPERTY LINE /cony or WAY LINE NOTES.' L SLOPE PA/ME/TAT= FROM CROWN TO LIP OF GUTTER. E 7YPIOAL savors SHOW MNIMUM REQUIREMENT&ADYATOINAL ROADWAY WIDTHS & RIGHT OF WAY MAY BE REWIRED TO ACCOMODATE TRAFFIC OR OTHER DEVELOPMENT NEEDS SUCH AS TURN LANES,ACCIEL/ DECEL LANES. EXTRA LNESPEDESTRIAN OR BYCYCLE FACILITIES,LANDSCAPING,UTYLTIES OR CONSTRUCTION REWIREMENTS. 3.WHEN FLAY UNE ELEVATIONS ME NOT EQUAL PAVEMENT SHALL BE SLOPED EX FROM THE HIGHER LIP.MAXIMUM STREET CROSS GRADE SHALL NOT EXCEED 4X. CWVI 6W0 - 0/12/2001 - A9/10/02 2003 0W616N 0TANOAR06/700.010 • TYPICAL f CTD®INI • •• DETAIL 200-1B „ES PUBLIC WORKS DIVISION DAT& MARCH,1993 SCALE: NOT TO SCALE c >< 48'( / f > It ff SWIDE C 5 c TRAVEL 1..— TRZEL 't TRAVEL - - VIVRE DETACHED DETACHED WAX C 4' 1C It 4' IF AUL ex& PARKING W TRAVEL TRAVEL - PARKING ' 6'wm.Al • LANDSCAPE I c I LANDSCAPE, Fc TE'ROW. T i COLLECTOR * Es sr IL / C >N.< sr LYWILIE A9' 1P' eIP' N6' DETACHED TRN/F1 �.c TRAVEL TRAVEL - y nor BIKE PATH DETACHED EWE PATH, 1 ymtL i F a r ali Yh; Fe 1 3 ..e,*^61 +'4ca:A',KMi'*_ 1 1 Dr R.011. 1 I,' i (NON-RESIDENTIAL) .TtF —••-- -PROPERTY LINE / RIGHT OF WM UNE NOTESe L SLOPE PAVEMENT AT EX FROM CROWN TO UP OF GUTTER. E.TYPICAL SECTIONS SHOW MINIMUM REWIREMENTS.ADDITIONAL ACADIYA' WIDTHS & NGHT OF WAY MN BE REWIRED TO ACCOMODATE TRAFFIC OR OTHER DEVELOPMENT NEEDS SUCH AS TURN LAMESACCEL/ !)PLAIT LARES, EXTRA LMES,PEDESTRUN OR BICYCLE FAC/ITIES.LANDSCAPING.UTIL?TFS OR CONSTRUCTION REWIREMENTS pvl6{0 3.WHEN FLOW LINE ELEVATIONS ARE NOT EWAL PAVEMENT SHALL BE SLOPED . 3/12/200I EX FROM THE HIOHER UP.MAXIMUM STREET CROSS GRADE SHALL NOT EXCEED C' • 6/11/01 4.COLLECTOR MD ARTERIAL STREETS HAVE DETACHED WALL • EL 9'10/0 2009 Cf616N 6fANOAK06/200-01A I. • TYIP0CAL SECTION o ■ DETAIL 200-1A „E8 PUBLIC WORKS DIVISION DAT& MARCH.1993 SCAM NOT TO SCALE I I , eft. I by pai4X 24- n �I h v� 7 : t+ c 'viatic & Gn55 5&tLflts Used w at-ism- -6101/4--- 80' ROW • 5' 2.5' 8' 12' 12' . B' 2.5' CONCRETE PARKING TRAWL LANE TRAVEL LANE PARKING SIDEWALK • 1.3 • a . 2% 2X • . • NIP CLASS 8 BASE Qum 4c GUTTER CURB & GUTTER *URBAN LOCAL RESIDENTIAL . . • WELD C�c�nnV � 5 5 . Best -cwl 1/4-4.6arkuds • rn , ad .ROW • • • G' 25' .. 1Z 12' 12' •2.5' 2' 6' CONCRETE TRAVEL LANE LEFT fiN LANE TRAVEL LANE MIN. SIDEWALK ,y • • • 2X p n HOP CLASS 8 BASE CURB 1c/GUTTER `-- �,-,,C,U.RRB & OUTTER rSa URBAN LOCAL EI,WLO x te'EN i/ REGIONAL OO1v MERQAL �Pr NO PARKING NOTE: URBAN TYPICALS APPLY TO ALL DEVELOPMENTS WITHIN THE MIXED USE DEVELOPMENT AREA AND ALL URBAN GROWTH BOUDARY AREAS. Vt.dt' itfib A 4lAL Pith' APPENDIX 24-E(cont'd) lig 111 hi 1, i Z • • y a 11 ; 1 12; • 4 b; •1 , 1 C 5 L • b I PNI I 1 w E , 11 .:. 1 i 9 . ! '. i 1 k; le b %; AS. • tlil ' 1 . j I I . •I3 i t I. Ai G I II_ r Appx 24-13 Supp.1 APPENDIX 24-E(cont'd) — ill t ` ill I a a I qr . b 4 b i f e! .. gel . F_� y 3 Is t b • b . I . a 1I . I . ■* • _ I i b ■ a a . . S (Weld County Code Ordinance 2001-1) Appx24-14 Supp. 1 1 Project LifeBridge PUD — Land Use Comparison - �, a h L<1 I ' LAND USE DIAGRAM '� 7 -_ y� SCAB 1.2W LIFkillIDGE IS Weld County Commissioners EXHIBIT November 9, 2005 1 L 'e #j.. Project LifeBridge PUD — Plan Comparison I • — J 0446.471 / Atr j;et , „ A Arp5g' '$ a ~fi• t.:i i l/�1 r It 1 , r .. Itt s ..a/..` �.iry r C..1.. .l 't 'i rT • ti‘114....0":1 y .t. tit :: J } a...�..r ors II F TrL • . _ ice ' •, ,._. *.•t t X .• .•' .r+�rjrn #,,r, r S 3 s ` 4 wq• J' fr �� • • } r r 1 rmINO a II .4 is_ • • f -, ... 0 :, ., . /. , Itri 1 _ U / ins I �i t. l 11ss p� ik $ a f -a._..� i Jul. w. .m I Ar.ei _ :ear� _. T . C • Weld County Commissioners November 9, 2005 4 Project LifeBridge PUD Bulk Height Comparison ___ f1 �,: _ — / // � : � Il, 0 ; / �� • 1r / , j 4 •. %,/t " i,, N • �� x. i . , 1.. .. X 1, (irto I t\%- ----- -�i I I .I I . ( j / I LEGEND „ n Eii i - 3: Irft.x I I — / '� i 1 _,,. I s x x l i I 30'ALLOWABIrE ,- —1 -- i �' I. I 1g ,i 35'ALLOWABLE- -•--� -�: I % j:_.-- 55' j I I J' 'EI. 60'4'!.X I 45'ALLOW "�� -: • �� __ \ I� I �`� . _ • 60 VAX 180N. 7 MAX;2:'e' I= ' . ' _ i, 55'ALLOW ,� n___ .�,, I Or I i Il l I 60'ALLOWAB a ! I_.,� I _ WITH UP TO - • II ---�;.\ J ' TO 5 THE ARElk3lR ` „ ��" .� __._ _ =._ ._ --_ --� _�1,,,_- �� -_ -_..� - - __- - 'c_iu \ 1 Weld County Commissioners November 9, 2005 i { y DETAILED CHANGE OF ZONE PLAN I FOR PROJECT LIFEBRIDGE PUD .� } ..rr * e ` wa *s: y ATRACT OF LAND SITUATEDI NORM RANGE el WEST OF THESTH PRINCIPAL ' "'e' row MERMAN.COUNTY OF MELD.RATE OF COLORADO. err carom./+•CINt* tar OV'LKI ��—I I *•. II /.. M1fY T'RIN s.4-.+- tu. nw — e• Aar i g'RN.RGW fl Ll l i re an wisy ie nu w • v v ti r... Tara r lg,vumv vimMrr Lu WIC 0m.W ♦ * J•Rrs✓aeoaavreArtrTY.0 __ ,r1 mum Apr CC1 CdllYTOlt'Ass-ea MPSfiMGMJ (61: IOVLMO.YA.wF[YL FII.RT TYK/1) Covau.4L.PEo etBuria.e Hun STREET SECTIONS El SCALE 1'=10'41' �.,, ^^ _c__ TETRA `J `J - LTIII.TECH Rnc ' ) Local Residential Streets: Project LifeBridge PUD Weld County MUD City of Longmont Right of Way 60' 60' 51' Width of Street flow line 36' 42' 36' Travel Lanes J (2) 10' lanes (2) 12'lanes _ (2)11'lanes Parking Lanes (2) 8'lanes_ _ . (2)8' lanes _. _... (2)7'lanes Planting Strip/Tree Lawn (2)7' strips 2.5'between curb and walk or 3' behind the walk on each side behind the walk Sidewalk 5' detached walk,both sides 1 5' walk,both sides, attached or 4.5' curb-walk both sides detached walk Alley: Project LifeBridge PUD Weld County MUD I City of Longmont Right of Way ' 20' No standard established 22 Width of Street flow line 20' I No standard established 20 Travel Lanes (2) 10' lanes No standard established (2) 10'lanes Parking Lanes No parking in alley No standard established No parking in alley Fence Setback (2)3' strips No standard established 0' Utility Easements I 10' each side I No standard established f Varies by use -4' minimum ) 1 ) PROTOTYPICAL STREET SECTION S k xd IC .r .1 y° V VV( / "} .- ANIBIG�61 4r II I„'VIII' O I i II ,` In Z0 / E/i „r.I r 8.,..T ..,E,, / e]V- —. ..lam g.. de . v. / va..{' ,429„ %f / R -. 0 I I ,PACE 2.l V i i PROTOTYPICAL STREET SECTION aJ. 00000001 0000000 7 v o i i I I I in X / .rsrr /# �- r�.urx 1, 5 __— _ 2 it, i i i ! ) Collector Streets: Project LifeBridge PUD—Collector Weld County MUD City of Longmont Parkway Street Urban two lane collector Collector Right of Way Varies 60'to 95' Varies 80'to 100' 72' Width of Street flow line 48'plus the width of the median 82' 48' Travel Lanes (2) 12' lanes (2)12'lanes (2) 12'lanes with 4'pavement between -_ _ travel and parking on each side Turn Lanes (2) 12'lanes as needed (2)12'Lanes as needed Turn lanes added if needed,additional ROW required Parking Lanes No parking on street (2)8'lanes _ _ (2)8' lanes Bike Lane nia ' (2)8'lanes n/a Planting Strip/Tree Lawn 10'strips on each side of street 2.5' between curb and walk or 6'minimum on each side behind the walk _. Sidewalk 8'detached walk,both sides 6' walk detached one side, 8' 5'detached walk both sides attached walk on other side Median ' Planted 11'minimum with a provision 14'painted median with provision none for a 10' tum lane as needed J for a 10'mm lane as needed I Project LifeBridge PUD—Collector Weld County MUD City of Longmont Parkway Street(Parkside) Urban two lane collector Collector Right of Way 100' Varies 80' to 100' _ 72' Width of Street flow line 39'on street and 32' on adjacent 82' 48' parking and access area Travel Lanes (2) 12'lanes (2) 12'lanes (2) 12'lanes with 4'pavement between travel and parking on each side Parkside Parking Access (1) 12' one way lane No Standard established _ No Standard Established Parking Lanes (1)8' on street and 20'diagonal parking (2)8' lanes (2)8'lanes adjacent to the park Bike Lane I (1)7'lane (2)8'lanes n/a Planting Strip/Tree Lawn 110' strips on each side of street 2.5'between curb and walk or 6' minimum on each side behind the walk Sidewalk 6'detached walk on street and 7' 6' walk detached one side, 8' 5'detached walk both sides attached walk adjacent to the park attached walk on other side _ Median I Planted 10'median between street and 14'painted median with provision none I i park side parking access lane I for a 10'turn lane as needed , . , . , PROTOTYPICAL STREET SECTION . . • .4 :-., .• • •'s w ate' 'k?. s«.. - �" ' 4 jam``• o.‘•••••• �• ` ' /If,. , °� • 1 yam. K;At y 3 `y t` n '�+ 4 • 4, ,6,..K . Y Sri, /%y`' . ., • -.1.4i4, minF 7 :rkrirr / jai i ca«eIA iz + +o / VP lel / ISA - / f. 7.31/A4 / S / / c142wcw / / ro itten / ,4„, atm'AsBeT' f !/—ynmGsiai f W 95' --4— mini i i ) PROTOTYPICAL STREET SECTION oam D 1 NNNpnFnn`... F Tic F c , _ y is 20 ° g. 77' 4 lU' li i'1 V Y A K �.'.�q � M(F_1i. 1..1k 4fL4'A 1.J1r )t �A.e:.XUM. �U� y.`.if 47, III." I I I Arterial Street-WCR 3.5 Project LifeBridge PUD—Arterial Weld County MUD T City of Longmont Boulevard ' Urban 4 lane Minor Arterial Arterial Right of Way 150' Varies 110'to 120' 120' Width of Street flow line 31' each side of median ; 84'including painted media n 68' I Travel Lanes (4) 12'lanes (2) 12'lanes (3)12'lanes with 16'pavement between (2) 13 lanes travel and curb each side Turn Lanes (2) 12'right lanes as needed ; (2)12'Right Lanes as needed Turn lanes in landscape setback as needed Parking Lanes No parking on street No Parking on Street _ I No parking on street Bike Lane Off street-Included in 8' detached I (2)8' on street bike Lanes on street-included in 16'lane each side walk of street • Planting Strip/Tree Lawn Varies—minimum 10'strips on each 2 minimum between curb and walk 18'if no turn lanes -6'minimum on each side of street or behind the walk side ; Sidewalk 8'detached walk,both sides I 8' walk detached one side,8' 8'detached walk both sides attached walk on other side Median Planted 12'minimum with a provision 14'painted median with provision none for an additional median,left turn lanes for(1) 10' left turn lane as needed and merge lanes as needed I Arterial Street—WCR 26 Arterial Street Project LifeBridge PHD—WCR 26 Weld County MUD City of Longmont ' Arterial Urban 4 lane Minor Arterial nigh Arterial raised Median Right of Way 120' I Varies 110'to 130' 120' Width of Street flow line y 68' 46'each side of median 68' Travel Lanes (3)12'lanes with 16'pavement - (4)12'lanes (3)12'lanes with 16'pavement between I between travel and curb each side travel and curb each side Turn Lanes Turn lanes in landscape setback as (2) 12' Right Lanes as needed Turn lanes in landscape setback as needed needed Parking Lanes No parking on street No Parking on Street No parking on street Bike Lane on street-included in 16'lane each side (2)8' on street bike Lanes on street-included in 16'lane each side of street I of street Planting Strip/Tree Lawn 18'if no turn lanes -6'minimum on 2.5'between curb and walk or 18'if no turn lanes -6'minimum on each each side _ ; behind the walk side Sidewalk 8'detached walk both sides 8' walk detached one side, 8' 8'detached walk both sides attached walk on other side Median none I 24'raised median with provision none I for(2) 10'left turn lanes as needed PROTOTYPICAL STREET SECTION ,►� 3 - # a t' 5 i 5 _ ' �> /AL II'. nww� "‘ wbinca t ai�i n�a�i � nv��iur -� �az"iTi� ,a u�uu era rw; 'r ,�uuxa � ua¢xZ -� un -� Jr t urulfisiw " 'f�—_ PY p:AI p;d ml ` r Street Cross Sections GNOME OF ZONE PLAN FOR PROECT IFRE PUD STREET NS =t_fi- r-1-,:.--�-�=-tom 1--1-f --f--fz--±:-.,i Wmitm.A-lalUa aw ll"Om, Owen l-Gr Maw Dna WINO .r 1 1 ,. ,Hr..,-1.....1.:17:1 ..H Nam l-Wel!India Waft 6s haw a I I/10mM Lamed MN all I 7q ag , . ....., . ) 1 i 1 Ing.g•Lmigall.gmer Oileierhose Ono%WY , - Swim o-Ql,aa MMAwt1Ia/ — —.;;'MN' MnC -97 Valli ilia k, ice"- I 7) 7rds ti 1 r N. .,a '(,A �Y -• 'i I yi i n • . , , ., 4%!bnS ili 'E VII TIONot . I I ( I3 L. ' .1 I I t. i .„ . . =`"" mow_ , ,-. ' crti - It W-≥_ - max►_" , ''�" i ' `t.141 unI ;4� IV a , I lac., ▪ �.. ' .. .- dl r - _ secs ;2, I VI 1II .k.„,....:._e___, i , . ,,......, , l•Pi iC -SibJ 1 I { ` •}. I-� gyp -iw�n � J � �� ,. Silks_ {,.tea t4 , ,i:ail unli 1 II I� Ii...� i s�'1 , I . / a , tie-1AL:time f I •j * tielle:;-1- ‘ ; '- �F. / 4 / r"i,4t, l rIL{ wo. 43- ` David S. Williams, DTJ Design Barbara Brunk, Resource Conservation Partners Matt Deiieh, Transportation Engineer mh °,�' A. a S t w ' ggRR " Dela Bruns, afe$ridge Christian .._,h ch _ 4 t v � .r y 14`u *xc.. a ° TIodd` Borger, TJB Consulting Groff -'d-41.L- L. rr, i• Y'- i ..+.. _.-_ ems' N.y _,4,k, 7 \�F N. Y ". �4 } I -too,3}� E "'8°'^4 , a1' F i ll . -. � A.. 4 err ,� t A' A'. ' .. a $ 0. I 3 l /_Ills,... LIFE BRIDGE I 11111''I\S I:HI AI:H i .. µ s h t � r�TC` ,f pn r '� �. Y y ' A .^+ Why we're here t , t .Y What's changed H- F . . r` r 1 µ{� .Transportation. Network I> ` ;.t a Ri { _F� � �k ProjectHighlights • I.. - . '. -.Y. ' -; ' :'-' 7II! sr: --; -- ,o= a 3^4 y Si 4 w b'Ig., :a r Fx `. xi v' .An .v ,.: it 4 g. ,,-_,,,../.-,, .. , t. -, ,f W 4 x_ .Phasin i k ,, • - t� An . . es ons eve y, .w , and s rs ;x f _3- J' " Y 1S. - W I i :-. . < ( S j ., �r .d feet e I. t rte" .,S. e-, % 31 ! 4 , C <! ill ®®iiiita., LIFEBRIDGE I u lslIM I.NI RI II e . '. ° �a,4f�� �°`�'� ' )3 I gj • . tc c. 'I.ril[} @4f 4iik� J' " �� ! , . r- i a ! 'I loo x ; ' _,Iii T_ . red . 'n try A6w�. ,a 1 }f p 4 l i \. � - �; �� . _ -... A- r , �.- 111 PF ( , R" ~r . . a i� +' 9 i - �kM� 3` J i. 't L Y.� Les F is 4�ke`a f ems' $sti a. ... .ALelp . it y Project ; _. & �Jy LifeBrid.e d tVI C -- 5 I , '..� t 9 --- N i'.yroi "ro : t 4. oir r. I P�� ^f� l r A c } " • . '.l'!' 9 \\. L �\� 3 �" 4, I . -.. 114.. IYi EXISTING CCUtiI —vI _ago_® LIFEBRIDGE (:HRI I i''(HI RI 11 .'A HWY '; �A ; �,: + .. IL' • 4 rr. b y ! i '�wLll ` � R� nut l n4 p' "" ' M• X �e . t T l f Q . J A:TY. l e 1 9 ?w V .,�. s. y1 * _ mac, ,. ` ;4. ., _ it ^„o irgi: y Via! 4 Vr eau 7 .-+ �. Z ,.. �eAr� C r Fui"� 4 MSR'iV+�r"1 Y_{ � J ee f' ��.r,C ° ` \D' Project x #S1 � ` `-w.,i,w � {y r -' LifeBridge i ,.,. �. - ,w Ili .. .ki x , r. y 1 '' i ') II `"a \ ( ( j _\ I I_ 1ii , Y LIFEBRIDGE IZ(J. L)) CHRISI-P CHI Ii H ii i S`../ r Y 1 YY C_ i„ a tea, i°y>> 04E �.. .4. i * , lay a { F� 1 ., - 5 d A`^�j E. tr * ;q✓. . .� P - �., fr•• - �'• It it' r- . 1 r7 1, Fairvie s + ''y „.4" L Street p -tl 1- ~—, 1 i.((fr FF{{ ..:iKllrl E� 72 , i i ' ' , 'ft r,, ' :41s, .1)jegligiAlligi .`'''' 7\IIDI411:7 yam{ A p 1 ' i ' - ' -' 1',,, _ , i } ._ q ` , fat. aft, . ' ` � -'� I. i {�, - '1'188 asp r; d 4 ,, +� -4 sl 4 -` i eke .. n 'roposed Future Union£ � R Ii Y \ ^4e n •:� -' .,Reservoir Expansion t�W if 4 - W ,o _ a9 x .n � 4 u w y 4 . . }NA fi '‘.`t: : P: y y �... .p.- �t �. '? � x V - t'�x'� dP�t l a� .. 4 , 1. ", rzz lt,r` N Lde:rid . a s `f 1.' ;I. 'la f y x.pil5 R _ s 1 r ,L arlet . ' F � .ne. s� « }H Iavk gTi �• ♦.s ,.All ^' s_rn - ' y *� iy. .✓} , •i4 _. ...yea VII?, k 'f-` a 1 n r $ ... Apa.. •., eC ' jw1 i }} ,..- '.%, w ' • w§. y� s W 1 {3Y'�• - - C' -- • .....ale ® LIFEBRIDGE RI',SI R�"OTR I-,X ': \STC_) \ I HRI.TI'%CHI'RI H mac •!Ii �� ^°^'e"` K -`�.- 4 «rte pig ' i Y ¶ iLLik / s _ �,.a Y , ^+ate '1A' Ilw t `Y' V1yR}. .qI �. 44, p _1 ! • 'roposed Future Union -- '� , t ;Reservoir Expansion ` �•i 1 d A ...N A S �b • !"4 dyC�Y^ y _ Ay a , �,, .. .rsa a Project ° . t ^' , It. =+,, Hi ., CR26RR LifeBr�d • y"t'., ? y N ; „iii./s aq .y K mat - ,,,c4,—, . �. a. y L ,A F j . LI-oallFEBRIDGE ID E ROAD RI ;AI ,I (= N IU=\ S -- (-`R ?6 (]nUSTIA%(II III 171(ii a l3WY'66' a' tv p I a s �: �. ' s . a 0y _ s „� 'roposed Future Union. - 17 �� . ..... - 1t' ' 9 Reservoir Expansion . •'x 7 r 'ay ' , LLe 9.tx -4s04,-,::- -'"J :'Y 91Y '4-4Eq '4 F---;4i ! ••,-/.'. 5'm-- a ! 1 •.1 I. h ea Y>t- , ♦ » .&. \.1 It �t 4. . i,4. �m ♦ • p ..1 . ffi, V U,,,. l. . 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