'Urbanist village' planned near Henderson
air field
By HUBBLE SMITH
REVIEW-JOURNAL
People are tiring of row upon row of cookie-cutter homes
designed for 1940s suburbia, the developer of the
master-planned Inspirada
community in Henderson said Thursday.They're starved for interaction
with their neighbors and a sense of community, Focus Property Group
Chief Executive Officer John Ritter said at the opening of
Inspirada's information center.
"We're sick of post-World War II homes," he said. "We fell in
love with our cars and fell out of love with our neighbors. The
street ends up looking like a line of garages." The 1,940-acre
development near Henderson Executive Airport will become a leading
example of the "new urbanist village" concept of community design,
Ritter told a gathering of business leaders. KB Home is building
5,000 of the estimated 11,000 homes at Inspirada and has 17 models
open. Homes should be ready for move-in by September. "When you look
at KB's models, it's like nothing you've ever seen in Nevada,"
Ritter said. "It's pretty stunning. Some of the bankers and
investors in this deal came through and their comments were quite
amazing. I don't think anything like this has been done in the
country, let alone Nevada."
Focus and a consortium of home builders paid $557 million for the
acreage at a Bureau of Land Management Auction in 2004. It was
passed over in a previous auction because of "inclusionary zoning"
requirements from the city of Henderson, which were later removed.
Most of KB's homes are single-family detached on smaller lots
clustered around a central courtyard, Nevada division President Don
DelGiorno said. About 15 percent of the residences will be attached
condos and townhomes."We'll move with the market," he said. "If a
certain product sells better, we'll react to the market."
Floor plans of Rembrandt City townhomes range from 1,640 square
feet to 1,980 square feet. Prices start in the high $200,000s. The
Renoir garden-style detached homes are 1,375 square feet to 2,040
square feet, also priced from the high $200,000s.
Ritter, a member of the Washington, D.C.-based Urban Land
Institute that advocates so-called "smart growth" development, said
Focus had been studying new urbanism projects that had been
"springing up" around the country. "I remember the day I went into a
meeting with the consortium group and saying, 'Guys, let's do new
urbanism in this project.' They said, 'What does that mean?' 'Well,
it means higher density.' We had no idea what we were getting into,"
Ritter said.When he met with Henderson planning officials, Ritter
found that they knew more about new urbanism than he did. They had
been looking for an opportunity to do it, he said."It's been painful
at times, kind of like herding cats, but ultimately, it's been
successful," he said.
Henderson Mayor Jim Gibson said Inspirada captures the
"small-town notion" valued by Henderson residents, even as it has
grown to be Nevada's second-largest city."It really was an exercise
for all of us because it was so huge and complicated, there wasn't
anyone it didn't touch," Gibson said. "It was an enormous
undertaking for the city."Ritter said the "last piece of the puzzle"
is a 300-acre town center with mixed uses such as lifestyle
entertainment, retail, restaurants and a boutique casino."I think,
over time, you'll see the vision realized. Ultimately, this will be
a role model in this country for the new urbanist community," he
said.The community, east of Interstate 15 off St. Rose Parkway, will
eventually be home to 26,000 residents with 300 acres of
recreational land and 20 miles of trails. Toll Bros. has opened a
sales center at the community. Other builders include Woodside,
Kimball Hill, Meritage and Beazer.
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