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All Forum Posts by: Jamie Hora

Jamie Hora has started 1 posts and replied 127 times.

Post: Question For Residential Developers

Jamie HoraPosted
  • Developer
  • San Antonio
  • Posts 129
  • Votes 73

It very common, at least in my experience in Texas.  The large metro areas continue to grow outward, and for developers interested in building subdivisions needing larger tracts, the raw land on the outskirts of the city is frequency zoned agricultural (and actually being used as such). 

It has happened in 2 of larger subdivision projects in DWF area and outside San Marcos. 

If you're talking about buying land and speculating a developer would be interested, knowing the growth patterns of the area would be a must. 

Post: Commercial Deal- 3,4,5,6???

Jamie HoraPosted
  • Developer
  • San Antonio
  • Posts 129
  • Votes 73

Nice thread @Henry Clark. Question, where do you find the listings of the land for auction, at each County courthouse?  Was the bidding in-person or online?

Post: How do i rezone my 20 acres of ranchland?

Jamie HoraPosted
  • Developer
  • San Antonio
  • Posts 129
  • Votes 73

Much of the rezoning process can be done remotely.  The rezoning process is usually handled by a City Planning & Zoning Department.  If it is in a City of any moderate size, that information for rezoning will be on their website. After reading through, I would set up a call with City staff members to discuss in further detail the process and make sure you understand everything. 

It will likely be the application form, plus a fee, and maybe some auxiliary information.  However, rezoning requires approval at Public meetings.  It may be 1 meeting for the P&Z and a 2nd for the City Council.  Depending on the area your property is in and if nearby residents may object to the rezoning would depend on my suggestion for you attending in person. 

Some P&Z meetings now offer to attend via Zoom.  If you are just wanting to switch your zoning to do a homestead, in my eyes, that seems like something nobody would protest and should be an easy case that can be done fully remote. 

They removed the Sandridge Road?  The shopping center probably has other entrances Im guessing, but it still looks like this road provides additional connections to their development.

It is mentioned there is a shared access easement here, which is what I would expect. My suggestion is reach out to these businesses and get a hold of the shared access easement.  You will want your name/lot to be added to this if is not already, then discuss sharing the cost of the new road with all parties of the shared access easement. 

A new/improved road here will also benefit them as well if you are bringing more customers to their shopping center and providing more access points for traffic flow in/out. 

Post: Prosper County Parking

Jamie HoraPosted
  • Developer
  • San Antonio
  • Posts 129
  • Votes 73

@Nasi K., by my quick research of the City code right now, it looks like there is a minimum distance of 200' required from residential to a drive-thru.  This is likely measured to the closest part, which could be the stacking location of the cars. 

Items such as these are most beneficial to discuss with the City in a Predevelopment Meeting. They are able to give more clarity to their code and discuss if waivers are possible, etc. 

Property lines from commercial to residential also look to require an 8-foot screening wall. This is common in many cities. 

Hope this helps!

Post: Prosper County Parking

Jamie HoraPosted
  • Developer
  • San Antonio
  • Posts 129
  • Votes 73

@Nasi K. putting restaurants on the end caps can allow them to include drive-thru's which obviously can be very desirable.  Is your lot adjacent to residential?  If it is, the location of the drive-thru on your site may be limited due to minimum setbacks required from residential housing.  I've had this happen on another project.

Post: Sewer easement for new development question

Jamie HoraPosted
  • Developer
  • San Antonio
  • Posts 129
  • Votes 73
Quote from @Maria Dinshaw:
Quote from @Jamie Hora:

If the sewer is crossing a property that is not owned by you or the City, it will require an easement.  You can have discussions with the City for their participation in easement negotiation.  If you are developing the land which presumably will benefit the City, assisting in bringing a city utility line is something in my experience they will help on.  


Any alternative routes for bringing sewer to your site should be explored to possibly avoid / limit how much of an easement you need. And as the other comment mentioned, typical easement widths are between 10'-20' wide, depending on the depth of your line, size, and what the City dictates. 

 Thanks Jamie,

I have 2 options at this point - take the easement through the neighbor's property and connect to the main on the other side of a creek (boring under the creek would be required) or put in a pump station and connect to a line inside a neighboring subdivision. The utilities engineer from the city told me that they will not approve a pump station unless the cost to connect to gravity sewer is 2.5 times the cost of the PS and he's the one who told me that I have to take the easement. Since they are dictating this location I'm hoping that they'll be cooperative in helping me obtain the easement if the landowner proves difficult.


Got it.  Have you or a civil engineer looked at the depths of the sewer to know that a gravity sewer will work even with boring underneath a creek?  I'd be happy to take a look at this for you if you want to share more specific project info with me.  

From a City perspective, yes lift stations are last resort because of the maintenance effort that gets placed onto them so I understand.  If this land has sat vacant for a while, it is likely partially a result of this sanitary sewer service.  I'd just make sure that is part if your discussions with the City for their help on the easement since you are the one trying to develop this "difficult tract"..

Post: Sewer easement for new development question

Jamie HoraPosted
  • Developer
  • San Antonio
  • Posts 129
  • Votes 73

If the sewer is crossing a property that is not owned by you or the City, it will require an easement.  You can have discussions with the City for their participation in easement negotiation.  If you are developing the land which presumably will benefit the City, assisting in bringing a city utility line is something in my experience they will help on.  


Any alternative routes for bringing sewer to your site should be explored to possibly avoid / limit how much of an easement you need. And as the other comment mentioned, typical easement widths are between 10'-20' wide, depending on the depth of your line, size, and what the City dictates. 

Post: Prosper County Parking

Jamie HoraPosted
  • Developer
  • San Antonio
  • Posts 129
  • Votes 73

For the option with larger building and lower parking, what would be your breakdown of square footage between retail & restaurant?  I checked Propser's parking code requirements, and Retails = 1/250 sf, Restaurant = 1/100 sf.

Example for 13,000 SF building.  7000 SF retail = 28 spaces , 6000 SF restaurant = 60 spaces, so you will need 88 total. 

You may already have done this based on your options presented and found how much of each retail/restaurant you can provide. 

Also keep in mind landscape islands required for contiguous parking. 

I've done civil design & permitting in areas of DFW and would be happy to answer any other question you may have. 

Post: Looking for guidance on my first new build

Jamie HoraPosted
  • Developer
  • San Antonio
  • Posts 129
  • Votes 73

Best of luck.  I did the civil engineering on a senior living facility that just opened up last year on Lake Granbury.  The City was friendly and easy to work with during the permitting process. 

Your size of project is a bit different, but it should still be a favorable place for your project!